There were real questions at points in the past as to how death metal would sound decades after its birth and if older musicians still would be able to pull of such savagery. We now know the answer is a definitive positive for both, and that the musicians who comprise this sub-genre are made up of stronger material than most.
Monstrosity is one of those bands that carried the banner from the early days right up to now on their latest record “Screams From Beneath the Surface,” their seventh and first in eight years. The band—vocalist Ed Webb, guitarist Matt Barnes, bassist Mark Van Erp, drummer Lee Harrison—is channeled, heavy, and destructive on these 10 tracks, sounding as thunderous as ever. Their debut album may have come out in 1992, but they show no wear and tear here, roaring like a death metal beast that has a belly full of fire.
“Banished to the Skies” gets the record off to a tempered start, though it’s still quite heavy. Guitars launch as the vocals boil, a classic metal-style assault launching in full. Strong soloing blazes as Webb’s growls feel raw and meaty, the playing echoing and dripping away. “The Colossal Rage” is a wrecking machine out of the gates, growls mauling as the leads surround you. The tempo pounds away as the guitars speed dangerously, the flames scorching flesh as Webb howls, “Colossal rage will end your life!” “The Atrophied” chugs, the vocals mashing and then morphing into screams. Leads sprawl as fists batter your gut, soloing twists brain wiring and bleeds with force, the playing carving away at your bones. “Spiral” has guitars attacking and screams lashing, the pace pulling back a bit but remaining devastating, the leads melting. “Now you have to die,” Webb declares, the guitars going off, speeding into the fog. “Fortunes Engraved in Blood” thrashes and mangles, the growls choke, and the leads jolt and warp. Dueling melodies storm harder, the growls claw at throats, and the channeled pace makes blood race through your veins.
“Vapors” is an onslaught, guitars chewing as growls curdle, the drums leaving everything in the dust. The simple chorus rips hard, infernal heat blasting with fury, the final moments piledriving through the earth’s crust. “The Thorns” heats up and lands stiff body blows, the growls spitting as if spraying poisoned words. The aura gets atmospheric as the soloing ratchets up the intensity, the growls wrestling you to the dirt. “Blood Works” opens with the drums mashing, speedy riffs blinding, the path going a little progressive. Speed ruptures as the thrashier charges challenge your muscles, stomping harder and leaving no skull unsquashed. “The Dark Aura” punches in, and then the pace gets more deliberate, bathing in flames as doomier colors dash across the sky. Howls stretch as dust coats lungs, Webb howling about the “demise of the universe” as the final moments bubble into time. Closer “Veil of Disillusion” engulfs as the growls rumble, the guitars turning nuclear as the surroundings get muggier. Leads swim as the howls retch, humidity continuing to skyrocket, the drums mounting one more assault and driving in the final nail.
Monstrosity survived a lot in their almost half a century as a band, and the fact that “Screams From Beneath the Surface” is this solid is a testament to them. Death metal has branched off in so many directions that playing it straight seems ill advised. But Monstrosity prove that isn’t true. This is as real as anything, and this record stands as evidence that sometimes the veterans actually know what’s best.
For more on the band, go here: https://www.monstrosity.us/
To buy the album (U.S.), go here: https://metalblade.indiemerch.com/
Or here (Europe): https://shop.metalblade.de/
For more on the label, go here: https://www.metalblade.com/us/


















