![](/images/dot.gif)
| ![](/images/art_cor-tl.gif) | ![](/images/dot.gif) | ![](/images/art_cor-tr.gif) | ![](/images/dot.gif) |
Playing Enemy I Was Your City (Hawthorne Street Records) By: Mike SOS
![](/images/sep.gif)
Rising from the ashes of seminal hardcore act Kiss It Goodbye, Playing Enemy return after a two year hiatus with I WAS YOUR CITY, a disjointed metallic concoction whose 11-tracks take you ears on a wild ride through broken relationships via ambient noise rock and angst ridden dissonance. Unstable and unsettling, "The End of Something" has a vertigo-like effect thanks to its swirling guitars and its monotone trailed off vocals underneath the gravel-swallowed lead throat, while "And The Engine" tackle a full-on left of center hardcore attack with driving bass lines which complement the intentionally jagged guitar work. Somewhere between Keelhaul, Mastodon, and Every Time I Die lays I WAS YOUR CITY, an album that will haunt as much as it threaten.
|
|
| ![](/images/dot.gif) | ![](/images/art_cor-bl.gif) |
Copyright © 1997-2024, In Music We Trust, Inc. All Rights Reserved. |
![](/images/art_cor-br.gif) |
|