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New site? Maybe some day.
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did you find that review you were telling me about at the show Friday night? |
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No, Jess Rotation has it... |
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I need to look that over again before I submit it, gimme a day or two Nate, I'll get it over your way soon. I like to come back to reviews after I've written them, it's cool to approach it with a clean head. |
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how's it look? i didn't get a copy. |
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Jess said she mailed it to you but I didn't get one sent to me, do you have it? |
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yeah I'll forward it right over... |
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sent... and thanks dude it's a fuckin awesome review... thanks again! |
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hey man, breeding salvation is fucking sick, i was quite impressed with it, i don't lie. |
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that's how I used to review when I did bludgawd, blunt honesty! Thansk again though... it helps to get reviews like that from time to time. |
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SOMEONE POST THE FUCKING THING!
Okay, I'm done yelling. |
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Leukorrhea - Breeding Salvation
The prolonged masters of Cape Cod Death Metal have returned with an
excellent 12 song full length CD, standing as a proud acclamation for
several years of service to the underground death metal scene. Leukorrhea finely displays their well-seasoned talent of song writing, which melds several elements of Death Metal. Within their sound is a coherent accessibility, which makes this disc hard hitting but direct as well as consistently sharp and supplementary. This isn't a bombardment of blast beats or a complete barrage of guttural vocals, neither is it an over-abused, slammed-out, break down fest or any of the other cliché stereotypes that have plagued death metal for years (which have seemingly bogged some acts into meaningless bore fests). Leukorrhea utilizes several of these aspects in their song writing; however, they clearly execute them in a fashion that presents each song ! as a fresh piece of meat ripe for a chew. The recording and mastering by Roger Beaujard (Mortician, Malignancy), brings a lot of justice to their well-executed approach of song writing. The drumming of Mike McPhereson is nearly flawless and provides a strong backbone for Ron Greene and Allen Florentine on Guitar. Another great thing is the guitar licks that occasionally escort songs to new depths of horror and carnage. Greene's tone is clean yet tortured enough to scream the essence of each song’s savage landscape. My favorite track would have to be "Flesh Formed to Art," particularly for the sweet buildup from the bass intro into a steady fade out at the end of the song. Nate Demontigny, pound for pound, is one of the better death metal vocalists I've had the pleasure of seeing perform before. The beauty of this recording fully demonstrates the capability of Leukorrhea and does them a lot of justice in comp! arison to leaving faith in some stiff working a soundboard at a bar. Listen to this album. It will leave an impression well earned.
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