Beau Heilman
I hope like you have done for other albums, you make this an instrumental one too.
Such an incredible album!!! Looking forward to devouring it once the cd arrives!
David Fischer
A change on the mic is almost always a critical moment, especially if a talented vocalist is stepping off. Enterprise Earth however are in no trouble, not only already having a successor among their ranks but also releasing maybe their strongest album yet. Death... starts with a compelling intro, followed by over 50 minutes of indiscriminate, yet controlled carnage willing (and able) to suffocate you with your own kneecaps, with a sound is even better than The Chosen's. An early 2024 highlight!
Favorite track: Curse of Flesh (Feat. Matthew K. Heafy).
Obstacle of Affliction
A cornucopia of heavy grooves, shredding solos, soaring melodies, and, of course, brutal breakdowns.
Favorite track: Blood and Teeth.
ENTERPRISE EARTH is among the most celebrated death metal bands of the modern era. The group “crawls from the shadows of Washington, throws Patient Ø at us, and death metal is reborn,” said Shockwave Magazine of the band’s 2015 debut. A critic for Metal Nexus declared 2017’s Embodiment “the heaviest album I have ever heard.” The band’s third full-length slab, Luciferous, joined Loudwire’s 50 Best Metal Albums of 2019. “It never hurts to make an album that makes the majority of your peers look silly,” wrote Blabbermouth. “Your move, deathcore hordes.”
Their move, indeed. ENTERPRISE EARTH reemerges in 2021 with The Chosen, a masterpiece of monstrous brutality and enveloping ambiance. It is the band’s heaviest yet most diverse effort, with shifting attitude, vibe, and desperate aggression stitched throughout its songs. Brooding, thick with atmosphere, groove-driven, old-school death metal with modern flourishes, the music of ENTERPRISE EARTH switches gears from earth-shattering breakdowns to sickeningly slow sludge to blast furnace pummeling with seemingly effortless ease. Composition after composition is ominous, ambitious, lurching, and inviting, including “Where Dreams Are Broken,” “The Failsafe Fallacy,” “This Hell, My Home,” “Sleep is for the Dead,” “Temptress,” and “He Exists.”
Since their 2014 formation in Spokane, Washington, the group steadily built an audience in the underground. Touring partners over the years are genre luminaries and peers alike, including Cannibal Corpse, Nile, Suffocation, Whitechapel, Thy Art Is Murder and Chelsea Grin. Death metal is one of the darkest subgenres of music ever created, steeped in macabre imagery of blood and gore and delivered with guttural bellows and piercing squeals. Still, it is not without its guiding lights or impassioned empowerment.
A sense of purpose drives the band’s music. ENTERPRISE EARTH conjures self-determination and iconoclastic independence from within the bowels of extremity. The band’s authentic death metal precision and technical might are unquestionable. Committed to musical excellence and personal perseverance, ENTERPRISE EARTH carves meaning from the darkness.
ENTERPRISE EARTH, a band committed to brutal audio onslaught and proficient excellence, carves out personal meaning from the darkness. They conjure self-determination and iconoclastic independence, from within the bowels of extremity.
supported by 68 fans who also own “Death: An Anthology”
First WTF was google music actually throwing something good into my feed.
Second WTF was everything every goddamn member of this band does. This and the previous album have been on repeat for weeks. All other music tastes like diet water. Help. Gruso
supported by 61 fans who also own “Death: An Anthology”
Before Ashen, I thought they were overrated. Deathcore bands seem to have a capacity to evolve quickly. I’ve seen quite a few bands in this genre grow exponentially from one album to the next, and Ashen is a particularly strong example. Metallurgical Fire
Chicago deathcore outfit Into the Silo torch everything in sight on this searing new LP with riffs that will leave bruises. Bandcamp New & Notable Aug 21, 2022
supported by 59 fans who also own “Death: An Anthology”
I’m very glad I set aside my preconceived notions of Job for a Cowboy for this record. It’s technical, exciting, and passionate. The songs veer all over the place, but there’s clearly a lot of planning and control to that chaos.
Full review here: https://theeliteextremophile.com/2024/03/25/album-review-job-for-a-cowboy-moon-healer/ TheEliteExtremophile