Brave The Cold
Scarcity


4.0
excellent


Release Date: 2020 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Did we miss the deeper message? Did we fail to engage? Hell no.

Just when Mitch Harris' status as a long-time Napalm Death member is becoming exceedingly unclear - their latest album still lists Harris on guitar and vocal duties, but even Barney himself seemed in limbo or hard-pressed to comment on his actual contribution to the band - out of the blue comes a pounding, grindy, but also melodically spiced up death 'n' roll offering called Scarcity, a mere two weeks after the release of Throes of Joy in the Jaws of Defeatism. Scarcity is the debut album of Brave The Cold, Mitch Harris' new musical project together with drummer Dirk Verbeuren (presently with Megadeth and Cadaver, among others). Spoiler alert: Scarcity and Napalm Death's last are each other's equal in quality and fervour, and they should stand next to one another in your collection.

As to approach and style in general, Scarcity seems to sit in between the catchiness of Carcass' last two full-lengths and the imprint of contemporary Napalm Death, which includes the full variety of influences ranging from punk and hardcore over thrash to death metal and beyond. With one notable difference, however. What sets this album apart is the extra melodic dimension added by the judicious use of polyphonic clean vocals. Ranging from baritone ritual chanting to almost angelic choral harmonies, these vocal parts, combined with an instrumentation that otherwise breathes pure aggression and menace, do an excellent job in co-creating the dystopian and apocalyptic atmosphere of the album, with its themes of alienation, dehumanization, cybernetics and artificial intelligence, global control and annihilation.

If this - on first sight - comes across as a move of reckless modernism, rest assured: the arrangement of clean vs. extreme really works and is dosed and balanced exactly right, resulting in added value for each track where it is employed. While the background choral drone in the ferocious opener 'Blind Eye' already hints at this mixing of styles, it is not until 'Hallmark of Tyranny' and the subsequent tracks that the melodic potential of Harris' song writing on Scarcity unfolds more fully. The clean vocals in the interludes and bridge sections of these tracks may easily catch you off guard the first time you hear them. But because they fit so surprisingly well with their contrasting aggressive surroundings, you just as readily embrace them. (At least I did.) In 'Monotheist', the clean vocal layer works to add driving force to an already irresistible headbanger. Even the most experimental – and Voivodesque, yes! - track 'Retrograde' retains sufficient levels of anger to keep any grind and death fan focused while the melodic vocal lines settle into the ear, only to stick indefinitely. Addictive, doomy liturgical chants nestle in the merciless biotopes of 'Dead Feed' and 'Upheaval', interacting seamlessly with heavy-as-hell riffing and pummelling rhythms. In the frantic 'Refuge', the harmonic multivocal cleans do nothing less than create sheer beauty.

Those still sceptical as to the extreme metal potential of the album will have their minds set at ease by uncompromising and undiluted hardcore tracks devoid of any cleans such as 'Apparatus', 'Necromatrix', 'Shallow Depth', and 'Shame and Ridicule'. It is on tracks like these that Dirk Verbeuren's brutal drumming skills shine through in all their technical glory. (Some of the fills on 'Shame and Ridicule' are almost uncanny.) Harris' riffing is on point and tight as a rat's b*tthole throughout. The distortion is deadly. In the brutal vox department, here as well as elsewhere on the album, Harris devotes ample attention to layering and combining a fair range of harsh shrieks, malignant snarls, coarse growls, and death grunts. Even considered solely from its metal side, Scarcity has plenty of hooks, twists, and tempo switches to keep all tracks interesting. Together with the added polyphonic overtones, this has definitely become a catchy record that stands out. Then again, an action span of 38 minutes for no less than 11 songs further reduces the risk of boredom to a minimum. Overall production is dense but crisp, courtesy of Logan Nader.

On a final note, listeners familiar with Menace's 2014 album Impact Velocity will know that this is not Mitch Harris' first experiment in combining and contrasting extreme and clean styles. It is a polyphonic formula much similar to the one that proved effective in shaping the industrial-progressive soundscape of Impact Velocity, that we now are lucky enough to see transposed and incorporated in the fresh and aggressive grind 'n' roll package that is Scarcity.

Brave The Cold is:
• Mitch Harris: guitars, bass, vocals
• Dirk Verbeuren: drums



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user ratings (6)
3.3
great

Comments:Add a Comment 
DePlazz
October 11th 2020


4486 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

Comments welcome. I was pleasantly surprised by this one. Fans of Napalm Death should definitely check this out.

Btw this clears some of the smoke around Mitch Harris' present involvement in Napalm Death: https://www.metalsucks.net/2020/10/05/mitch-harris-napalm-death-mystery-solved/

zaruyache
October 11th 2020


27382 Comments


totes doesn't just sound like his old napalm riffs or anything :p

DePlazz
October 11th 2020


4486 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

There's quite some instances where the riffing reminds me of Righteous Pigs, which is a plus

JayEnder
October 11th 2020


19814 Comments


Oh hell yeah this looks promising. Very welcoming review too man definitely gonna give this a jam soon m/

DePlazz
October 12th 2020


4486 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

Hm. If I were an Icelandic death metaller I'd definitely wish I had come up with this album first.

TheNotrap
Staff Reviewer
October 12th 2020


18936 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Nice review DePlazz, it would be nice if you could write more.

I'll check it out, I love Mitch Harris' riffing.





DePlazz
October 12th 2020


4486 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

Thanks man. I think you will enjoy this. I like to write and have a few things in the pipeline, but I'm a slow writer. And by that I mean reaaaaally sloooooww, haha.

TheNotrap
Staff Reviewer
October 14th 2020


18936 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

The album is indeed solid. I would prefer the production to be slightly filthier, but on the other hand, its polished approach gives it a certain charm.

Shame and Ridicule rules.

DePlazz
October 14th 2020


4486 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

Yeah that one slays. For the tracks without cleans, the production could indeed be a bit filthier. Mix could have left a bit more headroom in general.

The cleans are haunting in places. Quite a bit of replay value here in general. 'Retrograde' is my favorite track for now, love its quirkiness.

DDDeftoneDDD
October 14th 2020


22217 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Ei. TKS for the rec Plazzie. Just started. Opener jams hard.

DePlazz
October 14th 2020


4486 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

Cheers DD. I reckoned you might dig the progressive/weirder side of this m/

DDDeftoneDDD
October 14th 2020


22217 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Sure and the track Retrograde is def an highlight for me. Were the more s fw ones that gave me this stagnation feel towards the end. Other than that it riffs very well indeed.

DePlazz
October 14th 2020


4486 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

True, the concentration of straight forward tracks towards the end throws the album off balance a bit

DePlazz
October 16th 2020


4486 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

The animation for the 2 music vids issued so far is really sick:

- Blind Eye: https://youtu.be/jEBmxtir57k

- Hallmark Of Tyranny: https://youtu.be/BVwjA6WjJL8



DePlazz
August 23rd 2021


4486 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

Revisiting this, still a very solid metal release with tracks that stick. So sad this has stayed under the radar for so much listeners vis-à-vis Napalm Death's latest, since it's at least as good and a bit more consistent imo.



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