There are differences in a death growl. Through The Eys Of The Dead’s debut album (Bloodlust, 2005) left me nauseous, because vocalist Gunnels multi-layered shrieks just watered down everything that was on the record.
Now the band returns, but in a different form. New frontman Nate Johnsson owns such a great growl, that it is hard not to love it. He’s not just screaming, he’s truly delivering the hatred that is written in the lyrics.
On Malice TTEOTD also shows how months on the tour do good for your band: in every possible way, the band is now tighter than anyone would have believed.
Give them another chance, if you have any lust left for modern American death metal.
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