My Bitter End - The Renovation

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Album Details

Title: The Renovation
Artist: My Bitter End
Release Date: 2/6/2007
Label: Uprising Records
Duration: 42:12
Album Type(s): lyrics/libretto
UPC: 637339004722
Genre: Rock
Styles: Death Metal, Heavy Metal, Speed Metal
Moods: Aggressive, Crunchy, Intense, Ominous, Angry, Fiery, Confrontational, Fierce, Rambunctious, Dramatic, Gritty, Menacing, Rebellious, Harsh, Hostile, Suffocating, Uncompromising, Theatrical
Total Copies: 1
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. It's Time
  2. Becoming Misfortune
  3. To All Things Expendable
  4. Salvage the Structure
  5. The Suburbs Breed Showmen
  6. Comfortable with Corpses
  7. The Renovation
  8. Finding Level Ground
  9. Subtleties [Instrumental]
  10. Dirt Helmet
  11. A Proper Sendoff

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2007CDUprising Records47

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

The title of My Bitter End's second album, The Renovation, is an open admission of recent changes within the group, which brought in replacements at both the singer and second guitarist positions, and redirected their vision towards a more technical, versatile, and brutal, convergence of heavy metal and hardcore elements. This was unquestionably accomplished, and even though the 2000s are positively fraught with precocious young bands excelling at the art of all-over-the-place-itis, My Bitter End show admirable talent for siphoning their oodles of influences into frequently memorable tunes. As usual, it's all a matter of contrasts, contrasts, contrasts; switching from oppressive bouts of roaring, grindcore-like intensity into musical chords and even uplifting melodies and back, at the drop of a hat -- all the while skewing traditional rock song structures as a matter of course. Highlights within this dizzying maelstrom include "To All Things Expendable," with its unusually linear bursts of speedy metal riffs; "The Suburbs Breed Showmen" and "Subtleties," with their soaring harmonies mixed with vicious, math-metal breakdowns; and the troublesomely titled "Comfortable with Corpses," with its near-black metal blastbeat assaults. The title track, too, provides a stellar example of the band's trademark flurries of twin-harmony guitars (like Thin Lizzy at 78 rpm), while occasional atmospheric interludes ("It's Time," "Dirt Helmet," etc.) might distract from, but hardly condemn the general proceedings. All in all, The Renovation thrusts My Bitter End into the thick of a crowded and competitive extreme musical scene, but at least they appear to be going into it with renewed focus and commitment. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Jamie KingMastering, Mixing, Engineer
Tim StrugglePerformer