Project 86
Project 86


5.0
classic

Review

by riffariffic7 USER (28 Reviews)
January 7th, 2015 | 9 replies


Release Date: 1998 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Thrilling and expertly-crafted, Project 86 assemble an album for the ages.

Darkness has helped mold some of the greatest albums in existence. From Alice in Chains' Dirt, to Nirvana's Nevermind and Rage Against the Machine's self-titled masterpiece. Each of these records has helped contribute something special to the overarching rock genre. In 1996, California-based alternative metal band Project 86 was formed, shortly after that they released their very own self-titled record on June 16th, 1998. The album was produced by the late, great Bryan Carlstrom, a man who helped engineer a string of excellent albums from bands such as the aforementioned Alice in Chains, Social Distortion as well as The Offspring. What makes these artists worth noting is the fact that Project 86 manages to take influence from all of them, along with others (such as Tool and P.O.D.), while maintaining a sound that comes across as being completely fresh and original. Inspiration is always great fuel, but simple admiration is never enough to ignite a fire.

"Spill Me" creeps up as the first track on the album, and it is equal parts eerie, menacing, and all-around breathtaking. Featuring hard-edged, down-tuned guitar-work, the song immediately gives a great cliff-notes version on what to expect from the remainder of this collection. Featuring hair-raising opening lines such as "back so full of scrapes / the miles I've walked of waste / to fade and fall away against / numb my hunger to taste" and grim, climatic lyrics "unrealistic ideals / promises I can't keep / I don't have those luxuries / I don't have the time you do to sleep", vocalist Andrew Schwab exhibits an impressive look into his inner torment and frustrations, making the album feel very personal in the process. Throughout the remainder of this record, Schwab wrestles against these relentless thoughts - of fear, guilt and ambivalence - with the greatest of successes: he does it without coming across as either whiny or self-indulgent, instead aiming for brute honesty, giving the record an overall feeling of catharsis because of his unflinching commitment. In spite of the darkness that brims throughout, the band seem to be enjoying themselves with this record, easily helping withstand any sort of repetition in the process, while making this an album that is a rightfully consistent and constantly well-executed machine.

Gritty and daring, and a lot like heavy metal records throughout the ages, Project 86 makes way for a plethora of 5-6 minute-long tracks that bask in plenty of frantic solos, and bone-chilling cliffhangers. The album closer in particular, "When Darkness Reigns", is the longest song on here, clocking-in at a near 7 minutes, it makes use of every-waking-second, illuminating a battle against the "death of dreams". What may be the best track on the record is a thought-provoking display in lyricism. "When Darkness Reigns" initially seems to be a very dark (pun intended) and brooding song, eventually, however, it grows into being a battle for one's soul as the song progresses to a more hopeful, rising finale, boasting such lines as "you've lost my enemy / and now taste defeat / now taste your own saliva / because you'll never quench the heat / arise from the dead and wake". While it may seem tough to handle such demons with such grace, coming across like a true veteran with his vocal performance here, Schwab aids in delivering a stunning portrayal of one's fight for survival against evil and all of its might.

Unique and unpredictable, the album is diverse in every regard, making way for subtle political commentary, as evident during "Independence?", along with an intriguing guest-spot. "Six Sirens" features P.O.D. front-man Sonny Sandoval who helps to add another level to an already strong album, making this easily one of the most energized tracks on the record, the song speeds along at a rapid-fire pace and never lets up, featuring a great chorus and fantastic riffs throughout; which are very reminiscent of Rage Against the Machine's "Wake Up". "Independence?" lands right before "Six Sirens", which is oddly labelled as track 7 on the album, and it cleverly criticizes political figures with lines such as "how does it feel to find yourself playing for the wrong team with the stakes so high / how does it feel to find yourself so blind to the sin you're hiding deep inside" at the beginning, and the song only gets angrier as it progresses to its harsh and explosive final moments; leading brilliantly into "Six Sirens". Much earlier in the record, "Rebuttal" takes a stab at salespeople with lines like "blame everyone but yourself / be careful what you ask for / 'cause you've got your wish with judgement / with payback / liar / you've got a lot of nothing to say / you've got a lot of hatred to spray". "Rebuttal" is a dazzling song with a blazing, almost wordless chorus that simply sounds like Schwab screaming "blame" while being distorted into the background by the band's high-voltage instrumentals.

Thankfully the album never lets up. After a slew of such great melodies, it continues said quality in songs like "Bleed Season", "Stalemate" and the single-worthy "Pipe Dream"; which was the basis for their follow-up album, Drawing Black Lines. To say that the album is loaded to the teeth with outstanding content is an understatement. Quality is delicately balanced throughout this record and you'd be hard-pressed to find a song that is either lazy or unmemorable in any way, every contribution feels earned and expertly-crafted in the process. This self-titled record is a clear-cut masterpiece that never dwindles in quality throughout the ten track, 49-minute runtime. For fans of Tool and Rage Against the Machine, this album is a must-hear in every conceivable way.



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user ratings (75)
3.3
great

Comments:Add a Comment 
riffariffic7
January 7th 2015


652 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

1. Spill Me - 5/5

2. Rebuttal - 5/5

3. Pipe Dream - 5/5

4. Stalemate - 5/5

5. Run - 4.5/5

6. Independence? - 5/5

7. Six Sirens (Featuring Sonny Sandoval) - 5/5

8. Bleed Season - 5/5

9. 1 X 7 - 4.5/5

10. When Darkness Reigns - 5/5

riffariffic7
January 7th 2015


652 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

This was a very tricky album to review. I'm not really familiar with this band, bought this CD at a pawn shop, not knowing a thing about it, and I ended up loving it and wondering how I haven't heard of these guys before. Drawing Black Lines is a great album too, but this album is a brilliant debut and I'm happy to finally have the review out. Check out either of the first three tracks if you haven't heard it before, you'll know right away whether or not this is for you. But I have a feeling that fans of Tool and Rage will love this as much as I do (hopefully that overall score will be risen a bit higher with some more people giving this a listen).

Supercoolguy64
January 7th 2015


11787 Comments


nioce review, pos'd

Thibs
January 7th 2015


2986 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

i loved these guys back in the day. def a unique brand of hard rock / nu-metal. i think their debut is pretty solid. when darkness reigns is a great closer.



good review.

metalheadrunner
January 8th 2015


343 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Great review man, about to pos. Project is one of my favorite bands, their old stuff is probably their best work, though their new stuff isn't bad either. I actually talked a little bit with Schwab via email, he's a pretty solid guy (and that's not a lie). But yeah, this is a great review, great work.

riffariffic7
January 8th 2015


652 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

@Supercoolguy64 and Thibs - Thanks, guys.



@metalheadrunner - I appreciate it, man, and I bet Schwab would be a great guy to talk to, listening to this CD again definitely makes me want to check out their other stuff someday soon. I enjoyed Drawing Black Lines, but I definitely don't think it's as great as this (the final track is kind of meh, but songs like "Stein's Theme" are amazing). I got your message on my wall, I'll have to check out your Digital Summer review too, I see you gave it a 2.5, I'm not too far off myself as I just gave it a 3.

Wizard
January 8th 2015


20510 Comments


Nothing touches Drawing Black Lines and I mean nothing.

riffariffic7
January 8th 2015


652 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

@Wizard - What would you rate this and what would you rate Drawing Black Lines? I obviously gave this a 5 and I gave Drawing Black Lines a 4.5 because I wasn't a big fan of "23", plus I felt that the album wasn't as well-arranged as this one was. Just my opinion though. What'd you think of this? Why doesn't it touch Drawing Black Lines when it clearly helped pave the way for that album?

Source
May 7th 2019


19917 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

album slays



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