With commercial metalcore clearly the flavor of the month during the mid-2000s, Maryland's
Recourse attempted to flip the equation around with their first full album,
Weakening the Structure's
hardcore metal. Get it? Yes, it's a subtle inversion, and maybe even a dumb one at that; but it quickly gains legs as the album starts to unfold. Initial offerings like
"Frail Existence," "Weight of the World," and the title track have nothing to do with such hallmark metalcore ingredients as melodic vocals, guitar harmonies, or, god forbid, solos -- exchanging them for
hardcore's more unadorned, blue-collar songwriting aesthetics and true-to-life lyrics often dealing in sociopolitical topics. Which is to say there's hardly a trace of abstract poeticism to be found here (hooray!), and when it does dare show its face in the likes of
"Point Blank" and
"Eyes Burned Shut," it's generally as a take-charge call-to-action -- never that post-
emo and
nu-metal whining bullsh*t.
Traditional heavy metal devices also surface in the more complicated and involved riffs heard on
"Stolen Innocence," the bloody imagery described in
"End of Suffering," and the fact that
John Gallagher -- vocalist and guitarist with
grindcore favorites
Dying Fetus -- acted as producer and lent his guttural shouts to
"Scorched Earth" here. Of course the very same attributes may have some critics accusing
Recourse of being one-dimensional and lacking in variety when compared to bands coming to
hardcore from a metallic origin, instead of the other way around; but try evaluating mosh pits for reactions, and chances are these guys will have the more violent one of the bunch. In any case,
Weakening the Structure has the sort of punching-bag effect that will leave most
hardcore-minded
metal fans feeling well-worked-over by its conclusion. [This version of the album contains bonus material.] ~ Eduardo Rivadavia