As with most CHIMAIRA records (and everything Cleveland) the composition of the record was fraught with adversity. Longtime drummer Andols Herrick, bass player Jim Lamarca and electronic knob twister Chris Spicuzza had fallen away from the band. This left CHIMAIRA’s flagship member and singer Mark Hunter and guitarists Rob Arnold and Matt Devries with an album to record with no rhythm section or an effects specialist. The splintered Chimaira could have stared at the sun dissecting separate fires then converging into a singular sphere of blinding defeat. Most bands would have. But most bands aren’t from Cleveland. And only one band is CHIMAIRA. Instead, Hunter, Arnold, and Devries pushed themselves into frequent collaborator Ben Schigel’s Spider Studios with bloodied teeth and balled fists, hell bent on birthing what anyone else would have aborted.
Instead of filling the cavities in the lineup with new members, Hunter, Arnold, and Schigel took on the roles themselves, constructing each of the songs creating electronic auras and having Schigel man the drums. After only eight weeks in the lab CHIMAIRA emerged with their sixth album.
The eponymous opening track summons the ferocity of a band hungry and disgusted. Mark Hunter’s guttural barks declare a twisted war while the guitars shift from ravenous chugging to soaring leads. “Clockwork,” a song that refuses to grow stale after countless plays provides a chorus that sees the band tastefully using layers of clean vocals while not sacrificing CHIMAIRA’s severity, a theme throughout the album. Tracks like “Losing My Mind” and “Time is Running Out” lyrically reflect the tribulations of a group under the gun and both include the band’s signature groove that is utterly crushing. But it’s songs like “Trigger Finger,” “Born in Blood,” and “Scapegoat” that will leave janitor’s mopping up blood from venue floors across the World. Throughout the record the sonic layers are far from trite ear candy, giving an oceanic depth to each track. Solos and leads by Arnold confirm his status as the next shredder to beat. Schigel on drums goes from syncopated to bar room brawler and back again with no regrets for the jaws he dropped along the way.
Beyond the stellar musicianship and crisp yet raw mixing from metal mastering mainstay Zeuss however, is the song writing. It’d be easy for a veteran metal band to fart out an album of “borecore” breakdowns and 0-1-0 bullshit riffs. But CHIMAIRA never settle. The power, authenticity and forward momentum of the “The Age of Hell” are complimented, never betrayed by the band’s technical prowess. Listeners will leave this record equally frustrated that they can’t figure out how to play the tracks, as they are wanting to scream along in their cars or at CHIMAIRA’s legendary live experiences.
And now the eclipse of what you thought you knew about contemporary metal has begun. There is a new definition announced by distorted, yet familiar faces. CHIMAIRA will take you through “The Age of Hell.” Let’s hope you are prepared.
The Age of Hell is out now via 3Wise Records/Sony, and features two bonus tracks.
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