The album kicks off with tonnes of rhythm, melody and fuzz; a taste of what’s to come. A tense intro riff flares up in Lonely Souls before dropping into a slick groove. Click retains the stark originality that quickly emerged, painting a picture of (very) melodic (not so) hardcore mixed with a dash of prog and dynamic experimentation similar to Jurojin. Zero Point Seven boasts a bona fide booty shaker of a groove, hitting like Cancer Bats, but formulaically reminiscent of TDEP’s Milk Lizard. Right Words shows that ZOAX can do clean tones and big-sounding moments.
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