Dead Hawk – No Safety On Other Worlds
In the final analysis, Dead Hawk has created a space outside of music, and possibly outside of our reality, in which to provoke passion and angst in our psyche.
In the final analysis, Dead Hawk has created a space outside of music, and possibly outside of our reality, in which to provoke passion and angst in our psyche.
‘A Man of Silt’ is exceptional. The strangest thing you will hear for a long time.
If Melodeath is your thing, you’d be an idiot to miss this. But be prepared, because this leans more to the nastier than the nice.
Billed as black metal, the EP is actually black metal with atmospheric leanings that incorporates a ton of emotional hardcore influences in the way the material is presented. In terms of actual playing, it is fair to call this black metal.
It’s raw, it’s not the best quality, but what you can hear in the mud is blackened punk-thrash brilliance.
While the two sides are noticeably different, they do make a coherent whole, as both projects reach outside the box for their sound.
They feature more extreme influences than ever before, weaving elements of black and death metal into their modern metal sound.
The band doesn’t seem to have missed a beat, as they pick up exactly where they left off, but with some extra attitude included.
All of it is carefully pieced together to sound like the internal monologue of a serial killer.
Tando Ashanti is a knife fight to the death caught in sonic form. There is no guarantee of survival.