Deftones - Gore: Oh the irony. You see we (meaning the music department and the general manager) just rehashed this conversation about how we should not write negative reviews… Yet, here we are. I will preface my review of the actual album with this: as someone who 1) grew up on metal/loud rock and 2) is an avowed – yet critical – Deftones fan, I have higher personal expectations for Chino Moreno et al. than I have for what we add to the radio station and promote for airplay. In other words, this is no White Pony, but it is still good enough to add. If that last sentence means nothing to you, dear reader, but you enjoy “loud rock” (whatever the fuck that actually means, considering most rock is, in fact, loud), STOP READING NOW AND SKIP AHEAD TO THE RECOMMENDED TRACKS, which I do thoroughly enjoy and would even play on my own show had I one this semester.
Nu metal is dead. Like dead as in PLEASE STOP MAKING NU METAL SO THAT WE CAN JUST APPRECIATE THE SUBGENRE'S FORMER GREATNESS INSTEAD OF BEING DISAPPOINTED BY NEW RELEASES. Of course, most people with any real music taste would argue that the genre has been total shit since the turn of the millennium because of, oh let’s see, Limp Bizkit,Linkin Park, Disturbed (those vocals though), Korn (because white guys with dreads and kilts are supposedly edgy I guess), the entire soundtrack to the Daredevil movie starring Ben Affleck (LOL), the fact that the genre was overwhelmingly embraced by the “hardcore” Christian rock bands, and the fact that Rammstein was strangely popular in America ever. This genre is almost singlehandedly the reason slightly older adults want to pretend the years 2000-2005ish never happened; how any nu metal bands have endured this long is mystery even to me, and I often broadcast my appreciation for nu metal – mostly using the continued excellence of Deftones as the main support for my argument. Gore, however, is mostly a disappointment (again, to me, an over-critical listener of this subgenre). The band sounds surprisingly sloppy and clichéd: on“Pittura Infamante” and “(L)MIRL,” Chino’s singing? a.k.a. wailing feels out of sync with the instrumentation, the cheesy electronic sounds in the intro to “Hearts/Wires” and “Xenon” are unnecessary and exemplify what is perhaps the most hated convention of the subgenre. Oh, and some of the songs are basically MySpace-era emo a la Circa Survive, namely “Phantom Bride” and“Prayers/Triangles,” which just seems like a move in the wrong direction for this (or really any) band. (I do admittedly appreciate this subgenre of music as well because I frequently have horrible taste/enjoy total trash and/or think I am still in the seventh grade, you know, when I thought Ronnie Radke, the singer of the band in this video, was hot and that Hot Topic was the best store in the mall.) This is most definitely NOT an album that anyone with any considerable good taste would want to consume the whole way through… And even people who think snakebite lip piercings look attractive would probably find this release disappointing if they took a moment to stop teasing their Edward Scissorhands-esque hairdo or penciling on their shaved off eyebrows and actually thought about the garbage they listen to. That said, some of the songs fucking shred. The titular track features appropriately utilized electronic elements to build the pace and melody of the song and Chino’s iconic screech for maximum heaviness; “Acid Hologram” is more a successful foray into stoner metal than strict nu metal; and one of the first singles, “Doomed User,” honestly sounds as though it belongs on the band’s masterwork, White Pony. I guess I would give this album a B-, which is a fine grade for some people…THRASHLEY
RIYL: Chevelle, System of a Down, any of the other bands mentioned in this review... I guess
Recommended Tracks: "Gore" (9), "Doomed User" (3), "Acid Hologram" (2), "Rubicon" (11)