Swarm
Koloss is the Swedish experimentalists’ eighth full-length album. Many commenters have noted that they sound more organic this time around, and then struggle to explain exactly what they mean. This is clearly still a Meshuggah album, after all, so it still doesn’t feel natural to our human sensibilities. Think of it this way: Where prior Meshuggah albums are the audio representation of a complex industrial machine on the verge of flying into pieces, Koloss is more like footage of all the activity in a massive ant colony played at double-speed. Organic, yes, but alien.
That is really the only necessary observation about the record. It’s Meshuggah, but the instruments sound more real, and they sound more like a band—much as they do in their live material. The songs are in their unmistakable polyrhythmic style, but are somewhat simpler if no less bizarre.
It is a welcome step. In the time since 2008’s ObZen
And did I mention the songs are excellent? The only thing it's missing is a real skullsmasher of a track. There's no "Bleed," "Future Breed Machine," or "Rational Gaze" here.
The Verdict: Koloss helps Meshuggah to define themselves, and to distance themselves from the misguided web forum swarms who seek to claim them. I give it 4.5 out of 5 stars.
Buy Koloss
Like you said, any release by a band of this stature is going to have a lot of pre-established opinions in the metal community, based on the listeners' previous experiences with their music.
ReplyDeleteIn my case, Meshuggah are a band I've always struggled with. I think, then, that this more "organic" sound is helpful for me. It makes the music more digestible.
Fun fact: I recently had to get a new driver's license. In the old one, the "Meshuggah" on my shirt was clearly legible across the bottom of the photo.