ALBUM REVIEW: Ion Dissonance – Cursed
- August 27th, 2010
- By danny
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WARNING: This is not an album one can listen to whilst doing the housework or some other menial chore. It’s not background music, not at all. This is an album that demands your complete attention from start to finish. It’s like a naughty child that will set fire to the curtains if you dare take your eyes off of it for a second. It’s like when your partner waffles on about nothing for half an hour and then asks for your input when really, far from actually listening, all you’ve been doing is staring at her (or his) breasts. It’s like relaxing your mind during a tense game of chess and having your Queen taken by a pawn. In short, this album is mental.
This marks Ion Dissonance’s first album since a three(ish) year long hiatus and clearly that gap has stoked the creative fires to an almost hellish temperature because this album is a widdle fiends wet dream. The musicality on this album is enough to make even the most po faced Dream Theater fan sit up and think ‘Damn these boys can play, but do they have to shout so much?’. Well Mr. Fictional Dream Theater Man yes they do have to shout and with a pair of lungs like those housed in Kevin McCaughey’s chest it’d be a crying shame if he didn’t. Rarely do vocals sound as genuinely pissed off as they do on this disc.
Let’s get the incredibly lazy and predictable comparisons out of the way, this album has Meshuggah’s guitar tone (Nothing era onwards) and Dillinger Escape Plan’s hectic song structures. There’s blasts, there’s polyrhytm’s, there’s ‘beatdownz’ and I’m pretty sure I heard the kitchen sink in there somewhere as well but somehow these mad Canadian bastards make it all work. The production, bravely taken on by ID’s own Antoine Lussier, is amazing. Every sweep pick chimes through with crystal clarity while the chugs will probably vibrate your speakers of of your shelf, or table, or desk or wherever your Feng Shui tells you to put them.
The album ticks along at a relentless pace and closes with two of the more ’sedate’ and ‘restrained’ tracks on the album in They’ll Never Know and Pallor which, quite frankly, comes as a relief after the 11 preceding tracks of aural battery. It’s the musical equivalent of sharing a nice hug with someone who just gave you a horrendously violent seeing to.
If you’re one of those people who are learning an instrument and like to torture yourselves by listening to the sort of stuff you could only ever dream of playing on your chosen instrument, this is one for you. Also highly recommended if you suffer from ADHD as these tunes don’t sit still for a second.





