This multinational Progressive/Groove Metal four-headed creature is back with its sophomore opus, looking at forces beyond human control and how we respond in the face of helplessness.
Looking at forces beyond human control and how we respond in the face of helplessness, building and exploring tensions created from a sense of unease, Fates, the sophomore album by the multinational Progressive/Groove Metal four-headed creature Eight Lives Down, is a journey into the shadows of mortality. Recorded and mixed by Dan Baune at Tectonic Tone, mastered by Rasmus Andersen at Raw Sound Studio, and with a classy artwork by Diana Sawicka of What the Moon Brings, the follow-up to their 2020 debut Humans turns inward and downward, fixating on death, decay, and forces beyond human control. It’s a gaze into the abyss, and a study in how we respond when all sense of agency is stripped away, all masterfully brought into being by Aliki Katriou on vocals, Paul Allain on the guitar, Marcin Orczyk on bass, and Rodrigo Moraes Cruz on drums.
Dark and sluggish sounds kick off the opening tune Void before exploding into a modern-day blend of Groove and Progressive Metal, all embraced by Aliki’s vicious, raspy vociferations, who also declaims the words to the next song, titled Dog’s Breakfast, with tons of passion (“Everything changed seemingly overnight / Everything messed up and suddenly felt so right / Everyone covered eyes and ears / And climbed inside the anthill / Of despair and death / To practice learned helplessness”) amidst an overdose of heaviness. Fishbones sounds less violent while also leaning towards more melodic and experimental sounds, with Paul’s guitar transpiring electricity; and Aliki’s dark and pensive vocals are perfect for Phobia, again exploding into a feast of heavy and groovy sounds with Rodrigo dictating the song’s frantic pace with his classic beats and fills. Deicide brings forward more of the band’s caustic riffs supported by Marcin’s heavy-as-hell bass and Rodrigo’s killer beats; and Aliki sometimes sounds like a Death Metal version of the iconic Mike Patton, which is obviously awesome, like in the visceral tune The Point.
Then the band switches gears to a more melancholic, darker sonority in Green Light in the Distance without forgetting to blast our faces with their harsh sounds and tones; and the quartet still has a lot of fuel to burn, with Left Behind being a very good example of how they can mix harsher metal sounds with nuances from several non-metal styles. Marcin then blasts his bass, extracting pure metallic sounds in Storm, while Aliki keeps declaiming the song’s Stygian words nonstop (“It starts like liquid, water / One and the same / And I find comfort in the shelter / Hiding from the blame / I feed off you every day / And you infect my mind / In this race of coming out ahead / I’ve already fallen behind”). Constantinople is a bit disappointing compared to the rest of the album, sounding generic at times, but the band gets back on track in The Process of Dying, one of the most diverse, dynamic and vibrant of all songs, with Aliki kicking some serious ass on vocals. Furthermore, the bonus track (available on Spotify) featuring the iconic metal choir Hellscore, directed by Noa Gruman, sounds even more powerful.
Musically, Eight Lives Down maintained their progressive spin, with raw thrash foundations audibly peaking through in Fates (available in full on Spotify), while the album weaves Greek Zeibekiko, snotty Punk, Black Metal, NWOBHM, and even Brazilian Forró rhythms into a dynamic sonic landscape, being therefore highly recommended for fans of System of a Down, Rage Against the Machine, Sepultura, Carcass, Pantera, Prong, Faith No More, Lamb of God, and Jinjer. you can find those unstoppable metallers on Facebook and on Instagram, subscribe to their YouTube channel, and purchase Fates from their own BandCamp page, from their webstore, or by clicking HERE. In other words, simply sit down, relax, and descend into the abyss of heavy music crafted by Eight Lives Down. You won’t regret the experience at all.
Best moments of the album: Void, Phobia, Storm and The Process of Dying.
Worst moments of the album: Constantinople.
Released in 2020 Independent
Track listing
1. Void 4:51
2. Dog’s Breakfast 5:39
3. Fishbones 4:35
4. Phobia 4:28
5. Deicide 4:20
6. The Point 3:17
7. Green Light in the Distance 7:16
8. Left Behind 4:48
9. Storm 7:33
10. Constantinople 4:56
11. The Process of Dying 7:17
Spotify bonus track
12. The Process of Dying (Hellscore version) 7:14
Band members
Aliki Katriou – vocals
Paul Allain – guitar
Marcin Orczyk – bass
Rodrigo Moraes Cruz – drums
Guest musicians
Hellscore – metal choir on “The Process of Dying”






