Having ADHD can be a blessing and a curse. Mostly a curse though. As someone who has it, it often is very hard to stay on one track, as distractions are easy to come by and can take you from one task to another with neither getting done in linear fashion. It makes taking on challenging music a little easier to handle though, and there is our blessing.
“Overspace & Supertime” (totally read that as “suppertime” the first time) is the second full-length from UK progressive death metal crushers Cryptic Shift, and its five tracks and 79 goddamn minutes are exhilarating, wrenching, sometimes frustrating, always mind-blowingly creative. The band—vocalist/guitarist Alexander Bradley, guitarist Joss Farrington, bassist John Riley, drummer Ryan Sheperson—also comprises ¾ of death/doom power Slimelord, and here they push beyond that into the cosmos. They take the themes from debut “Visitations From Enceladus” and jettison their characters and themes into different dimensions. The songs, which are involved and long (two of the tracks put together are nearly an hour combined) never let you stay in one place long. When you feel like you’re on your way to one star pattern, they suddenly jerk somewhere else entirely. That’s why having ADHD makes listening to a record such as this palatable, but I also cat get overwhelmed by it. Even though I really like what I experience each time through with this mammoth.
“Cryogenically Frozen” opens and is the shortest track, clocking in at a puny 9:24. It takes some time to get going as the scene is set, the word of a craft in trouble crackling over airwaves, and then the track opens in full. Guitars ice through the swelling chaos before going off, the leads rocketing through the clouds. Hammers drop again before the playing moves into breezy, jazzy streams, then the fist clenches again, dissolving and flowing into timelessness. “Stratocumulus Evergaol” is the longest track, running a massive 29:25 spreading over six movements. It is a LOT to digest. Not a complaint, really. Just a note. Leads heat us as the growls crawl through mysterious mists, battling and trudging, pulling back and letting the temps drop. Guitars reemerge and the roars claw, the leads zapping and injecting strong riffs, storming with aplomb, delving into muddier waters that make tracking hard. Classic metallic riffs explode, which zips back through the ’80s, jolting and bouncing, making adrenaline flow, blasting into oblivion, space hypnosis flooding your mind. Colorful melodies rush through your mind, the leads extend their exploration, and cold makes your bones ache, a sheen blinding and disintegrating.
“Hyperspace Topography” dawns with psyche guitars erupting, the howls crackling, spacey voice effects turning. There’s a long section of playing that progresses through time, guitars striking as windy leads dazzle before the pace comes unglued, battering and bending around corners. Wails scorch as the guitars go acidic, everything slowly fading. “Hexagonal Eyes (Diverity Trepaphymphasyzm)” has melodies quivering, howls carving into bone as a mathy attack pulls you under, crushing as hypnosis overwhelms, the leads igniting before going dark. Sounds sizzle and bubble before the storm returns, guitars bucking into mystery. The closing title tracks runs 20:22 and snakes over four parts, starting clean before launching into a fury, cosmic sounds whirring and transitioning into a mind-bending section that spreads and intoxicates. The guitars maul and dissolve, speaking haunting over a cosmic gasp chilling and emphasizes the lack of light. Smoke rises as the guitars simmer, the fires stoked with power, everything ramping up as the wails choke, a dreamy glaze thickens, and everything slowly dissolves.
“Overspace & Supertime” is a massive, involved adventure that is jam packed with riffs, progressive chaos, and ambitious ideas that sprawl in front of you with little to no control. That’s mostly a good thing as this record is more than generous dealing comic-impacted death and thrash that batter your brain thoroughly. Cryptic Shift probably would benefit from tighter editing and a little less dazzle, as it would make a record such as this a little more impactful. That said, it’s an impressive piece that easily can topple with such a grandiose and explosive vision.
For more on the band, go here: https://cryptic-shift.bandcamp.com/
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/


















