Hatebreed [LP Version]

RELEASE
September 29, 2009
LABEL
GENRES
Pop/Rock, Punk Metal, Heavy Metal

Album Review

A mere four months after the release of a covers album, For the Lions, New Haven's Hatebreed offer their first truly new album in three years. This self-titled offering, the band's fifth, is the first outing to feature both new guitarists -- Frank Novinec, who joined in 2006, and newcomer Wayne Lozinak. In addition, drummer Matt Byrne replaced original skin man Rigg Ross, making vocalist Jamey Jasta and bassist Chris Beattie the only two founding members. Despite the new members, the sound is crafted around almost exactly the same formula that has made the band such a sought-after attraction on the metalcore circuit. In the summer of 2009, they shared stages all over the world with Slipknot, Slayer, and Korn, as well as having preferred lineup spots in many music festivals. With this CD, faster, downtuned hardcore is melded to slower, more decidedly doom-laden death metal moments -- check the surprisingly retro but utterly killer instrumental "Undiminished" -- all played with extreme technical flair, stop-and-start cadences, and call-and-response choruses. The rest of these 15 tracks range from headbanging anthems such as the opener, "Become the Fuse," to Hatebreed's trademark bone-cracking heaviness in "Everyone Bleeds Now" and pummeling riff-laden hardcore in "Merciless Tide." As a bonus, there is an edit of "Escape" tacked on at the end of the set. [A vinyl version of Hatebreed was released in 2009.]
Thom Jurek, Rovi

Track Listing

  1. Become the Fuse
  2. Not My Master
  3. Between Hell and a Heartbeat
  4. In Ashes They Shall Reap
  5. Hands of a Dying Man
  6. Everyone Bleeds Now
  7. No Halos for the Heartless
  8. Through the Thorns
  9. Every Lasting Scar
  10. As Damaged as Me
  11. Words Became Untruth
  12. Undiminished
  13. Merciless Tide
  14. Pollution of the Soul
  15. Escape [Diehard Edit]