Dethrone the Corrupted - Sintrophia

Sintrophia is the debut LP from Slovenian five-piece, Dethrone the Corrupted, who have been releasing preliminary singles and EPs leading up their commitment to a full-length since 2014 and whose first album here found its way onto my radar by way of its eye-catching Lovecraftian cover art. The monstrosity of the album art and the vertically spiky logo do quite give away the modern death metal and deathcore styling of the album, which is quite well-performed by the band, but gravely lacking in originality. It’s a fine enough display of the band’s technical capabilities, but too often do deathcore clichés and somewhat hollow production drag down the easily sinkable compositions the band writes. There are a few times the band raises the bar for the intensity they can achieve through this well-trod style. The choir sampling that supplements “(Im)mortal”, for example, does help elevate it above the rest of the songs on the album. But jolts of power like these are fleeting, few, and far between. The band have enough technical prowess to execute this style well, but theirs is not enough to set them apart from the many other proficient groups performing this style. If Dethrone the Corrupted really want to make any waves in this field, they will really have to readjust their approach to focus on crafting more unique and memorable songs and try to create a signature sound for themselves.
Look at it and guess/10

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