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Earthborn Evolution

Canada Country of Origin: Canada

Earthborn Evolution
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Type: Full-Length
Release Date: October 24th, 2014
Genre: Death, Progressive, Technical
1. Elusive Reverence
2. Sous La Lueur De L'Empereur
4. The Great Revelation
5. Neurotical Transmissions
6. Abstrait Dialog
7. The Axiom
8. L'exorde
9. Theatrical Delirium


Review by Adam M on December 12, 2014.

A hugely jazzy type of death metal is performed by the members of Beyond Creation. While there is an aggression to the music, the technicality is the aspect that seems to win out most of the time. The musicians are able to stop and start on a dime and layer all sorts of crazy instrumentation on top of each other.

The feeling caused by the album is sometimes splendid, but often hit or miss. When there is more form in the song-writing, the structures are tighter and the band sounds marvelous. When they’re trying to be overly technical with the passages, things tend to wander off into oblivion more often. The style is very similar the one Obscura used on their last album, Omnivium. In comparison, that album is more memorable, while this one has a more interesting jazz slant. Both are very good albums overall, but get too much credit from the death metal crowd. Albums such as Individual Thought Patterns and Unquestionable Presence are more refined than these. The level of polish in the production and quality of the performance brings the quality of Earthborn Evolution up greatly. When the album fires on all cylinders, it is quite a beast. There are plenty of moments that are intriguing throughout, such as the title track Earthborn Evolution, but the lack of cohesion brings the overall quality down a notch on occasion. The fantastic portions do win out overall and result in a pleasant listen.

Beyond Creation certainly have the talent and ambition to make a strong mark on the death metal genre. Earthborn Evolution brings a whole lot to the table for death metal, but it’s not the masterpiece or game changer that many have been making it out to be. It’s still a fascinating piece of music, however.

Rating: 7.5/10

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