Periphery is streaming their new album Juggernaut: Alpha, which can be streamed here. The album is out January 27, 2015 via Sumerian Records.
Tag Archives: Periphery
From First To Last Signs With Sumerian Records, Streaming “Dead Trees”
From First To Last has signed with Sumerian Records and is releasing their digital single for “Dead Trees,” which can be streamed here. The current incarnation features Periphery vocalist Spencer Sotelo. More information on the band’s release plans in the near future.
Carolina Rebellion Announces Line Up
Monster Energy Carolina Rebellion has announced their lineup, happening May 2 and 3, 2015 at Rock City Campgrounds at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Charlotte, NC.
Saturday, May 2
Korn
Marilyn Manson
Rise Against
Sammy Hagar & The Circle
Chevelle
Cheap Trick
Papa Roach
Bush
Scott Weiland and the Wildabouts
Jackyl
Of Mice & Men
Live
Motionless In White
Periphery
Beartooth
Young Guns
Marmozets
Islander
and more
Sunday, May 3
Slipknot
Godsmack
Slayer
Slash featuring Myles Kennedy and The Conspirators
Breaking Benjamin
Halestorm
Queensrÿche
The Pretty Reckless
In This Moment
In Flames
Tremonti
Suicidal Tendencies
Testament
Hatebreed
Starset
Butcher Babies
We Are Harlot
Exodus
And more
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Periphery Debut Graveless Track, New Tour Draws Closer
Periphery is preparing to drop their sprawling double album effort Juggernaut on January 27th from Sumerian Records. In the meantime feat your ears on ‘Graveless’ from the Omega half of the offering. Listen to the track below. Tour dates are also around the corner too, so check the links below to get tickets.
Press Notes:
Periphery, who release two new albums on Jan. 27 via Sumerian Records: Juggernaut: Alpha and Juggernaut: Omega, is streaming “Graveless” from the Omega release via MetalSucks (http://www.metalsucks.net/?p=161360).
“Graveless is one of my favorite songs on the record! It’s fast and aggressive, but morphs into something beautiful and catchy as the song progresses,” explained Adam “Nolly” Getgood. “There’s an element of the classic Periphery sound in there, but with all band members pushing to take things to the next level it’s got a whole palette of colours that the band hasn’t explored before too.”
Digital and physical pre-orders for the pair of albums are available now with instant downloads of “22 Faces,” “The Scourge” and “The Bad Thing” available via iTunes (http://hyperurl.co/Juggernaut_Alpha and http://hyperurl.co/Juggernaut_Omega). Physical pre-order bundles, which include The JuggerDoc, a documentary on the making of the new albums, are available viahttp://sumerianmerch.com.
Periphery’s tour, with support from Nothing More, Wovenwar and Thank You Scientist, is days away, launching Jan. 10 at Cat’s Cradle in Carrboro, N.C. Tickets are on-sale now with VIP packages available via Soundrink.com.
Confirmed dates are as follows:
January 10 Carrboro, NC Cat’s Cradle
January 11 Charlotte, NC The Fillmore
January 12 Atlanta, GA Masquerade
January 13 Tampa, FL Orpheum
January 14 Ft. Lauderdale, FL Revolution Live
January 16 New Orleans, LA House of Blues
January 17 Houston, TX House of Blues
January 18 Dallas, TX House of Blues
January 20 Albuquerque, NM Sunshine Theatre
January 21 Phoenix, AZ Club Red
January 22 Los Angeles, CA House of Blues
January 23 Anaheim, CA Yost Theater
January 26 San Francisco, CA The Fillmore
January 27 Portland, OR Hawthorne Theater
January 28 Seattle, WA El Corazon
January 31 Denver, CO Summit Music Hall
February 2 Minneapolis, MN Varsity Theater
February 3 Chicago, IL House of Blues
February 4 Detroit, MI St. Andrew’s Hall
February 6 Toronto, ON Opera House
February 7 Montreal, QC Corona Theatre
February 8 Albany, NY Upstate Concert Hall
February 9 Rochester, NY Water Street Music Hall
February 11 Boston, MA Paradise Rock Club
February 12 New York, NY Irving Plaza
February 13 Silver Spring, MD The Fillmore
February 14 Philadelphia, PA District N9ne
April 25 – 26 Jacksonville, FL Welcome to Rockville Festival
May 15 -17 Columbus, OH Rock on the Range
Under the Surface – Underground Bands Spotlight
This month’s Under the Surface has us travelling from our friends in the great north, Canada to the comfortable confines of Boston all the way down to North Carolina and finally making our last stop across the world in New Zealand. This of course is all in the pursuit of the latest and greatest in unsigned or undiscovered metal music.
We begin with one man wrecking crew Justin Chorley and his latest musical endeavor, Hirsute. Still Waiting is melodic doom metal of the highest order. It’s a bit baffling that there can be an act of this caliber that hasn’t already been nabbed by Relapse or Southern Lord. And this isn’t just fanboy hyperbole. Chorley singlehandedly may have brewed up the depressing lovechild of Opeth and Paradise Lost. Not unlike Deafheaven’s Sunbather, the key to Still Waiting is how it casts light and shade. In order to really appreciate the storm and soul-crushing riffs you need the quiet, introspective moments of songs like ‘Sang the Bird from its Cage’ and the title-track. But don’t take my word for it. Find Hirsute on bandcamp and see for yourself. You won’t be disappointed.
9/10
From one man’s metallic vision we move to another’s in Pyramids on Mars. The instrumental brainchild of Hamilton Ontario’s Kevin Estrella, Pyramids on Mars focuses more on melodies and very clean/technical guitar passages. With no singing and drums only there to keep time, Estrella’s shredding is truly the marquee event here. When he shreds, he shreds. It’s the stuff that the John Petrucci hideous t-shirt crowd loves as evidenced on ‘Descending Saturn.’ But when we don’t have an abundance of fancy fret work and are only left with the thin sounding programmed drums and synths that’s when Pyramids on Mars starts to lose momentum. Come for Estrella’s axe skills, but he’s yet to find a reason for you to stay.
5/10
Following the more progressive metal route are Boston’s own, Chronologist. In the wake of Periphery and djent fever sweeping across all local markets it’s beyond gratifying and exciting to hear a new collective that isn’t just aping Meshuggah palm-muting and calling themselves “progressive” like every other band at the Palladium these days. It’s unclear if Chronologist will continue to move forward without a vocalist, but it’s working for them. Songs like ‘Bazooka’ and ‘San Juan’ have enough dynamics and intricate guitar work that it eliminates the need for singing. Going instrumental is something even more established prog-metal acts should consider (looking at you Dream Theater). To be around for barely over a year and have an instrumental Demo be better than most of your peer’s LPs is a strong start. Keep up the fine work, gentlemen.
8/10
All Hell’s The Devil’s Work is the kind of LP that sounds like it was released 30 years ago, conceived after many brews and bong rips. Down to the production and riffs, it’s an album that reeks of Venom and Hellhammer, yet it’s a power trio from Asheville, North Carolina. If you have a fine appreciation for early 80s metal particularly the darker side of the British Wave of Heavy Metal you can have some fun with The Devil’s Work. When it finds its pace it alternates between Show No Mercy and Orgasmatron. Which is awesome but when it teeters off it has a hard time figuring out if it’s an homage or if it’s just dated. Especially since today there are many young bands like Skeletonwitch and Toxic Holocaust who balance an old-school sound without sounding rehashed. Here for every rager like ‘The Reaper’s Touch’ you have to deal with a dud like ‘Firewalker.’ Dang shame that it’s inconsistent, but there’s enough thrash on The Devil’s Work to warrant still wearing your bullet belt.
7/10
Lastly we have the new 7” Burn the Witch EP from Southern California’s enigmatic Son of Man. Since they refuse to play shows the only thing we can really determine based on their limited output is that they are angry and also have appear to have an affinity for metallic hardcore. Unlike All Hell, Son of Man is balancing some tried and tested genres (thrash, hardcore, doom) without sounding like you’ve heard it before. It hammers its point home quickly in similar fashion to Black Breath and leaves you wanting more. Actually it would have been nice if this was a proper LP with even more pummeling and properly timed breakdowns.
8/10
HANSEL LOPEZ
Periphery Premiere New Song, Plot Juggernaut Album and Tour
Progressive metal manics Periphery premiered a new song today, ’22 Faces’, in anticipation of their ambitious double-album dropping in early 2015 on Sumerian Records. In addition to a flurry of activity to promote Juggernaut, the band is hitting the road with Nothing More, Wovenwar and Thank You Scientist.
Official Press Release:
WASHINGTON,Dec. 15, 2014– Periphery, the DC-based sextet that Revolver Magazine recently said “stand at the vanguard of a new, and thoroughly modern, musical movement”, premiere the new song “22 Faces” via Rolling Stone
(http://www.rollingstone.com/music/premieres/hear-peripherys-insane-prog-metal-shredfest-22-faces-20141215).
Digital pre-orders for the band’s forthcoming dual album releases, Juggernaut: Alpha and Juggernaut: Omega, are available today (https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/juggernaut-omega/id944060803andhttps://itunes.apple.com/us/album/juggernaut-alpha/id944061541) with instant downloads offered for “The Scourge,” “The Bad Thing” and “22 Faces.” Physical pre-order bundles are available now viahttp://sumerianmerch.com. The physical release of Juggernaut: Omega will be packaged with The JuggerDoc, a documentary on the making of the two albums.
“’22 Faces’ is a track off of Juggernaut: Alpha that I happen to be super proud of. One minute it is ambient and pretty, and the next minute it is assaulting you from every which way,” sing Spencer Sotelo explained to Rolling Stone. “This track also goes right to the heart of the Juggernaut story and gives a good look at some of the conflicts that the main character has to endure.”
Periphery documented the recording process for the ambitious, two album release and is releasing footage as a series of webisodes via Sumerian Records’ YouTube page (youtube.com/sumericanrecords). Clips featuring drummer Matt Halpern and guitar player Jake Bowen have surfaced with four more installments to come, the next arriving onDec. 21and profiling guitar player Mark Holcomb’s work on the albums.
A five-week tour kicks off on Jan. 10at Cat’s Cradle in Carrboro, N.C. A video teaser for the tour, which includes openers for the upcoming tour are Nothing More, Wovenwar and Thank You Scientist, is available here:http://youtu.be/oXL0yHsKGl0. Tickets are on-sale now with VIP packages available via Soundrink.com.
Confirmed dates are as follows:
January 10 Carrboro, NC Cat’s Cradle
January 11 Charlotte, NC The Fillmore
January 12 Atlanta, GA Masquerade
January 13 Tampa, FL Orpheum
January 14 Ft. Lauderdale, FL Revolution Live
January 16 New Orleans, LA House of Blues
January 17 Houston, TX House of Blues
January 18 Dallas, TX House of Blues
January 20 Albuquerque, NM Sunshine Theatre
January 21 Phoenix, AZ Club Red
January 22 Los Angeles, CA House of Blues
January 23 Anaheim, CA Yost Theater
January 26 San Francisco, CA The Fillmore
January 27 Portland, OR Hawthorne Theater
January 28 Seattle, WA El Corazon
January 31Denver, CO Summit Music Hall
February 2 Minneapolis, MN Varsity Theater
February 3 Chicago, IL House of Blues
February 4 Detroit, MI St. Andrew’s Hall
February 6 Toronto, ON Opera House
February 7 Montreal, QC Corona Theatre
February 8 Albany, NY Upstate Concert Hall
February 9 Rochester, NY Water Street Music Hall
February 11 Boston, MA Paradise Rock Club
February 12 New York, NY Irving Plaza
February 13 Silver Spring, MD The Fillmore
February 14 Philadelphia, PA District N9ne
April 25 – 26 Jacksonville, FL Welcome to Rockville Festival
May 15 -17 Columbus, OH Rock on the Range
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Periphery, Wovenwar, Nothing More and Thank You Scientist Book North American Tour
Periphery, Nothing More, Wovenwar and Thank You Scientist will be venturing on a North American tour in January.
NOTHING MORE w/ Periphery, Wovenwar & Thank You Scientist
Jan 10: Cat’s Cradle – Carrboro, NC
Jan 11: The Fillmore – Charlotte, NC
Jan 12: The Masquerade – Atlanta, GA
Jan 13: The Orpheum – Ybor City, FL
Jan 14: Revolution – Ft. Lauderdale, FL
Jan 16: House of Blues – New Orleans, LA
Jan 17: House of Blues – Houston, TX
Jan 18: House of Blues – Dallas, TX
Jan 20: Sunshine Theater – Albuquerque, NM
Jan 21: Club Red – Tempe, AZ (Phoenix)
Jan 22: House of Blues – West Hollywood, CA (Los Angeles)
Jan 23: The Yost Theater – Santa Ana, CA (Anaheim)
Jan 26: The Fillmore – San Francisco, CA
Jan 27: Hawthorne Theatre – Portland, OR
Jan 28: El Corazon – Seattle, WA
Jan 30: In The Venue – Salt Lake City, UT
Jan 31: The Summit Music Hall – Denver, CO
Feb 02: Varsity Theater – Minneapolis, MN
Feb 03: House of Blues – Chicago, IL
Feb 04: St. Andrew’s Hall – Detroit, MI
Feb 06: The Opera House – Toronto, ON
Feb 07: Corona Theatre – Montreal, QC
Feb 08: Upstate Concert Hall – Clifton Park, NY (Albany)
Feb 09: Waterstreet Music Hall – Rochester, NY
Feb 11: Paradise Rock Club – Boston, MA
Feb 13: The Fillmore – Silver Spring, MD
Feb 14: District N9ne – Philadelphia, PA
Monuments – The Amanuensis
Alongside the likes of Textures and TesseracT, Monuments were one of the driving forces of djent during the movements’ initial explosion, back when it little more than an online community. In the following years, djent became huge news with bands such as TesseracT, Uneven Structure and Chimp Spanner taking the world by storm whilst Monuments were yet to release their debut album. Finally in 2012 Gnosis saw the light of day (with guest work from Chimp Spanner’s Paul Ortiz) with the band having a lot of ground and momentum to recover, but a set of songs that rightfully put them in the top crop of such acts.
Two years on and the band have a new album in The Amanuensis (Century Media), a new vocalist in ex-Periphery vocalist Chris Barreto, and, as a result, somewhat of an evolution to their palette. Chris’ vocals vastly improve on Matt Rose’s, with a range, diversity and bravery akin to Mike Patton. The typical transition between soaring singing and growls are present and done to a top level while elsewhere there are hints at his experimentation. ‘Saga City’ for example begins with a near gospel like soulful vocal passage before the song erupts.
The rest of the band seems rejuvenated by the new presence at front. As brilliant as Gnosis was, it did prove fairly straightforward with a more limited vocalist (well, as straightforward as a prog metal band can be), but here they are beginning to feel unshackled. Musically there is no huge departure from before, songs still have that recognisable tone and are founded on massive melodic passages and chugging riffs, but a wealth of ideas is beginning to creep through. Final track ‘Samsara’ brings the whole album concept full circle with a lyrical repetition of opener ‘I, The Creator’, a chanted incantation over a moody folky back drop.
The Amanuensis offers some of the bands most memorable and best songs such as ‘I, The Creator’ and ‘Garden Of Sankhara’ and the only niggle here is the thought of how much further they could take their sound now they have a vocalist with a huge dynamic and near seamless delivery. The Amanuensis is a bar-setter for djent, and still it only hints at the possibilities of what these guys can offer.
9.0/10.0
CHRIS TIPPELL
Summer Slaughter Live Report
Another Summer Slaughter tour descended on America and Ghost Cult was there! Sure, kids on the interwebs bitched and moaned about how “extreme” the so-called “most extreme tour of the summer” really was this go around, but who really cares. Either you went and rocked out, or didn’t go and complained. The metal scene these days is far too diverse for such elitist attitudes to keep thriving, and no one is denying that the early years of the tour had some of the most brutal bands assembled on one stage ever. On the the other hand, when you can bring the current crop of some of the most exciting progressive bands in heavy music out on the road for two months, and criss-cross a country like the USA, you are doing it right my friends.Continue reading
The Summer Slaughter Tour 2013 Starts This Weekend
The annual edition of The Slaughter Tour is upon us and we are stoked! Not every one was thrilled when the lineup was announced mind you, as the tour had previously been a beacon of death metally goodness, and now it is a more diverse affair. As the ever-shifting musical landscape continues to evolve in the place of the deathcore bands were growing accustomed to seeing, now the prog and djent bands have fully taken hold of the tour. It is not a completely unwelcome change, but there are bound to be some who will grouse about the bands, no matter who plays unless Necrophagist shows up.Continue reading