It's a relatively cool night for May and the peaceful silence of a small Massachusetts
town is shattered. Although it is not overbearingly loud, keen ears perk up as the
members of THE ACACIA STRAIN turn their collective head towards the building.
Production mastermind Zeuss (Shadows Fall, Hatebreed) is inside, dialing in the
sounds at Studio Z during the band’s first excursion with the aural expert.
Then again, we are talking about THE ACACIA STRAIN, Springfield, Massachusetts'
heaviest band, returning with their latest offering: Continent. The name alone
implores and implies something massive and demanding, exactly what this album is.
"This album is definitely darker than anything we have done in the past. It's more
proper, if that is even possible. It is our most angry release to date," says vocalist
Vincent Bennett, with an ever so slight emphasis on the word ‘angry.’ From the social
critique on the lull of cultural comfort, the deep-rooted resentment that festers inside
has darkened. "Continent is basically my absolute disgust towards everything. The
whole album is based on the concept of nihilism. The world as we know it was a fluke
and there is no meaning in anything. It is about pulling yourself out of society because
everything makes you sick. It is about purposefully leaving everything behind and
destroying everything you think you love. It is about hatred, anger, rage and
resentment. Nothing is sure to me anymore. Everything has been tainted. This album
is pretty much exonerating myself from it all."
The band’s sound is undeniably darker on Continent, yet THE ACACIA STRAIN
manages still to likewise hold true to the band’s established identity, retaining its
signature sound while still combining more speed, brutality, and more atypical song
construction. That said, THE ACACIA STRAIN has effectively established themselves
at the front of a pack of ever-expanding – and equally evolving – extreme music
contenders.
“We write music that we like playing,” Bennett continues. “Too many people in bands
lately have just been putting out records and playing shows so they can BE in a band
and be popular. There is no passion anymore; it’s all an internet popularity contest.
We write the music we do because we like playing it, and if people are into it then
that's an amazing bonus. There are so many useless arguments on the internet about
what kind of band is metal or metalcore or deathcore or hardcore or whatever. Shut
up. Listen to music. The minute you try to define it is the exact moment it loses all of
its actual meaning.”
Undeniably, meaning is something high on the band’s list for the release of Continent,
the third release for Prosthetic and fourth overall for THE ACACIA STRAIN. Tying
lyrics and music with visual interpretation once again is artist Paul Romano, uniting
Continent’s theme of nihilism and misanthropy with the album’s visually stunning
mural of destruction. Now, with the band’s line-up stable, rounded out by guitarist DL,
bassist Jack Strong and drummer Kevin Boutot, THE ACACIA STRAIN is poised to
continue down the road of growth and progression, something they have been doing
since The Dead Walk’s release in 2006. Proving their power on the road time and time
again and leveraging their sonic devastation in cities across the US and Canada, 2008
shall be no different for THE ACACIA STRAIN. The only difference is Continent will
be the end of everything. ”
www.myspace.com/theacaciastrain
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