| October 28, 2006 - Averse
  Sefira and Vex at Redrum in  | 
| Averse Sefira, Vex, and six completely worthless bands The  Vex  To this
  reviewer, Vex was both a welcome relief and a source of frustration. The band
  was the first of the night that was able to craft something remotely
  interestingly musically, which was appreciated by this reviewer on a night
  that had henceforth been filled with emo-core, nu metal, and third-rate
  Pantera rip-offs pretending to be extreme metal. However, according to one
  who was present at the concert, in their seven years of existence, Vex has
  rehearsed as a complete band maybe once or twice- and it shows. Technical
  problems plagued the set, the members all seemed to want to go in different
  directions, and the vocalist provided too much chatting between songs, which
  killed all intensity. Musically, Vex is reminiscent of middle period works
  from The Chasm- a fusion of traditional metal styles into death and black
  metal, but unlike most lesser bands that attempt this, who merely simplify
  extreme metal into the same old pentatonic patters, Vex combines the
  imagination and sense of harmony of classic Iron Maiden into a potent extreme
  metal base. If the band members manage to unify themselves into one entity,
  it will be a force to reckon with.  Averse
  Sefira
   Predictably,
  shortly before the best band to play this night took the stage, all of the
  scenesters and whores who were populating the venue left, leaving only a few
  die-hards left. In this almost empty venue, Averse Sefira blasted out an
  intense set that would have been completely lost on the untermenschen
  anyways. The band opened with Plagabraha, and after finishing that and
  quickly dealing with some sound issues (Sanguine's vocals were inaudible in
  this first song), they tore into the rest of the set, made alive by tiny
  improvations- a pick scrape here, an accented vocal line there, used in
  master-planned material, combining the best of spontaneous energy and emotion
  with studied composition. Multiple generations of metal combined in a fiery
  explosion of energy, tempered by the emotional wisdom of the Norse greats, in
  a celebration of coming conflict and death acting as the smith’s forge,
  melting and reshaping a world made weak through entropy. Militantism
  prevailed, both in sound through the march battery of The Carcass, in
  physical presence, with Sanguine and Wrath in full regalia, wielding
  instruments as weapons, conducting themselves as field marshals on the front
  lines, and in words, through the lyrics of the songs. Highlights of the set
  were the awesome renditions of "Helix in Audience" and "The
  Nascent Ones (The Age of Geburah)", and "Homecomings March",
  the latter of which was vastly improved through the band’s use of dissonant
  and inverted chords in line with their newer material, which helped ease some
  of the saccharine that the original version had, as well as through a more
  adept, if more subtle, use of dynamics, and truly inspired vocal
  performances. The full setlist was:  Plagabraha Bands: Promoters: -Cynical |