Album Rating: 5.0
Ya can't be pulling the generic card then. Polaris is as generic as it gets, sir. Why I consider this to be the golden age of djentcore is that they specifically do not go the constant chorus route with the same rinse and repeat structures. The songs feel chaotic while also maintaining coherence. The riffs are the focal point, not the vocals.
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Album Rating: 0.5
RIP Ryan so friggin hard man.
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Album Rating: 0.5
I definitely am pulling the generic card Tundra buddy lol. Polaris might be generic too, they just hit hard for me. Different strokes and all that.
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Tundra likes djent because of whatever logic that I don't care to follow. I like junz because it gives my brain dopamine to open some fookin' pits up.
We are not the same.
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Album Rating: 5.0
Of course. RIP Ryan Siew, but I can still be critical of the music he wrote while he was still here.
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Album Rating: 5.0
My favorite kind of djentcore is the mathcore adjacent variety. It uses those dissonant chords. Discordant tapping runs, while still keeping things cohesive with the song writing. That assortment is not generic by any measure. The most generic bands include Spiritbox, modern Born of Osiris, and a bunch of bands that used to be far more compelling honestly. ERRA, for instance, pales compared to their formative records.
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Album Rating: 5.0
If the albums I suggest, like Singularity, or Periphery P2 (which we all know you can't stand) is still too generic for you. Give Sentinels - Collapse by Design, Oceans Ate Alaska - Hikari, Vitalism - Causa a spin
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