Demon Hunter, as the name suggests, seeks and finds solace in
spirituality while musically exorcising the beast within. The cover booklet is
cleverly designed in "testament" like layout and table of contents as
if for a not so subtle reminder that we are onto a new "contractual"
obligation with a higher power that's stepping in to finally deliver us from the
evils of industry baseness… they might've suspected but could they really have
known?
Much like many on the SS roster, Demon Hunter's not an easy
listen at first. They become refreshingly listenable without irritating
repetition and blindsiding song constructs that have worn the beaten path into
our pan-fried brains for far too long now with regard to anything termed
"new". Demon Hunter's debut record's received an early share of
positive press and began a ripple effect with listeners ready to embrace a new
breed of Metal practitioners capable of balancing old and new without breaking
tradition. "Screams Of The Undead," "I Have Seen Where It
Grows," and "Infected" are early indications of modern aggression
with technical fortitude, where menacing chops plod step for step with low E
primacy and Grind-Core, Death screams, and "Nu" run roughshod over
stimulating monologues of a soul seeking refuge.
Demon Hunter's mastered the art of bridging the once great
breed of bands from back when Fear Factory, Deftones, and Machine Head reigned
over a purposeful revolution that gave rise to another level of power and drama
before snuffing itself in a sea of sellout. Some will point to today's standard
Slipknot, some could pull something like Soulfly or Sepultura from here, and
Demon Hunter's an offshoot of either or all, without question. Regardless,
listeners will realize a quick jump in playability happening, where blastbeats
rise and fall with chronologic imprecision; harmonic fills and pedal effects
invade dense riffs; vocals rage and roar before an intrusive chorus beckons a
gentler discourse; Such are utilized to full impact, and with many structural
components based on some of SS's own domestic specialists like Living
Sacrifice's or Zao's style of aggressive intrigue and pitchshifting
attributes.
"My Throat Is An Open Grave" is a disquieting step
beyond the power ballad path amidst a hollow ringing of bow strings and mournful
vocals; "Through The Black" and "Turn Your Back And Run" up
the potency factor while following a tortured soul at the crossroads; "The
Gauntlet" makes a powerful statement in dead silence by comparison at the
end, where again lies the "Open Grave" characterization of earlier and
the acceptance of a decided fate as the hour draws near. Deeper, darker, and
with greater depth than many, Demon Hunter yields a new dynamic to the stodgy
rip-offs currently marketed as Metal.