Genre-blending Extreme Metallers We Do Not Belong Here are releasing their new EOP this week, Strange to Cope In Today’s World! The band has a range of influences but has a foot-on-your-throat approach to creating! Definitly one of the better new releases heading into the homestretch of the year! Stream the EP now!
Pre-order:
https://wedonotbelonghere.bandcamp.com/album/strange-to-cope-in-todays-world
Bio:
Formed in 2022 as an outlet for the trio to reject stylistic constraints, We Do Not Belong Here writes music that snakes around clear genre definitions. The chaotic sound of the band is a reflection of the members. AJ Martinez and Troy Bennett, members of Louisiana blackened death metal powerhouse Faustian, create a sinister sonic landscape for the shredded vocals of Nat Heck, member of Louisiana emo staple Wonder Kid. With one foot in the world of black and death metal and one foot in the world of emo and post-hardcore, Louisiana’s We Do Not Belong Here is the sum of seemingly disparate parts.
We Do Not Belong Here’s debut EP, Strange to Cope in Today’s World, recorded with James Whitten of Hightower Recording in New Orleans, is a chaotic journey. At the EP’s most mournful, Heck’s pained delivery and confessional lyrics play against the haunting melodies of Bennett’s guitar while Martinez’s propulsive drumming drives the band forward. These moments are a counterpoint to the EP’s most aggressive moments when all three members lock in on powerful rhythms and vocal deliveries. Strange to Cope in Today’s World is a lamentation of living in a region on the brink of fascism and environmental ruin.
EP Credits:
Guitars and Vocals – Troy Bennett
Bass and Vocals – Nat Heck
Drums – AJ Martinez
All songs by We Do Not Belong Here.
Lyrics for tracks 2 and 4 by Nat Heck.
Lyrics for track 3 by Troy Bennett.
Lyrics for track 5 by Nat Heck and Troy Bennett.
Samples taken from a homemade tape of a sermon by an unnamed minister titled “Rapture” and dated 7/9/1972.
Recorded at Hightower Recording by James Whitten.
Mixed and Mastered by James Whitten.
Artwork by Kara Heck.
Photography by Nat Heck.