Album Review – Misanthropy / The Ever-Crushing Weight of Stagnance (2024)

Offering a refreshing raw, frantic and visceral approach to the tech death style, the new album by this Chicago outfit proves why they’re an ever-evolving band in the best way possible.

Offering a refreshing raw, frantic and visceral approach to the tech death style, Chicago, Illinois-based Progressive Death Metal entity Misanthropy is carving their own path and going about the style in their own unconventional manner in their new album The Ever-Crushing Weight of Stagnance, the follow-up to their 2018 album Abhorrent Metamorphosis, skittering off without prior warning, swerving violently and just doing things seemingly at random but mostly at break-neck speed. Displaying a sick artwork by Pedro Sena aka Lordigan (Analepsy, Cognitive, Extermination Dismemberment), the new album by Kevin Kovalsky on vocals and guitar, José Valles also on the guitar, Mark Bojkewycz on fretless bass and Paul Reszczynski on drums is perfect for fans of Origin, Archspire, Ulcerate and Fleshbore, among others, proving Misanthropy Misanthropy are an ever-evolving band, imbibing the influences around them and freely recreating them in their own unique manner which may not be too straightforward but it definitely makes for a thrilling listen.

It’s truly impressive how their tech and progressive vein already explodes in the very first seconds of Of Sulking And The Wrathful, with Mark and Paul sounding ruthless with their bass and beats, respectively, not to mention how deep, evil the guttural by Kevin sounds and feels; and it’s pedal to the metal in the infuriated The All-Devouring, where Kevin and José give a lecture in Death Metal riffage supported by the crushing drums by Paul and the always thunderous bass by Mark, resulting in one of the best songs of the album hands down. The band continues their path of savagery and intricacy in A Cure For The Pestilence, where their riffs and fretless bass will pierce our minds in the name of Technical Death Metal, offering us all nonstop action and, therefore, calling us all to slam into the circle pit.

The quartet keeps embellishing the airwaves with their fusion of Death Metal and complex, progressive sounds and tones in the form of Condemned To A Nameless Tomb, with Paul stealing the show with another ass-kicking performance behind his drums. Descent sounds just as wicked, experimental, whimsical and furious as its predecessors, a neck-breaking tune where the sick roars by Kevin will haunt your putrid souls forever; whereas investing in a more direct, in-your-face Death Metal sonority the band will hammer our heads mercilessly in Sepulcher, with the riffage by Kevin and José exhaling sheer heaviness and animosity until the very end. Last but definitely not least, a beyond somber, eerie start gradually evolves into the massive Consumed By The Abyss, with Mark’s fretless bass punching us hard in the face in the best progressive way imaginable.

The guys from Misanthropy are eager to know what you think of their music and their new album, and you can get in touch with them via Facebook or Instagram, and of course stream all of their wild creation on any streaming platform like Spotify. And above all that, let’s support those talented metallers by purchasing their bestial new album from their own BandCamp page, as well as from the Transcending Obscurity Records’ BandCamp, main storeEurope store, or US store, and you can also click HERE for all things Misanthropy. Those guys are dead serious about the quality of their music and absolutely sharp and focused on their new album, inviting us all for a wild Death Metal ride that might be too complex for some, but extremely awesome for most of us metalheads.

Best moments of the album: The All-Devouring, A Cure For The Pestilence and Sepulcher.

Worst moments of the album: Descent.

Released in 2024 Transcending Obscurity Records

Track listing
1. Of Sulking And The Wrathful 6:05
2. The All-Devouring 4:43
3. A Cure For The Pestilence 6:39
4. Condemned To A Nameless Tomb 6:24
5. Descent 6:44
6. Sepulcher 7:18
7. Consumed By The Abyss 6:37

Band members
Kevin Kovalsky – vocals, guitar
José Valles – guitar
Mark Bojkewycz – fretless bass
Paul Reszczynski – drums

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