A rogues’ gallery of guests is integral to how the broader piece plays out. There is grinding, serrated industrial metal influence about Revenge On God, for instance, with djent specialist Yentl Cambre’s guitars grinding away. You might expect similar from fellow heavy six-stringer Sarunis Brazonis on harmless. Instead, it unfolds as a mostly clean-sung lament, like Evanescence on a bad trip. And getting master keyboard player (and old friend of Linkin Park) Warren Willis on the excellent Catalepsia is a masterstroke, ramping up the sheen and instantly infectious melody in a style that makes even the deepest darkness digestible.
Indeed, and crucially, never does ACOM&M feel like hard going. Compared to Ms. Barks, the vibe here is lighter and less confrontational, scrabbling for melody and traditional musicianship rather than rejecting it. Arguably that means that cuts like Living Nightmares and the openly Eminem-indebted narc (I’m so happy that you’re dead) don’t directly hit as hard as they could. But they still work their way under the skin. And although it’s unclear whether the trite affirmations of shimmering outro you are loved are meant to be taken seriously or with tongue in cheek, it’s clear nonetheless that this is the work of an artist with the stylistic flair to match a message worth hearing. n0trixx: plenty of treat.
Verdict: 3/5
For fans of: Mimi Barks, Ho99o9, Scarlxrd
A Catalogue Of Madness And Melancholia is out now.