Showing posts with label Power Trip. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Power Trip. Show all posts

Monday, 16 June 2025

My Day At Sunday Download Festival 2025

Its been six years since I last visited Donnington! What has the pandemic robbed me of? My hesitancy to return to live music feels like a lost opportunity, yet to experience such magic to begin with is a blessing. Magic is what my Sunday at Download gave back, a much needed reminder of the incredible times live performances muster. The day started with Kneckbreaker in the tent, Orbit Culture and Bleed From Within on the mainstage. I caught Municipal Waste and Malevolence too, however the follow were the real highlights of my day.

Amira Elfeky
One from the current wave of BMTH inspired Djent Pop Metal, Amira immediately caught my ear with her pristine voice. I found myself unsure of her authenticity, listening carefully to her breathy articulations between singing. It was no backing track. She just sounded like a studio recording live. Utterly impressive and with such easily enjoyable music, it made for a great show to follow up on.


Power Trip
My first mosh of the day. It had been a minute since I last heard there revival Thrash stomps! With pounding drums and choppy guitars chugging in perfect synchronicity, their grooves were infectious! Not to mention new vocalist Seth Gilmore did a fine job as their new frontman.


Meshuggah
God of metal, masters of my primordial rhythmic soul, It doesn't matter how many times I've seen them, it never feels like enough. This was my "loose yourself" moment, a feeling adored many times over the years. Go wild and bang your head and disappear. That will always happen with Meshuggah. Lethargica on the setlist was a niche touch and ending with Demiurge had me hyped up!



Spiritbox
Seeing them for the third time this year blunted the excitement a tad but that mid day sunshine can be brutal! Melting in the sun, I found myself watching other go wild and having a great time. I got my slice of that earlier in the year. The performance was excellent, It feels like they are on track to become one of metals premier names if they keep pumping out gold.



Lorna Shore
There is nothing quite like an impressive performance to win you over. I liked these guys, but seeing the musical virtuoso in the flesh was something else! The dazzling fluorescent sunburst guitar of Adam De Micco highlighting his incredible melodic through lines. It was also a delight to see them take my least favoured aspect of the music seriously. The breakdowns, exchanging cheeky grins at the sheer absurdity of these stunts was nice to see they don't take themselves seriously.



Novelists
Spotify had recently exposed me to this group. They have some charming songs. With a delayed start, I was delighted to catch them in the tent. Camille Contreras has a lively stage presence and hearing a few familiar tunes between others made for an entertaining set.



Fit For An Autopsy
New to my ears, this band absolutely slapped. You could tell from the crowd reaction they had something to offer. The rhythmic chops caught my ears, an amazing chemistry between guitar and drums that had be head banging like mad. To my unaccustomed ears, they sound like a Post-Deathcore crossover with Lamb Of God and splashes of Gojira. Really impressive, I will be getting into this one!



Korn
Fortunately, I'd seen Korn just last summer, otherwise my heart would of been torn. One of the few bands that always tug hard on the heartstrings, I caught some of my favorite songs in the first seven or so I stuck around for. I could have easily spent my night in the pit, loosing my mind again but alas there was one more act to see. They were phenomenal, a powerhouse ready to put on a show. It sounded great, I rocked out hard but had to move on.



Sikth
Legendary within my friendship circle, Sikth were a one of a kind local band who we saw at our very first Download Festival before they parted ways shortly after. I caught them sound checking at the beginning of the day. They sounded great. It felt only right to see them conclude the night in the tent, putting on a mightily energetic show to a meager crowd of less than a thousand peeps. I thoroughly enjoyed it. No regrets!

Monday, 17 June 2019

My Weekend At Download Festival 2019


Going for both Saturday and Sunday this year I had some miraculous fortune being in the right places at the right time to miss out on the rain. There was no avoiding the mud though! Not a lick of grass insight, the arena was a mud bath but I got through it and had a fantastic time. Once again the festival delivers on a magic I manage to convince myself is going to run out as the years roll and this year was no exception, the headliners really delivered something special. This year I thought I'd right about the highlights, good and bad, despite catching many more acts over the two days!

Power Trip
I saw this band not so long ago opening for Napalm Death in a small club and they blew me away with their 80s Slayer-alike Thrash Metal. It was great to know they could grab the attention of the festival organizers but a main stage slot was unexpected however given what a mighty show they put on it is no surprise. There strong songwriting for a tried and tested formula really matched the crowd and the probably won over a lot of new fans with an explosive show!

Behemoth
It was my first time catching the Devilish legends Behemoth, their music was a strange translation to summer sunny skies on the main stage but impressive costume design and stage makeup made it work. The performance was engaging and tearing through some strong at utterly dark songs they really made quite the impression as a band I need to get more familiar with!

The Hu
 There was no way I was missing the opertunity to see a Mongolian Metal band! Squeezing into a rammed tent the crowd was electrified to see a really unique and almost drone like vibe emerge from the fusion of Metal and native Mongolian instruments. It went by in a flash! I had checked them out before but this live show really helped bridge a gap in their music.

Batushka
Making their way onto my highlights list for all the wrong reasons. Russian Orthodoxy inspired Batushka had me dead excited for their notorious live show, however taking an age to to set up an elaborate stage of era furnishings and ornaments, their slow arrival to the stage became a drag. Going through some sort of slow candle lighting ceremony they took far to long, overplayed their set time and took more than five minutes between the three songs they churned though doing dull rituals of candle lighting and blessing books. It was a sham and they angered a lot of fans with the poor execution of their show. It did not translate to festival restraints.

Die Antwood
 Hear the booming bass from the Tent where Batushka were dampening spirits I was dead excited to catch the quirky South African Rave Rap duo! Unfortunately I only caught the trail end of their set however it was an absolute riot! The sound system was blaring and their energy on the stage was phenomenal. I couldn't help but move. Its really nice to have something break the flow of similar music being played around the festival. Would have loved to have seen more of it, shame about set overrun but these things happen.

Slipknot
 Prior to the show I had been feeling a little hesitant with Joey and now Fenn's departure. It was however a dynamite show from a band who seemed focused on giving us the absolute best. Corey Taylor was pitch perfect and ten years on from one of the greatest shows Id ever seen, the Knot proved they still have it! It was very emotional, strong memories of my social groups bonding over this band in our youth and that feeling of freedom when your inside the song, inside the moment, free of life's burdens. Only a few bands can do that and Slipknot is one of them, with deep cuts like Get This and Scissors it felt truly special.


Cane Hill
 With delays for fans entering the arena Cane Hill has to kick off Sunday to a small crowd however they gave it their all and a being at the front one could get a better appreciation of guitarists unique playing style and use of effects. As a band they have obvious influences from Korn and Nu-Metal however it made clear that they are bringing their own style and it rocked hard!

Alcest
 Ive been waiting a fair few years for my opportunity to catch Alcest and they did not disappoint! Their serine music translated beautifully to the intimacy of the small stage and their enchanting singing was captivating. The sound was impeccable and these songs came to life on the stage! Wonderful set.

Whitechapel
 Ive never gotten that deep into this Deathcore band however of the times I have seen them they have always been killer. Clearly oversold on the smallest stage, a rammed audience squeezed in and despite being at the back, barely able to see the stage the sound was impeccable. Their trio of baritone guitars were crushing and they soared through a brutal set of tracks. Perhaps this is an advantage of listening from next to the sound desk!

Smashing Pumpkins
 They feel somewhat like a recent discovery for me. Its always 90s bands that seem to get to my heart and I would have been thrilled for this show had I not seen them earlier in the year. It seems they are good friends with Amalie Bruun of Myrkur. They brought her out to do a Black Sabbath cover together which has a special atmosphere to it. Their show was reasonable, amazing set design but It feels like they have ambled through the last fifteen years missing out on the opertunity to establish themselves as a headline act. Billy's stage presence is left to be desired between songs but the performances themselves were fantastic.

Slayer
Its farewell to the legendary Slayer from this side of the pond. I would of loved to see the whole show but the beginning was absolute fire and ever over thirty years into it they can still pull of their songs with a manic intensity. Tom sounded fierce and the live show is certainly not the reason they are calling it curtains. There was a huge fan turn out for the legends but I had to leave early to get my spot for Tool.

Tool
They have been my band of choice to "get into" this year. Many, many hours churning through their discography, which seemed so difficult to get at first. Having got through every record I made the drive north listening to Tool and really starting to connect with the music in anticipation. Live music always has this magic and I shouldn't of been surprised to have it unleashed again. At first the show felt a little underwhelming, no cameras on the band and nothing but trippy visuals plastered across the big screens. It didn't take long for me to realize how much the band wanted the show to be about the music. Their flawless executions of dense and difficult music became a beacon of light and all of a sudden I felt that "strangeness" around their music disappear. It made complete sense, I was converted to a die hard fan and blasted nothing but Tool on the late drive home too. An utterly amazing show to end the weekend on.

Friday, 7 July 2017

Power Trip "Nightmare Logic" (2017)


I was lucky to catch this band supporting Napalm Death at the Electric Ballroom a few months back in London. They put one heck of a show, I was captivated after one song and loved their set. Of course I had to get myself a copy of their latest album, a fast, to the point thirty three minutes of brutal thrashings spanning eight tracks. Hailing from Dallas, these Texans have been at it for almost ten years and as far as I can tell, this is their sophomore full length.

The band sound right out of the 80s. A fast ripping, power shredding Thrash Metal band with frantic chugging grooves laced between gritty metallic shreds and tight picking rhythms. Tinges of Crossover creep in and a Slayer like darkness marks their sound with eruptions of wild, noisy frantic solos that burst into the fold between conventional thrashing sections. Its quite atypical of the genre but well thought out and inspired, rather than repeating old ideas the band reinvent them with some vigor and resiliance.

The eight songs take on the same tone, intensity and pace with very little to break them up other than some echoing, reverberated effects between a couple of tracks. From start to end its all killer no filler. Hard to pick a favorite however "Ruination" stands out for its frighting gang shouts and the front mans beastly screams coming to life on the chorus. His shouts are audible and gritty, drenched in reverb to give it a sense of scale that falls inline with the music.

Its a weighty record with a well formulated thrash persona, a sturdy production that brings the sweet spot of the fast open string muted picking to the forefront of the sound. As a whole it possibly lacks one thing, some "break out" moments to sweep you off your feet. It pummels hard and fast but none of the riffs defy expectation and so its a cracking head bangers listen but lacks that spark to add memorability to the songs. Other than perhaps having the potential to do better this is a great listen.

Favorite Track: Ruination
Rating: 6/10