August Burns Red Constellations
  full reviewuser ratings (482) 
Tracklist:
1.Thirty And Seven
2.Existence
3.Ocean Of Apathy
4.White Washed
5.Marianas Trench
6.The Escape Artist
7.Indonesia
8.Paradox
9.Meridian
10.Rationalist
11.Meddler
12.Crusades

Ranking: #59 for 2009

user rating
3.8
excellent
Chart.
other reviews
sba4life (5)
This might be one of the best metalcore albums to ever be released...
ScorpionStan (4.5)
The very incarnation of what great metalcore is supposed to sound like, Constellations comes dangero...
augustburnsred1992 (4.5)
August Burns Red take another step in the right direction with great melodic material, more off time...
McDiggitz (4.5)
August Burns Red are still living up to the hype. Apparently, God has a lot to scream about these d...
Caleb McAlpine CONTRIBUTOR (4)
Constellations doesn't necessarily reinvent and revive the decaying genre of metalcore, but it certa...
David James Young (3)
Shred....
Taylor Jermolajew (2)
A technically impressive but boring album plagued with mediocre vocals and an over reliance on other...

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  On 111 Lists

3.5
great
Dave de Sylvia STAFF (188 Reviews)

2009-07-09 | 514 comments | 13,659 views

Summary: August Burns Red are creeping out of the incestuous metalcore scene and doing things just a little bit differently.

Sometimes at night I lie awake and wonder: have August Burns Red earned their status as metalcore’s reigning buzz band, or did they inherit it by default? It is true that just about every second-wave act that’s sniffed commercial success (Atreyu, Trivium, Avenged Sevenfold) has unceremoniously ditched the genre, but it is testament to the genre’s enduring popularity that it can continue to churn out bands in the same vein. But where does that leave August Burns Red? Following the release of 2007’s Messengers, it would have been hard to argue that they were doing much to differentiate themselves from the throng, let alone lead it, and they seemed scantily equipped to rejuvenate an increasingly self-cannibalising genre. Constellations is unlikely to usher in a metalcore renaissance, but is a progression- though not entirely progressive- from the formulaic and relatively uninspired Messengers.

Metalcore is a much-maligned genre, sometimes deservedly so, but it’s a problem of saturation and over-exposure rather than an intractable structural fault. The difference between really good music and painfully generic music can just as often be inches as miles, and Constellations is stark proof of this: the differences between this album and the last are few, yet the effect is immeasurably better. For a start, while Constellations is still packed full of breakdowns, they’ve at least allowed themselves to think outside the formula a little bit. On rousing opener ‘Thirty And Seven,’ they tease listeners with a false-start breakdown before launching back into the chorus riff, delaying gratification for a short while (even if the eventual breakdown is disappointing); elsewhere, on tracks like ‘Marianas Trench,’ they weave in guitar parts with the breakdown rather than allowing it to halt the song’s progression entirely; ‘Oceans of Apathy’ and closer ‘Crusades’ drop the intensity entirely and work in bluesy middle eights rather than breaking up the songs with predictable chug-a-lug sections.

As well as these structural improvements, the band members have stepped up their individual performances. Drummer Matt Greiner is the most audibly improved: his newfound sense of adventure is evident at just about every turn on Constellations, from the glitchy blast beats that simmer beneath the surface of ‘Indonesia’ to the tasteful fills with which he eases into ‘Marianas Trench.’ Even if his presence does become a little overbearing on the quieter songs (‘Marianas Trench’ is the exception that proves the rule), it’s good to hear him out of his shell. Likewise, the depth and variety of the guitar lines on Constellations is far in excess of what the group have produced before: particular highlights are the weaving dual-guitar lines of ‘Paradox,’ the tippy-tappy guitar solo that elevates the otherwise generic ‘Existence’ and the lush, doomy chords that open instrumental piece ‘Meridian.’

Vocalist Jake Luhrs doesn’t do an awful lot to distinguish himself- he doesn’t do clean vocals, but as a growler he is more or less intelligible the majority of the time, allowing some insight into the group’s lyrical themes. Much has been made of the group’s Christian faith, however at times on Constellations they seem to fall over themselves to be overtly vague, to the point of saying very little at all. ‘Thirty And Seven’ boasts the awkward line “it’s so much easier to fight this war when you’re the last in line,” and it’s hard to imagine a more awkwardly mixed metaphor than this one, from ‘Oceans Of Apathy’: "Everything true and complete is cut out and cut out and swept under the floorboards / Left to drown [...] in an ocean of apathy." Dying, particularly by drowning, is a common theme throughout much of the album, and the best moments occur when August Burns Red are at their most stark. ‘Marianas Trench’ sees Luhrs imagining himself drowning in the earth’s deepest and most grammatically incorrect ocean trench, while ‘Indonesia’ sees him ponder a challenge to his faith when death comes knocking: "How does a man wrap his mind around eternity when he cannot even explain his own composition? Don't you see it's bigger than you."

There’s another, unfortunate, side to Constellations that reinforces all of the negative stereotypes. Tracks like ‘The Escape Artist,’ ‘Rationalist’ and ‘White Washed’ embody the sort of unimaginative, meathead rock the genre’s become known for, with the latter offering up this gem of a chorus: ”Don't say another word / You've crossed the line / I won't hesitate to put you in your place” Nevertheless, most of the signs point towards a band that are broadening their horizons and striving to shake up any complacency within their sound. Between The Buried And Me vocalist Tommy Rogers provides a bridge vocal to ‘Indonesia’ that is eerily reminiscent of Dirt-era Layne Staley, and it exemplifies neatly just where August Burns Red are at right now: they may not be doing anything new or innovative, but they are creeping out of the closeted, incestuous metalcore scene and doing things just a little differently from everybody else out there.

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Comments:Add a Comment 
Dave de Sylvia
Moderator


Comments: 6856
07.09.09

Album Rating: 3.5

First review in four months oops

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cirq


Comments: 3750
07.09.09

Album Rating: 4

You must love this band

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Waior
Contributing Reviewer


Comments: 6300
07.09.09

Album Rating: 4 | Sound Off

This review was unfortunately humbling to read; manages to be both much more and concise and eloquent than mine at the same time. Irritating talent.

Nice to see some staff love (or something like it) for this too.

Digging: The Red Chord - Fed Through the Teeth Machine

ScorpionStan


Comments: 1320
07.09.09

Album Rating: 4.5

Excellent review. Some awkward phrasing, but nothing too detrimental.

Also in the summary i think you mean creeping out OF the incestuous metalcore scene.

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Mordecai21


Comments: 1994
07.09.09

Album Rating: 4

Good to see you haven't got rusty, you should review more. I still haven't got this yet

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redskyformiles
Contributing Reviewer


Comments: 5794
07.09.09

Album Rating: 3.5

nice review, dave. i agree with this one the most (even though i like messengers)

Digging: David Bazan - Curse Your Branches

Klekticist


Comments: 607
07.09.09

Album Rating: 4

wonderful review.
i disagree with your comment on the lyrics "it’s so much easier to fight this war when you’re the last in line" however.

anyway, nice job. :D

Digging: Thrice - The Alchemy Index: Vols. I and II...

DaveyBoy
Staff Reviewer


Comments: 5825
07.09.09


It's always great to read a Splat review... Now all we need is the other half of the devastating duo to return. Jom, where are you?

Digging: Paloma Faith - Do You Want the Truth or Something Beautiful?

IndieOut


Comments: 262
07.09.09

Album Rating: 4.5

good review for an even better band. Ocean of apathy's intro bothers me with its similarity to truth of a liar though.

Digging: Thrice - The Alchemy Index: Vols. I and II...

Dougie


Comments: 3593
07.09.09

Album Rating: 4 | Sound Off

Lovely review. Good to see the album getting a positive staff review.

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ninjuice


Comments: 5112
07.09.09

Album Rating: 4

Ocean of apathy's intro bothers me with its similarity to truth of a liar though.

There's not much similarity imo - the notes are a bit similar but Truth of a Liar takes about twice the time to "get going".

Digging: Sole and the Skyrider Band - Plastique

Matte


Comments: 185
07.09.09

Album Rating: 4.5

I disagree with this review, anything lower than 5 is blasphemy!! neg neg neg!

Seriously though, good review. Very well written, and you make excellent points, unlike some other reviews for this album. 3.5 is an impressive rating coming from a staff member for a metalcore album. *Thumbs up*

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someguest


Comments: 2583
07.09.09

Album Rating: 3.5

It took four reviews to get a correct one.

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This Life is Genocide


Comments: 1983
07.09.09

Album Rating: 3

goddang, right when i thought all the abr talk was done...

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Kronzo


Comments: 264
07.09.09

Album Rating: 4.5

Is this better than messengers?

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Electric City
Staff Reviewer


Comments: 9780
07.09.09


lol reading

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ninjuice


Comments: 5112
07.09.09

Album Rating: 4

Is this better than messengers?

Yes, no question.

alachlahol


Comments: 296
07.10.09

Album Rating: 3.5

too many reviews of this album stating the same points over and over

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jingledeath


Comments: 4397
07.10.09

Album Rating: 3.5

didn't expect to like this cause Messengers was boring but this is quite solid

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blindsided21


Comments: 44
07.10.09

Album Rating: 4

Excellent review. A small correction though: Indonesia is about a friend of one of the band members who died in a plane crash in Indonesia while doing missionary work.



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