Good Fight Music – GFM053
You know, I think I get the title of the band: songs fly by like a bird
going in for the kill and are stripped down to the bone. Maybe I'm
over-thinking that a bit. Maybe not. However, the metaphor would be apt
when it comes to the lacerating energy Of Feather and Bone carries. It's
a short beast but it swoops in with a frothing fury and is, well,
rather peckish. Right down to the goddamn bone.
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Of Feather and Bone are finally putting out a full length is at least
something that's come sooner rather than later. Though the Denver, CO
band isn't old by any stretch, I had these ACxDC fears lodged in the
back of my mind. Maybe that's just me getting old…er. And good thing
that wasn't the case. Of Feather and Bone's grindy/crusty/hardcore
approach has always been on the short side with only three EPs (I assume
they're EPs despite not being labeled as such) to their name (one of
which is a split with Reproacher). Though the band hasn't been a turn
over machine when it comes to material
Embrace the Wretched Flesh, one call tell by song titles alone, is an
album that doesn't do mercy; it's not on the agenda. Throughout the ten
tracks the songs proclaim hatred, suffering, isolation and damnation.
And after a short burst of feed back and the almost complete lack of
introduction it's easy to see why. There are no kind words to introduce
any of this. No leading listeners into a safe room and letting the thing
blow over. Of Feather and Bone simply get down to the killing.
Of Feather and Bone have glorified their crust/grind/hardcore love in
the past and make no effort to move beyond it here. The band keep
themselves tightly knit around a hardcore/punk structure, though they
allow themselves to fluctuate between the heavy stuff and the old
school. The first three tracks feature heavy breakdowns that the 90s
scene would have definitely given a nod to. The beatdown sensibility is
ever present, but weirdly never feels like the focal point despite its
persistence. Hell, “Confined Violence” and “Ignore Their Remorse” flow
into one another through a breakdown (and the later is even mostly
comprised out of said breakdown).
It's the speed and melody that makes Of Feather and Bone shine. When the
band gets blast-y shit really gets going. When the band is melodic,
they sound mournful. Maybe it's self-inflicted. Maybe they're
inflicting. But no matter the direction they can deliver the damage.
Tracks like the extremely punk-y “The Proclamation of Hatred” take a cue
from the 80s but remain modern with a moody metallic/melodic section.
“Deafing Call” (I'm assuming my copy has a misspelling and it's actually
“Deafening Call”) on the other hand is the most grindcore the album
gets, but keeps itself on that hardcore/punk path.
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Of Feather and Bone cram a lot of breakdowns, a lot of hardcore/punk
sensibilities and a lot of crusty/grind goodness into a meager
twenty-three minutes. Embrace the Wretched Flesh goes by in a flash too.
It's tough as nails and full of hate. Songs are on the large built out
of the same elements, generally featuring one domineering over the other
two. It is definitely one of the reasons the album has so much punch,
but also one of the reasons it's easy to confuse songs. Still, Embrace
the Wretched Flesh is a bone breaker that pays its dues to the genres
the Of Feather and Bone loves so much.

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