Burnt
By The Sun
Burnt
By The Sun (2001)
review
by: Jason
Thornberry
Date:
4/3/01
A
preposterously passionate bombardment of hardcore fury.
The walls of the studio that this was recorded in must
have been shaking while guitar strings snapped and drumsticks
were reduced to sawdust for the hillbilly bar down the
road in Parsippany, New Jersey, where this EP was recorded.
A complimentary nod in Drop Dead's direction as this band manage to sound weighty and swift at the same time. Typically
a group is either Swans Filth cumbersome or seem like
Digital Hardcore in the analogue domain, but played on
balsa instruments with an equally anorexic recording budget.
Burnt By The Sun, Napalm Death, Drop Dead, and Nuclear
Assault (remember them?) all top my short list of bands
capable of both.
While
the newer hardcore scene is awash in the limitations of
its own stereotypes (which, up to now, have been every
"scene's" disgrace) Burnt By The Sun are able
to forego that whole 'hi-five, brah' American jock mentality
with an ease that might suggest that those types perplex
the band too.
Burnt
By The Sun's livid earthquake punk does more in the eight
and a half minutes this four-song collection lasts than
some bands entire catalogs can, and that's a rather healthy
sign this early on as a band.
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