Press - Reviews

Various collated album reviews. Click the titles to view each review in full.

The Destroyers of All

2011

Everything is Fire

2009

Of Fracture and Failure

2007

The Coming of Genocide

2004

No Clean Singing

http://www.nocleansinging.com/2011/02/24/ulcerate-the-destroyers-of-all-2/

Give it up for New Zealand’s Ulcerate for knowing how to throw a curveball at me. The band is signed to Willowtip, my go-to label for death metal that has as much Dillinger Escape Plan in the mix as Cannibal Corpse. When I see Willowtip on a CD, I expect winding technical and chaotic riffage (on bass and drums, as well as guitars) to force my skull into a state of rapid decompression. In effect, I fully expect their records to be all experience and no songwriting—in this case the experience of being “that guy” in Scanners.

The Destroyers of All does nothing of the sort. Instead, it bakes its listener to death—a fitting follow-up to their last album, Everything is Fire. The album is in every possible way comparable to a desert, so much so that I want Ulcerate to do the soundtrack to the next stupid adaptation of Dune—this is the sound of wandering sand-worms. The song structures are vast and majestic, and make good use of so-called negative space. The last record burned the earth; this record sifts through the cinders at a leisurely (torturous) pace.

As has been pretty openly stated over at Invisible Oranges, this is a death metal record made by people who like “-post,” metal. That is to say, it has songs with long and irregular structures without refrains or choruses, and a general sense of minimalism.

Full disclosure: I am a filthy, filthy whore for this sort of thing. Neurosis and Isis make me shiver with anticipation when the proper mood strikes. I even like long-form repetitive black metal (Dear Wolves in the Throne Room, play Ohio, you bastards!). Coincidentally, I feel the same way about films with long, majestic shots of deserts. Yes, I am that asshole, and this album seems tailor-made to suit my taste. (more after the jump, including a track to stream . . .)

That isn’t to say that anything “-post” will slob my knob. I’ll be the first to admit the style has far more misfires than headshots and at least as many talentless imitators as deathcore—but it does hit me critically when it’s well done.

The Destroyers of All is not all post and no punch—not by a long shot. Its greatest strengths harken back to the finer points of the US death metal scene circa early 90’s. The riffage (unmemorable and obtuse here, seemingly by design) recalls the atmosphere, mood and general “sick” feeling that Morbid Angel pioneered.

The sense of melody, however, is more in line with Incantation and Immolation: The emphasis is on dissonant melody and counterpoint. Some might call that wanky, but I call it symphonic, and there you go — that’s why they’re on Willowtip.

The drumming—hello Suffocation—is incredibly technical, and may be the best point in the album’s favor. Formulaic deathcore drumming, meet your nemesis. The cymbal-work here in particular is excellent, displaying a nuanced and wonderful sense of range. The record uses ghost hits, compositionally, the way intense drum and bass does. Surprisingly, the tempo is not constantly slow and doomy—there are several blast beats and quick thrash bits, although they seldom line up with the speedy guitar bits.

The overall effect of this blend of old and new is, especially for death metal, quite subtle. It’s an inspired idea: generic death metal records have repetitive songs that all bleed into one another anyway, The Destroyers of All achieves the same effect, except on purpose. The process is flipped, and the blending becomes part of the dread instead of part of the boring. My inability to find my place in time became an inability to locate myself in the huge space of the record.

There are no individual tracks I can truly speak about; each is so obtuse and so fitted to the others that I can’t imagine listening to any of them out of the album context (this is the big strength of “-post”). The album is so hot, so suffocating and creepy, that it took three listens to get through the whole thing, and I took a sandwich break on that final listen.

To clarify: that’s good.

Suffice to say, The Destroyers of All is a strong release with a good sense of momentum and groove. This record is a unique result of a series of other people’s ideas well-executed. At its best, the album is moody, atmospheric, vicious, and certainly worth a listen or two.

The next time I have a long car or bus ride through, say, Nevada, I know what’s coming up on my iPod.

Heavy Blog is Heavy

http://www.heavyblogisheavy.com/2011/11/10/ulcerate-the-destroyers-of-all-2/

Woah, what am I doing reviewing a record that not only came out at the beginning of the year, but we once reviewed already? Well, with their recent signing to Relapse Records bringing Ulcerate back into my field of view and my discontent with the negative (yet valid!) score they received, I felt compelled to give their most recent album The Destroyers Of All a shake from my side of the aisle. If you’ve never heard of these New Zealanders before, their sound is characterized by creeping dissonant guitar lines and blistering fast and technical drumming. It’s all absolute chaos that challenges the status quo of not only in the realm of death metal, but progressive metal and sludge as well. Hell, I even raised the question earlier this year about their categorization as “Post-Death Metal.” Sound interesting enough? It should.

The fittingly titled album The Destroyers of All is a hard record to talk about because of its very nature. Practically inaccessible and devoid of melody through much of its runtime, this record is a cacophonous monolith that challenges not only the ears, but the mind. Ulcerate’s sound descends from the likes of Portal, Deathspell Omega, and Mitochondrion, each band famously utilizing an almost avant-garde dense atmosphere and utter brutality that pushed death metal and black metal into new extremes. Ulcerate follows these footsteps, but does so in their unique fashion.

Ulcerate manages to teeter between progressive death metal, tech death, and post-metal throughout The Destroyers Of All. Each of the album’s seven songs go over 6 minutes in length, which gives the band plenty of room to play with challenging brutality and awe-inspiring stretches of ominous instrumental soundscapes. “Omen” in particular is somehow strangely breathtaking. Where Isis‘ music painted flourishing pictures of ocean-front landscapes, Ulcerate’s music inspires metal images of barren landscapes permeated with fog and drought.

Instrumentally, Ulcerate has a lot going for them. The guitar work from Michael Hoggard is downright terrifying. Hoggart’s contorting guitar lines are enigmatic and trance-inducing, showing that one can manage being technical without the blistering speed. Bassist/vocalist Paul Kelland isn’t playing second fiddle, either. His sludgy low bass is always present under the spiraling guitars. His intimidating low growls aren’t to take lightly either; his vocal work is monstrous and absolutely brutal.

Drummer and producer Jamie Saint Merat is definitely the star of the show. The production work on this record meets a compromise of polish and raw and gritty tones that compliments the band’s sound well. His drumming is absolutely phenominal as well, using intricate cymbal play against intense blasts of double bass to help build up this frantic atmosphere. He can easily go from atmospheric grooves to in-your-face technical drumming in a matter of moments in any given song. Coming from a person who doesn’t emphasize drumming as much when listening to music, me saying that Marat is a fantastic drummer is really saying something about his talent and ability.

Glowing positivity aside, this record is definitely not for everyone. This album is massive in sound and runtime, and an hour of this music is certainly testing, not to mention off-putting entirely for some listeners. Despite this, The Destroyers of All is easily one of the most intelligent, intense, and brutal death metal records released in 2011. Ulcerate are putting New Zealand on the map as being a credible source of extreme metal; it’s not all hobbit holes and sheep out there. Apparently something twisted is going on in that environment that is fostering this incredible sound, and may it forever writhe in the uncomfortable tones of Ulcerate.

Metal Psalter

http://www.metalpsalter.com/review_ulcerate_the_destroyers_of_all.html

I don’t know why I waited this long to finally give Ulcerate a listen, but I really wish that I had started paying attention to them sooner. The Destroyers of All is one of the most unique death metal releases that I have heard in years, and a quick sampling of their prior works turns up ample evidence to support the back catalogue being equally impressive. Ulcerate are clearly a death metal band, but they refuse to play by the established rules of the genre. This is sort of a throwback to the early days when the rules were still being written, and you could count on hearing at least a few death metal releases each year that really pushed the envelope.

Ulcerate’s unconventional approach is apparent within the first few minutes of The Destroyers of All. Album opener “Burning Skies” features a balancing act between blistering drumming, and abstract almost wandering guitar work. This approach proves to be the foundation of Ulcerate’s sound. Throughout the album, the guitars have a way of locking in with the drums at points, only to meander off in a completely unexpected direction, often meeting up with the drumming later in the song to deliver a surprisingly direct burst of rock-solid death metal. “Cold Becoming” starts off slow with a halting, almost spasmodic intro that calls to mind a newly animated zombie twitching as it rises from the earth. This intro is artfully blended into the body of the song, which ends up being one of the most direct and aggressive tracks on the album. It’s really a great example of the way Ulcerate build and release tension within their songs, and I think that it is their mastery of this principal that allows them to keep the listener engaged while working with such an abstract sound.

Paul Kelland delivers his vocals in low, but well enunciated death growl. The vocals are probably the most commonplace element of Ulcerate’s sound, but they tend to be well placed and work along with Jamie Saint Merat’s drums to anchor the songs. Saint Meret’s drumming deserves special mention, as his versatility is important here. The drumming is often pretty straight forward, but when the song calls for it Saint Merat is more than capable of making full use of his kit and taking things to a more intricate level. I found myself being led through The Destroyers of All by the vocals and the drums; a direct contrast to most metal albums where the guitars and vocals are front and center. The dissonant riffing is still huge part of Ulcerate’s sound, but the guitars seem almost like they are working in what would be the negative space if we were talking about visual art.

The Destroyers of All is a monster of an album, and one that I think all death metal fans should hear. Of course everybody won’t like Ulcerate, but the fact that they are doing something different means that anybody with an interest in the genre should at least be aware of it. Indirectly, these guys fit in with bands like Portal, The Chasm and Mitochondrion. None of those bands sound the same, but they all approach death metal from a unique angle, and all of them maintain the genre’s trademark heaviness while weaving in a ton of atmosphere. In the end, The Destroyers of All is a difficult album to accurately describe, but despite its break from convention it is an album that I found fairly easy to get into.

Teeth of the Divine

http://www.teethofthedivine.com/site/reviews/ulcerate-the-destroyers-of-all/

New Zealand's Ulcerate set the bar pretty high for themselves with 2009′s Everything is Fire, a monstrous slab of churning, atonal death metal that ended up on many 2009 year end lists, mine included. How would they respond?

The album title says it all.

Even though the formula is the same as on Everything is Fire–that's to say Immolation styled death metal channeled through Deathspell Omega's swirling discordance and bursts of haunting atmospherics–the resultant sound is still as devastating and draining and again, should see many 2011 year end lists.

As with the previous album as well as the likes of the Portal, Impetuous Ritual ,Vaesaleth and recent Mitochondrion (who may actually have stolen some of Ulcerate's thunder), Ulcerate's sound isn't about simple structure or memorable riffs, but rather a sonic descent into madness and a calamitous, murky noise that initially comes across as structureless chaos.

However, after multiple listens (shit, this came out in January and I'm still trying to fathom it out), the album's seething, twisting, pit of snakes sound starts to gradually make sense. But it's not easy and neither is it rewarding (in the traditional sense), because like laying eyes on the contents of the Ark, once the albums depths are revealed to you, your face might melt off.

With their own production, mix and master, Ulcerate have sculpted a sound of their own that will appear foreign to casual death metal fans wanting triggers and a clinical pro tools sounds, and there's a place for that sound in death metal. Just not here. The Destroyers of All lurches, undulates and froths with a malevolent intellect and age old saurian insidiousness. The seven lengthy songs intermingle dense, indescribable, otherworldly anti-melodies and a cacophony of caustic, muddy riffs and percussion.

At times it sounds completely unfathomable — for example the last two minutes of "Cold Becoming" is as claustrophobic and dense two minutes of music you're liable to hear in 2011; its simply massive, like the song is suddenly amplified and grows like a living, pulsing thing. The same can be said for the middle section of the crippling 10+ minute title track, which also has a mesmerizing, foreboding closing that hints at ominous warnings of future destruction. There's a menacing depth here you can actually feel crawling under your skin, not just hear. Throw in sudden and at times, darkly hypnotic injections, segues and intros that are moments of unnerving atmospherics ("Beneath", "The Hollow Idols", "Omens") — the Deathspell Omega comparison becomes more than just a passing fancy.

There are certain bands and albums that simply are impossible to convey on paper or in words. Ulcerate and The Destroyers of All is the kind of album you need to make words up to describe. Words like imbludgeonation, decripplifying, ulciferous and albumoftheyearconderiticated.

Heavy Metal Cosmos

http://www.heavymetalcosmos.eu/el/reviews/376-u/1427-ulcerate-the-destroyers-of-all

Today I saw at the television a group of religious believers, who are thinking that within now and a year the end of ours days is coming in sight. How easy and cheap to predict this now, after a few apocalypses have strike the earth. The horrible truth of mankind is used in favour of their foolish beliefs. When nature calls we all shall drown…

And how glad I am that before my final and sure death I have witnessed both live (last year) and now also on CD, the ultimate death grooving and haunting machine Ulcerate. This band already hit me in the face last year during their tour with Nile. When a band can nail you straight and stable to the ground (You see I keep following the religious references) and absorbs you completely and makes you stand fascinating listening, watching and tripping for 45 minutes, than you can understand that something unique and mind-blowing is happening. Like an internal apocalypse.

Now I hold in my hands the by Hammerheart released version of their 3rd album "The Destroyers Of All", I have to admit, that after the live show last year I forgot to check out their CD's, but I am completely hit, stroke and taken away again by their apocalyptic music. Haunting, hypnotising, grooving, horrifying and taking out every single feeling by every nerve alive in your body. Intense, brutal, harsh, mystifying and alienating music. No apocalypse, catastrophe and final day will be the same after this experience. When the destroyer of all has destroyed it all, you can rest in piece and patience. Waiting for that final day that all your tears will be washed away, till then you have the Ulcerate experience. Live I described the band as the Wolves In The Throne Room of death metal, I think that fits it more than suitable.

The song titles will give you a cold becoming with there apocalypse influenced lyrics like "Dead Oceans" and "Burning Skies". This music is the forecast of "The Destroyers Of All" final days. Enjoy this end joy!

Apocalyptic haunting death metal, my god what a gift to have heard this before the earth will stand still… very intense gruesome death metal! Majestic!

Cutting Edge.nl.it

http://www.cuttingedge.nl/music/reviews/295495-ulcerate-the-destroyers-of-all-

Google English translation:
Even death metal art.

It is fair for the heavy music enthusiast. After the new album is also solid-Maruta Ulcerate with new work to come. New Zealand's finest, after the superb "Everything is fire" from 2009 now "The destroyers of all 'for. Ulcerate proposals as a pure death metal band is black and white and brilliant, this band dishonor. If we must begin to compare we could say that somewhere between Ulcerate Immolation, Dead Congregation and Psycroptic, but despite all the comparisons we have to conclude that Ulcerate a distinctive sound over the years has managed to distill.

Drum Beats of an incomparable rate to suddenly turn into slow, heavy riffs, which flirted with ambient , feedback and a dreamy sound, an eye for layered melody and harmony that is alternated with an energy that strikes like a bomb: it is becoming hard the elements for a successful Ulcerate plate. Sludge postcore meets, meets grindcore, doom meets, meets ambient ... You could through the forest for the trees can not see and yet, in the melting pot of subgenres Ulcerate that creates, manages the band in order to keep an overview and each song as a whole to present solid. This is art!

If we must note that nitpicking Ulcerate dancing on the string where the melodies and atypical in to rate played riffs tend to the same uniformity. In other words, at the time the danger is that all the songs start to sound the same and a little water in the same liquid. After a few listens, however, you discover more details in the complex musical structures. Ulcerate knows better than anyone to keep a perfect balance between full throttle and the brakes.

Ulcerate creates 'The destroyers of all' a dreamy, meditative landscape where the listener can relax in lie until you are startled by a fierce armed to the teeth rabble mob that is after one thing: destroy ! This was easily one of the death metal records of 2011 can be perfect.

- Jan Temmerman

Truemetal.it

http://www.truemetal.it/reviews.php?op=albumreview&id=9523

Google English translation:
One of the most anticipated return of 2011 that the "kiwi" Ulcerate which had stunned the world of brutal, no later than two years ago, with that great record by the name of Everything is Fire . The feeling left by the notes was the same one that can give you a first delicious morsel while we already anticipate the second and, it must be said that The Destroyers of All leaves in your mouth that escalation of joy that could be expected.

The result of painstaking work of production and mixing, which is desirable for other improvements, such as by the three boys are in Auckland, and consists, for the first time, with the same formation that had generated the previous year, this new album can be defined as the first true and solid pique their careers.

As Everything Is Fire showed the full range of quality of the band, The Destroyers of All start to dot the "i". It is, in fact, in a sense, the most extreme and brutal album ever produced by Ulcerate .

Burning Skies , after a brief, leaden, introduction immediately puts the record straight with a heavy drum beat that is raging against the backdrop of rhythmic riff desperately. As can be quick work for double bass Jamie Saint Merat , the song, overall, expressed a very different kind of pathos, that could result from the slow onset and terrifying the whole Lovecraftian pantheon in a dark and stormy day.

It 'just in this extreme contrast to the 7 tracks that shine of this work: compositions that share a unique, monolithic, and that require you to everyone who came and gutted the clear intent of attention, to be able to identify numerous special .

Returning to the track that opens this disc, I can say that is definitely one of the peaks of the lot, an obsessive whirlpool of sound that is interrupted only for a short breather before a final searing epic: real cry of contempt human self-affirmation to the hostile cosmos.

The album continues on this overwhelming trend, in which the blasting growling Paul Kelland does not allow any escape to the melody, nor any sort of foothold reassuring except, perhaps, the haunting dissonance created by Michael Hoggard who become, so to speak, after a family bit 'of plays. Illustrative in this regard, Dead Oceans and the most varied Becoming Cold .

Beneath , however, instrumental part quietly, slowly growing for more than 2 minutes, including digressions and graceful backbeat of drums, until all'irrompere of speech in all its power, which contributes to the growth of emotional climax that will explode then only in final.

The Destroyers of All is an album of pure granite, which draws liberally from the legacy of atmospheric post-metal tearing with the aggressiveness of the more extreme brutal death. Far from putting on display some kind of overall evolution of the sound of Ulcerate , to shine, however, the personal development of each of its members, showing the lyrics of Kelland , ever so perfectly inspired and hooked to the mood of the music, and more inspired songwriting pair of Hoggard / Saint Merat . This really deserves a special mention, because the young drummer from frail appearance, it proves, once again, not only the star of the group for the instrumental technique (which continues to improve with each step. Just listen carefully to what ago in The Hollow Idols ), imagination and presence within the songs, but is becoming more of a small Portnoy Ulcerate , having been employed for this disc: the songwriting, the whole process of production and mixing, and As usual, the beautiful artwork, and of course his duty fully settled behind the drums. What's more, they are also numerous side projects and his considerable organizational skills to the band's tour. I wonder if it is also part of the list of Petrucci!?!

Returning to the disk in question, Omens , penultimate on the list, is certainly the track queen begins ghostly quiet before the tsunami, then the majestic gait and a sudden implosion that takes your breath away, it starts slowly with some variation on the theme of the first 'sudden departure and expected in the fourth, until a new emergency braking accompanying muddy the final is a song that, alone, contains all the feelings that can produce a record like that, pure magma down slow and calm but in burns and dissolves everything. Worthy appetizer for the final long title track, all to appreciate the infinity of his inspirational and chilling for its belly to the final crescendo that goes off in a desolate vision of post-atomic explosion.

The Ulcerate are back and have created a heavy load by increasing the rate of morbidity of their music. The Destroyers of All is a black, nihilistic themes and the heavy sound, as well as solid for the conspicuous average duration of 7 tracks that make it up; is a record that grows with each listen, it's an album for adults, for those who believe they have reached a maturity that, as a listener, to be able to work without stopping to analyze the surface of the classification round. This is especially the high level of yet another affirmation of this band coming from far away, we're really getting used too well, making us portends an even better future, because their true masterpiece, in my opinion, has yet to be written.

Francis 'Darkshine' Sorricaro



Un ritorno tra i più attesi del 2011 quello dei "kiwi" Ulcerate i quali, avevano stupefatto il mondo del brutal, non più tardi di due anni fa, con quel grande disco che risponde al nome di Everything is Fire. La sensazione lasciata da quelle note era la stessa che ti può donare un primo bocconcino prelibato mentre già pregusti il secondo e, bisogna dire, che The Destroyers of All lascia in bocca proprio quella escalation di goduria che ci si poteva aspettare.

Frutto di un lavoro minuzioso di produzione e mixaggio, auspicabile per altro da perfezionisti quali sono i tre ragazzi di Auckland, e composto, per la prima volta, con la medesima formazione che aveva generato il precedente, questo nuovo album può essere definito come il primo vero e solido puntiglio della loro carriera.

Per quanto Everything is Fire aveva mostrato l'intero ventaglio qualitativo della band, The Destroyers of All comincia a mettere i puntini sulle "i". Si tratta, in effetti, in un certo senso, dell'album più estremo e brutale mai prodotto dagli Ulcerate.

Burning Skies, dopo una breve, plumbea, introduzione mette immediatamente le cose in chiaro con un violento ritmo di batteria che imperversa sullo sfondo di riff disperatamente cadenzati. Per quanto possa essere veloce il lavoro alla doppia cassa di Jamie Saint Merat, il brano, complessivamente, esprime un tipo di pathos molto diverso, quello che potrebbe derivare dal sopraggiungere lento e terrificante dell'intero pantheon lovecraftiano in un giorno buio e tempestoso.

E' proprio di questo estremo contrasto che brillano i 7 brani di questo lavoro: composizioni che condividono un'atmosfera unica, monolitica, e che richiedono, a chiunque vi si accosti, il chiaro intento di sviscerarle con attenzione, per poterne individuare le numerose particolarità.

Tornando alla traccia che apre questo disco, posso dire che è sicuramente uno dei picchi del lotto, un gorgo di sonorità ossessive che si interrompe solo per una breve boccata d'aria, prima di un finale epico e lancinante: vero e proprio grido sprezzante di auto affermazione umana verso il cosmo ostile.

Il disco prosegue su questo trend opprimente, in cui il growling abrasivo di Paul Kelland non concede alcuno scampo alla melodia nè ad alcuna sorta di appiglio rassicurante tranne, forse, le ossessive dissonanze create da Michael Hoggard che divengono, per così dire, familiari dopo un po' di ascolti. Esemplificative, a questo proposito, sono Dead Oceans e la più varia Cold Becoming.

Beneath, invece, parte quietamente strumentale, crescendo piano piano per più di 2 minuti, tra divagazioni e leggiadri controtempo di batteria, fino all'irrompere della voce in tutta la sua potenza, la quale contribuisce alla crescita del climax emotivo che esploderà poi solo nel finale.

The Destroyers of All è un disco di granito puro, che pesca a piene mani dal retaggio atmosferico del post-metal lacerandolo con l'aggressività del brutal death più oltranzista. Lungi dal mettere in mostra chissà quale evoluzione complessiva del sound degli Ulcerate, fa risplendere però l'evoluzione personale di ognuno dei suoi membri, mettendo in mostra le liriche di Kelland, mai così ispirate e perfettamente uncinate al mood della musica, ed il sempre più ispirato songwriting della coppia Hoggard/Saint Merat. Quest'ultimo merita davvero una menzione particolare, perchè il giovane batterista dalle sembianze gracili, si dimostra, ancora una volta, non solo la stella del gruppo per quanto riguarda tecnica strumentale (che continua a migliorare ad ogni passo. Basti ascoltare con attenzione quello che fa in The Hollow Idols), fantasia e presenza all'interno dei brani, ma sta diventando sempre di più un piccolo Portnoy degli Ulcerate, essendosi occupato, per questo disco: della composizione dei brani, dell'intero iter di produzione e mixaggio e, come al solito, dello splendido artwork, oltre ovviamente al suo dovere dietro le pelli pienamente assolto. Come se non bastasse, sono numerosi anche i progetti paralleli e notevoli le sue capacità organizzative per i tour della band. Chissà se fa anche parte della lista di Petrucci!?!

Tornando al disco in questione, Omens, penultima della lista, è certamente la traccia regina: inizia spettrale, quiete prima dello tsunami, poi l'incedere maestoso ed una improvvisa implosione che toglie il respiro; si riparte lentamente con qualche variazione sul tema prima dell'improvvisa ed attesa partenza in quarta, fino alla nuova brusca frenata che accompagna fangosamente al finale; è un brano che, da solo, racchiude tutte le sensazioni che può produrre un disco del genere, magma puro che scende lento e placido ma sotto brucia e dissolve ogni cosa. Degno antipasto per la lunga titletrack finale, tutta da apprezzare nell'infinità dei suoi spunti creativi, per la sua pancia agghiacciante e per il finale in crescendo che si spegne in una visione da landa desolata da post-esplosione atomica.

Gli Ulcerate sono tornati ed hanno appesantito il carico aumentando il coefficiente di morbosità della loro musica. The Destroyers of All è un disco nero, nichilista nelle tematiche e pesante nel suono, oltre che massiccio per la cospicua durata media delle 7 tracce che lo compongono; è un disco che cresce ad ogni ascolto, è un disco per adulti, per chi crede di aver raggiunto una maturità tale, da ascoltatore, da essere in grado di analizzare un'opera senza fermarsi alla superficie della classificazione di turno. Si tratta soprattutto dell'ennesima affermazione dell'alto livello di questa band che viene da lontano, che ci sta abituando veramente troppo bene, facendoci presagire un futuro ancora migliore, perchè il loro vero capolavoro, a mio parere, deve ancora essere scritto.

Francesco 'Darkshine' Sorricaro

Chronicles of Chaos

http://www.chroniclesofchaos.com/reviews/albums/2-6234_ulcerate_destroyers_of_all.aspx

I know there can be no end point to the spectrum of accessibility. There would be no band that could lay claim to the heaviest or most brutal act in present history. Despite these obvious conclusions, there has to be at least an area which resides far from everyone else. A space for music you occasionally look up in amazement wondering how you got to this point in your aesthetics. There must be a time in one's life when the braying of dying farm animals was considered slightly jarring. This space is where all distinctions between consonance and dissonance become useless. A place where elaborate structures reside under thick veils of noise. It is a barren wasteland of acidic springs and vultures the size of mountains. It is a place where Ulcerate lives.

New Zealand's Ulcerate has been fairly consistent over the last three years with a regimented output. Since the mid '00s, the band has been unwavering in their dedication to release an ear shattering record every two years. 2011's _Destroyers of All_ follows the 2009 _Everything Is Fire_. If titles are any indication, then Ulcerate has no plans on reigning back their critical analysis regarding flaws and shortcomings of the human race. In fact, the band plans on letting you know exactly what they think of this thing you call "everything". While only 45 minutes, the length of each track stretches past the six minute mark, with a daunting ten minute closer. If the album were presented visually, _Destroyers of All_ would look like seven uniform metal structures. If you were looking for dynamic transitions with progressive and spidery guitar work, you may be disappointed. What Ulcerate lacks in variation, they make up for in distance. The unrelenting grind begins to make its motive clear. It is only after your last layer of feeling is peeled back that the true magic can begin.

Under the sometimes confusing maelstrom of indecipherable vocals and complex drum fills is a crafted landscape which, while bleak, is strikingly beautiful. There is a methodical calmness with Ulcerate's songs despite the ever presence of hellish noise. When compared to previous records, especially _Everything Is Fire_, the sense of atmosphere is noticeable. The heavy riffs are scaled back for the percussion and vocals. This, in turn, opens the middle, leaving a space between converging masses. This mixture of spotlighted vocals and drums makes for an intriguing blend which carries itself throughout the album. One of the closing songs, "Omens" makes the doom aspect of the record particularly noticeable. But _Destroyers of All_ shares no ties with Candlemass or even Black Sabbath. This is only slow violence. A tornado in slow motion.

I am usually resistant about calling albums "growers". The quality of slow yet exponential enjoyment is odd and is open to many variables and explanations. _Destroyers of All_ grew on me over the course of a couple of weeks. Its enjoyable aspects and convincing arguments were only heard after repeated listening. This is of course not to say the same thing would be true for another person. Some people, understandably, don't have time for an album to reveal its true self. Enjoyment may arrive immediately or not at all. Despite my reservations, there is something to be said about albums which require a small bit of "breaking in" or "loosening up". Ulcerate required me to stretch a little bit. When I was finally warmed up, I could run for miles. _Destroyers of All_ finally revealed its true form as a bright flowing death metal butterfly. It also makes a strong case for album of the year, if anyone can think that far ahead. At the end of the day, though, I'm pleased with myself for weathering the storm.

Face Your Underground

http://chokingonbile.blogspot.com/2011/02/special-ulcerate-destroyers-of-all.html

* in Dutch - English translation below...

De tijd dat Death metal zich nog afzette tegen trends en op eigenzinnige wijze z'n eigen weg zocht ligt al lang achter ons. Bands zijn net zo trendgevoelig als de populaire hitlijsten en voor vernieuwing ben je aangewezen op slechts een handvol bands. Mocht je daarvan afhankelijk zijn ben je op jaarbasis met drie cd's volledig bij.

Een van die bands is het Nieuw-Zeelandse Ulcerate. Al vanaf hun allereerste demo baarde de band opzien door techniek en sfeer samen te brengen in goed gecomponeerde songs. De band ruikt ontegenzeggelijk naar Immolation en de Gorguts invloeden zijn overduidelijk en toch heeft de band er een eigen geluid van gesmeed. Voorganger 'Everything Is Fire' was wat dat betreft al een zeldzaam hoogtepunt in het afgelopen decennium en op dat succes wordt logischerwijs voortgeborduurd. Toch is 'The Destroyers Of All' niet slechts een verzameling songs geschoeid op de leest van z'n voorganger. Men heeft de sound heroverwogen en bijgeslepen waar mogelijk en daarmee wordt de perfectie benaderd. Het gitaarwerk bestaat zelden uit een reeks powerchords, maar is juist gelaagd en dissonant. Het herbergt een groove, maar staat ook bol van de sfeer en middels subtiele melodielijnen wordt je compleet opgezogen in de uitgesponnen, doordachte composities, waarbij opvalt dat de zang volledig in dienst staat van de muziek en maar een marginale rol in het geheel speelt. De wijze waarop de band middels rustige, sfeervolle passages naar een climax toewerkt zijn zelden vertoond in het genre en lijken hun oorsprong te vinden in het werk van bands als Neurosis en Isis. Het is echter op briljante wijze vertaald naar een eigen sound en de uitvoering is vlekkeloos, maar daardoor niet steriel. Het tegenovergestelde is eerder waar; de productie is krachtig en eerlijk, waardoor de muziek organisch klinkt. Maar dat kun je dan ook met een gerust hart aan drummer Jamie Saint Merat overlaten.

Ulcerate speelt ontegenzeggelijk Death metal, maar het moge duidelijk zijn dat de band het genre overstijgt. De band is van zeldzame klasse en lijkt volledig zijn eigen gevoel te volgen. Juist dit zorgt er voor dat de band zo bijzonder is. Nooit lijkt er naar snel succes te zijn gezocht en de over het algemeen lange songs zijn daar ook helemaal niet geschikt voor. 'The Destroyers Of All' is geen plaat die je na één of twee luisterbeurten kan doorgronden, maar waar je over enkele maanden nog steeds nieuwe details in zal ontdekken. Ulcerate is zeldzaam, uniek, getalenteerd en bovenal een fantastische band. De onderstaande vijf sterren doen maar nauwelijks recht aan deze release. Dit is de buiten categorie, hulde!
The time that death metal still reacted against trends and idiosyncratic manner sought his own way is long gone. Bands are as sensitive as the popular trend charts and renewal you are dependent on only a handful of bands. If you depend on them, you are on an annual basis with three CDs full of.

One of those bands is the New Zealand Ulcerate. Since their first demo tape bore the stir by bringing together art and atmosphere in well-composed songs. The band undeniably smells to Gorguts Immolation and the influences are obvious and yet the band has forged a unique sound. Preceded by "Everything Is Fire" was for that matter has a rare highlight in the past decade and that success builds logically. Yet "The Destroyers Of All" is not just a collection of songs, inspired by his predecessor. One has the sound reconsidered and rectified where possible and thus be approached perfection. The guitar work is rarely a series of power chords, but will be laminated and dissonant. It houses a groove, but is also full of atmosphere and through subtle melodies you'll be completely sucked in spun, thoughtful compositions, it is striking that the vocals are completely dedicated to the music and only a marginal role in the whole play. The way the band through a quiet, atmospheric passages to a climax are rarely screened in the genre seem to find their origins in the work of bands like Neurosis and Isis. However, it is brilliantly translated to a unique sound and the execution is flawless, but is not sterile. The opposite is rather true, the production is powerful and honest, so the music sounds organic. But can you also feel confident to drummer Jamie Saint Merate leave.

Ulcerate undoubtedly plays Death metal, but it is clear that the band transcends the genre. The band is full of rare class and seems to follow his own feelings. Precisely this ensures that the band is so special. Never seems to quick success are identified and the generally long songs are not as well suited for. "The Destroyers Of All" is not a record you after one or two listens to understand, but you are still a few months will discover new details. Ulcerate is rare, unique, talented and above all a great band. The following five stars hardly do justice to this release. This is another world, congratulations!

Blabbermouth

http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.Net/showreview.aspx?reviewID=2153

Critics seem to adore ULCERATE. Thus far I've paid little attention to the New Zealand band's albums. Having lined up "The Destroyers Of All" for review, I decided I'd give it multiple attentive listens and make a determination of the act's worth to the world of death metal. And multiple listens is what it took since the first couple left me unmoved. The very first impressions had me thinking "The Destroyers Of All" sounded like a more atmospheric, fluid, and "out there" version of IMMOLATION… well, kind of anyway. It's that "kind of" part that should be the red flag for any discerning listeners, as it is indicates that layers exist beneath the surface that may tell a more complete story.

Once the ball gets rolling you'll listen in rapt attention and find it difficult to switch gears to a more traditional strain of death metal. The arrangements expand and contract, but hold together in a cohesive sense. A creative approach to guitar that is cold and incendiary at once relies less on conventional ideas of "riffs" and more on utilizing the instrument to emit waves of dark human emotion. It's all in the ebbs, the flows, and sounds created; all that clangor with varying levels of dissonance with purpose. "The Destroyers Of All" is perhaps best summarized by a single line from the title track: "Cold blooded and callous, it does not grieve". Accents seem to morph into integral arrangement segments at will and recede back into subtler forms. Drums keep time, but do just as much to punch and pull against the bass and guitarist as bassist Paul Kelland's ungodly, cavernous vocal treatment works to sink the whole thing even deeper.

"The Destroyers Of All" is also one of those steady exercises in listener envelopment, even as aggressive opener "Burning Skies" swarms and overtakes. "Dead Oceans", "Cold Becoming", and "Beneath" are anything but run of the mill, but it is the last three lengthy songs — "The Hollow Idols", "Omens", and the title track — where the crush of the tonnage involved leaves no chance for life. Like when that sore, reddened area about which you've been bitching swells to shocking proportions and becomes infected, those 25 minutes equate to a twisted metaphorical amalgam of light headedness, excruciating pain, and overwhelming fear. The songs are written to jolt just when things approach calm, such as when the relative breeziness of "Omen" (a real epic bastard) erupts in violence at the 3:30 mark or the way that the title track seems to become a vortex of metal shavings and bits of broken glass. The lyrics fit so well to the music too. Take this line from "The Hollow Idols" for example: "The marred hands of our leper idols wring us of all hope". Deep as it is dark for sure.

The most erudite of our tribe might refer to "The Destroyers Of All" as some seriously heavy shit on several levels. If you've ever viewed images of burned out areas of Detroit, then consider "The Destroyers Of All" for your next trip there; the soundtrack is so frighteningly fitting as to be almost unreal, especially coming from a trio of New Zealanders. Better yet, pick up a copy of the Yves Marchand and Romain Meffre photographic art book "The Ruins of Detroit" and page through it as this album plays at full volume. By that point you'll experience the metal as both a taste and a smell. Suffocating, tormenting, limitless…

- Scott Alisoglu

Metalreview.com

http://metalreview.com/reviews/6073/ulcerate-the-destroyers-of-all

"Buzz" is an odd word. It can refer to a type of dissonant sound that one generally associates with annoyance, as in the buzzing of flies (see Ghostbusters II for reference), or it can have a sociological use, referring to the social chatter of a particular population growing from the anticipation of a future event. I came across Ulcerate on a certain message board and decided to see why people were so excited about this new record. I found that Ulcerate has been generating buzz since the release of their debut full-length Of Fracture and Failure in 2007, but with The Destroyers of All, the band has shown they are now more than ever a force to be reckoned with and well worthy of the hype. 'Buzz' might also describe something about Ulcerate's sound, but instead of causing annoyance, Ulcerate has succeeded in bending a chainsaw-like cacophony into some of the most original death metal I've heard in years.

The Destroyers of All is a dense, satisfying foray into death metal's future, where brutality is secondary to explorations of harmonic dissonance and the creation of atmosphere. This is not to say that Ulcerate is in completely new territory, but the New Zealanders seem to be interested in addressing the transcendentally evil nature of death metal, a project that might also describe the work of Morbid Angel or Immolation. Like Immolation, Ulcerate writes riffs with a melodic sensibility that defies the listener's expectations and, in a certain way, demands the listener rethink his or her understanding of melody and harmony, but a more accurate comparison of their sound would land somewhere between Dead Congregation and Psycroptic. Necessary band comparisons aside, Ulcerate has a sound that is entirely their own.

Average track length on The Destroyers of All is somewhere around seven minutes, and each song is comprised of top-notch drumming that anchors riffs that play dizzying games with subtly layered dissonant harmonies run through what I'm guessing is an array of delay and reverb pedals. Opening track "Burning Skies" begins quietly but erupts shortly thereafter into blast beats and a killer opening riff. Generally speaking, this is cause for celebration, but there are at least twenty more great and unique riffs on the album. These are dispersed evenly throughout the songs, but "Cold Becoming" might have the highest density of awesome riffs. Above I said that brutality comes second behind dissonance and atmosphere, but let me be clear: Ulcerate sits comfortably next to, say, Severed Savior, Disgorge, or Deeds of Flesh and will satisfy even the most stalwart fan of brutal death metal. Brutality aside, for the patient listener, the middle section of the titular concluding opus "The Destroyers of All" has Ulcerate demonstrating that they also know the aural definition of heavy, after which, in striking counterpoint, they patiently and tastefully (and quietly) close out the album. Compared to the bands I just mentioned, this use of dynamics, among other things, helps Ulcerate stand out far ahead of the pack.

My only real criticism is that songs packed with such quantities of vertigo-inducing riffs and atypical melodies begin to bleed into one another, but this is of minimal concern here. Where normally this might seriously detract from a group of songs, Ulcerate knows exactly when to put on the brakes, play with the dynamics, or introduce a relatively straightforward part that brings the listener back from the edge of the abyss. "Beneath", for example, is a mostly mid-paced meditation on themes established in earlier songs, giving Ulcerate a chance to show that they can kick a sick brutal groove. But what I mean to say is this: The Destroyers of All demonstrates true artistry by striking a balance between a diversity of elements, including some top-tier instrumental talent, and if you like death metal, you would be a fool not to give it a spin.

Fuck the Underground

http://www.fucktheunderground.com/reviews.php?review=159&page=1

Bleak. Unforgiving. Oppressive. These are just 3 adjectives that come to mind while listening to The Destroyers Of All. Hailing from New Zealand, these kiwis manage to create a sonic wall of dense, foreboding death metal that is sure to leave the listener in a state of shock and utter disbelief. I guarantee by the time your finished listening to this album, your mouth will be agape, as if witnessing your worst nightmare and your head will feel as if it was being crushed by a vice. I can not think of a better album title than this, as all of my senses have been destroyed by Ulcerate.

Ulcerate are definitely not your run of the mill death metal band. If you pick up this album thinking your gonna hear bands such as Deicide or Dismember than think again. The one problem I can foresee the band having is that there is very little "catchiness" or "hooks" that grab you by the balls and make you wanna bang your head. They do not write songs your prototypical way with a bridge, chorus, solo routine. To say they have an unconventional style of writing their brand of brutality is the understatement of the year. At times you will find yourself bobbing your head to a riff and then without warning that riff is replaced by another. To the average 15 yr old metalhead, this would come across as utter crap, as if random notes were strung together with no sense of structure. But that couldn't be further from the truth. Ulcerate manage to craft mind- numbing, atmospheric and simply put unique death metal.

The players on this album are: Paul Kelland (bass/vocals), Michael Hoggard (guitars) and Jamie Saint Merat (drums). What these three individuals are able to create as a whole is equal parts masterful and complex with a deep sense of anguish. Paul's vocal prowess is deep, dark and menacing. Mike's guitar tone is complex and rich with a delivery that is able to bend and mold various riffs into a complex yet structured way. With exceptional time changes and a dizzying array of progressions within each song, I dare you to find a guitarist that is able to manufacture such a style. But the real star of this 3 piece is the drummer Jamie. It is obvious from the get-go that this dude considers playing his kit as a craft and he has most definitely mastered his craft. I dare say this, but Jamie might be the absolute best drummer in all of death metal. Sure drummer such as Gene Hoglan and Tim Yeung get all the glory and rightfully so, but Mr. Merat is so masterful and creative with his kit that he too deserves some love. He is not just keeping beat with the music with an occasional fill here and there, but he has managed to take all the elements of drumming and incorporate his own unique style and vision that takes the listener into a frenetic state of awe.

"The Destroyers Of All" demands your attention. It will captivate you. It will punish you. It will frighten you with its foreboding sense of despair. Ulcerate have managed to create a sound that is both inventive and prolific. A nefariously vicious attack that will leave all innocent bystanders trembling in fear.

Global Domination

http://www.globaldomination.se/reviews/ulcerate-the-destroyers-of-all

If one wants to know more about Ulcerate, I suppose one will have to go and read The Duff's reviews of "Of Fracture And Failure" and of "Everything Is Fire", where our boy rains praise upon the heads of those left-brained New Zealanders. Now, me, even though I heard lotsa good things about the band, I never checked them out. Laziness. No time. Other bands that interested me more. Hate MySpace and the music clips therein. And so on, and so forth. Sue me. Anyway, my point is that I come to this review a total virgin, as far as Ulcerate's idiosyncratic sound is concerned.

Now, I have to ask you something. What's in a name? I mean, when one names, say, a sub-genre of music, how does he do it? And, even more, does the name really and truly signify the music it's come to describe? Waxing philosophical is not exactly my point, but in the case of Ulcerate – and not in the case of, say, In Flames – I think that the term "melodic death metal" perfectly describes the music the band creates. Of course, Ulcerate's work has no connection whatsoever with the bands and the overall sound the term was deemed proper to describe. No In Flames, no At The Gates, no Göteborg sound here. Just Melodic Death Metal. In that, the music is obviously death metal: slithery constantly shifting time signatures, almost constant blasting, vocals painfully growled, a fecundity of riffs and complex songwriting. In that, everything is completely informed by melodies.

I know, I know, Khlysty's no fool: even the most discordant, dissonant and unmelodious song has some kind of melody that informs it. But, in Ulcerate's case the melody – clear, obvious, well-defined – is the basis from which explodes the sonic mindfuckery the band unleashes to the audience. See, while, as I said, the melody is well-defined, the guitars attack it ferociously, either spewing forth malformed swathes of note runs, or tearing it apart with barely-controlled leads of dissonance (listen to the peaking of "Cold Becoming" for reference…). Only the bass and the occasional rhythm guitar parts hold the melodic fort, once a song starts rolling and/or morphing.

The term "beautiful" cannot usually be associated with such ferocious material. Nonetheless, I will call the music beautiful, in an alien and dislocating way, as if seeing one of the wonderful and terrible vistas Lovecraft and Barker sometimes allude to in their fiction. The riffery doesn't seem extraordinarily difficult – maybe it is, I ain't no musician so I can't really tell – but it exudes such majesty and menace as to make the music an imposing monster that awes the listener. Small changes in dynamics give breathing space before the next onslaught. Passages of pure angularity are followed by almost hummable bridges. And, while listening to "The Destroyers Of All" I really go the analogy some people made with Gorguts' notorious "Obscura": both records are defiant experiments of sound, texture and structure that piss all over the death metal canon.

But, where Gorguts went for a, let's say, creative use of dissonance, though, Ulcerate turn towards clearly-defined consonance as a means to achieve their extraordinary musical feat: creating music that runs the gamut from introspective to majestic to overtly aggressive, without never losing steam or focus. I won't comment on musicianship or production values: they're both stellar, that's all you need to know. The bottom line here is, of course, that "The Destroyers Of All" is one of the best death metal records I've ever heard, one sure-fire contender for year-end top-five material and one of these records that, given attention and time, will prove that its gifts are more varied and magickal and monstrous than one might expect on first listen. Prerequisite listen, if there ever was one.

Metalreviews.com

http://www.metalreviews.com/reviews/detail.php3?id=6957

So, in my review of Deathspell Omega's Paracletus, this was the band I compared them to. Perhaps not that obvious a link, but it is apparent that the two acts share something. Whereas other metal bands write songs as if they were building a wall- this beat goes on top of that riff and that vocal line- these groups have a much more fluid approach; compositional ideas are like structureless gelatinous liquid, flowing from idea to outlandish idea as if buffeted through river rapids. Total metal, as I called it in that review. But if Deathspell Omega are a rushing torrent, Ulcerate are like a rolling flow of lava. They have a particular knack for a sort of psychedelic, twisting style in which slow and contorted, almost doomy riffs are underpinned by a blaze of up-tempo death metal percussion; a juxtaposition which gives their music a mind-warping feel.

But whilst Paracletus saw a band tightening their songwriting, with shorter tracks, this takes a small step in the opposite direction. The song lengths have been inched up slightly, from an average of about six minutes, to an average of about seven or eight minutes. This may seem like a small thing. And sure, the first few times I listened to Destroyers of All, it sounded like very much the same deal as the last album, Everything is Fire. Disappointingly so, actually. But, several listens later, it dawns that this record is, in fact, of a rather different character. It is slower, and it is darker. It generally abandons the more frantic ideas that surfaced in thrilling fashion on tunes like Caecus, instead playing more on the brooding menace of The Earth at its Knees. Thus, those mind-warping ideas described in the previous paragraph become the centrepiece.

And so churning, roiling opener Burning Skies takes the form of a series of utterly abstract guitar lines, slowly and uncomfortably winding across spans of several bars before repeating again. And under this is a grimly forthright death metal blast, goading the lumbering riff-beast with its rat-a-tat. Gorguts springs to mind, in the sheer pained discomfort of the sound. Like that band's classic quasi-ballad Clouded from the Obscura album, this has a sad, melancholy feel to it; the last breaths of a malevolent artificial intelligence. And rather than simply functioning as a particularly dark opening statement, this is really how it continues, with each tune dependent on its ability to subtly manipulate dynamics within this slowed-down framework. Centrepiece Beneath begins as a drifting void of ethereal ripples of semi-clean guitar, out of which rises a primal, grinding slow riff evoking one of Immolation's down-tempo numbers. It is in these sheer drops and escalations from abstract quiet to crushing volume that much of the interest is generated, and, to refer again to Deathspell Omega, this gives it the maniacal qualities of a record like Fas – Ite…. This likeness is particularly strong on the ten minute stop-start closing title track, which seems to drift freely from one bizarrely-angled death metal riff to another, halfway through withdrawing into a seasick low ebb in which double-kick percussion never actually leaves but merely dies down to a whisper underneath a malnourished wash of watery guitar.

Whether this represents an improvement on previous works, then, depends very much on how much effort you are prepared to invest in it. It is more impressionistic, rarely dazzling you with technical or brutal ideas, and instead taking the form of a darkly brooding mood piece. So you have to listen, without distractions- anything else and it seems simply like a slower, less eventful version of its predecessor. An imposing and demanding album.

Killing Songs : Burning Skies, Beneath, Destroyers of All

drop-d.ie

http://www.drop-d.ie/ulcerate-the-destroyers-of-all/12758

New Zealand has, in the last few years, really been marking its spot on metal's map and particularly so in the death metal realm, with bands like Witchrist and, last year Diocletian releasing the punishing War Of All Against All album and now Ulcerate, with album number three, are continuing a strong and relentless creative trajectory. The Destroyers Of All sees much of that trajectory come to a boiling point.

The Destroyers Of All is a nefariously vicious but still intrepidly inventive record. It is, in every aspect, utterly brutal, chaotic and unforgiving. In fact, one could go on for so long with many an adjective to applaud it. Fans of the album's predecessors will doubtlessly lap this record up but it may also open a door to newcomers to explore their world. Not that it's, dare we utter the word… accessible, far from it! It's simply the fact that The Destroyers Of All is heaving with a ferociousness that eclipses what came before.

Drummer Jamie Merat is on particularly top form with a performance that could really only be described as bestial, while bassist/vocalist Paul Kelland delivers an almighty, ear abusing vocal performance that meshes with the vigorous barrage of riffs so naturally.

Dead Oceans opens with a grimy guitar tone before launching into visceral and unforgiving chaos. The clash of riffs and unrelenting drums makes for an overall daunting and oppressive sound on not just Dead Oceans but the entire album.

Beneath is one of the moments that reels the clamour in just a little bit. The dense passages have been slowed slightly to a languished pace while the ten minute closer title track is a sprawling and ambitious work of cerebral brutality.

The title of this album well and truly sums up its purpose – The Destroyers Of All. Its violent intent and implementation speaks volumes. There's more than a satisfying level of technicality and prowess within all seven tracks but still an overwhelmingly bleak and despondent atmosphere. The bar for death metal records in 2011 seems pretty high right now.

Metal Ireland Killer

http://www.metalireland.com/2011/01/31/ulcerate-the-destroyers-of-all/

It's a formidable reputation that New Zealand's Ulcerate have built up over recent years. Three albums of precise, yet textured Metal that treads the line between Gorguts' techincal proficency and the slow-burn weight of Immolation have now been released, each bolstering the group's standing.

This third album comes courtesy of the ever-reliable Willowtip and not without some great expectations attached to it.

The band has stated in interviews that they weren't interested in changing radically from their last, the excellent ‘Everything is Fire', and this is evident from even a single listen. Their attack still revolves around expansive, spidery guitar playing and a visceral style of drumming that is as unrelenting as it is precise.

Crucically, there's a warm, tonal aspect to the riffing that lifts it beyond the simple battering that many other Death Metal bands dish out, and never once does it sounds clinical. Atmosphere leaks from this record, with the plunging chords and a sustained use of dissonance making a vibe that is both enveloping and uncomfortable.

The vocals, though still brutal and effective, take on an almost observing role, reinforcing the waves of rythmic attack the rain down on the listener rather than lead them.

It seems that with this record, Ulcerate have decided to delve more deeply into the cold, disonant soundscape that underpins their music. Guitar progressions mix with the drumming and produce an almost rythmic trance.

A truly excellent production job has been done to give equal prominance to the flowing spaces between the twisting riffs, and a more panoramic element becomes evident on subsuquent listens. A good example of all the elements combining in style and slowly breaking into a mass movement of sound is closing section of ‘Cold Within', with a faint melodic undertone slowly propelling the whole track to a brilliant, flourishing end.

In such respects, this isn't a record that can be lashed on and off at will. The great stand-alone songs that define the classic Death Metal bands aren't to be found here. Instead, there is a single-minded insistence on the growth of atmosphere and feel.

What really makes it such an accomplishment is that such a vision has been realised without once devolving into ‘brutality for brutality's sake', yet still producing a record that festers with aggression and energy.

Comparisons with their fellow Antipodeans Portal don't do Ulcerate's more clinical aspects justice, but it's not hard to imagine these bands contently co-habiting the same space in the current pantheon. Even a comparison with a Godspeed You! Black Emperor's bleakest moments is hard to shake off as a quiter moments of ‘Omens' drift by.

Like plumbing the depths of the last Esoteric album , trying to take in the totality of ‘The Destroyers of All' isn't an easy task, but it remains worthwhile and ultimately rewarding process. The bottom line is that if powerful, atmospheric music that is as bleak as it is skillfully sculpted is your thing, this one really does belong on your want-list.

Grace and bleakness in equal, great amounts.

4.4 / 5 - Lorcan Archer ::: 30/01/11

The Number of the Blog

http://thenumberoftheblog.com/2011/01/27/fucking-metal-album...

You've just woken up to find yourself with no memory of what has happened. You don't know how much time has passed.

You realize you are not outside, but deep within a system of caves. It is vast. You can tell, that it is vast. Not the vastness of visuals, as it is too dark to see. But the vastness of noise. Or, rather, the absence of noise.

Silence.

As you begin to become aware of where you are, and your conscience is fully awakened, something begins to overcome you. Fear. Only, it is like no other fear you've felt before. No. No, this is different. Words cannot express what you feel.

You lay there. In the vast emptiness. No nightmare can compare to the fear that has overcome you. Something is moving. Something far off. Or something closer than you can tell.

You feel isolated. You feel cramped. Claustrophobic. And yet, you can tell, wherever you are: It's huge. And it almost seems empty. Almost.

You close your eyes tight, expecting to wake up at any second. Any second. Please. Please God. There is something out there. You know it. You can sense it. You. Can hear it… Whatever you are in, it is in here with you.

The silence is broken by the sound of trickling water. Water. You've just realized how thirsty you are. You're so thirsty. The thought of water acts as a monster, taunting you from the back of your mind. "Water flows here," it tells you, "It's not much farther," the lies taunt you with a massive force. You can see there is no water. There is none. But you're so thirsty…

There is something out there. A machine. Something unlike anything you have ever heard before.

Silence. Time does not exist here. The clocks pendulum has never been put in it's perpetual motion. This must be Hell. This must be.

Your thoughts race as you begin to panic. This can't be the end. You have done nothing to deserve this. This is insane. Insanity.

Your eyes shoot open as the distant objects seem to appear closer than ever before. Insanity. But it is not the objects that truly frighten you. Insanity. Something else has begun to ease it's way through the blockade in your mind. Insanity.

Insanity. You begin to realize the madness you have been slipping under. This can't be real. None of it. The silence is deafening. It's too loud. It's too loud. IT'S TOO LOUD! You hear the screams of women. The sounds of animals in the distance. Far off in the distance. And that distant rumbling. Whatever has been watching you this entire time. It is still out there. And it is moving.

Silence. The ebb and flow of thought. Silence is not the absence of noise. It is the expansion of thought. But the only thoughts that immerse your mind are maddening.

This must be Hell... A Hell only known as Insanity.

-----

That is a brief description of the atmosphere that I feel while listening to Ulcerate. SO NOW! Let's actually review this scheiße!

I guess it is pretty obvious through my posts that Ulcerate is easily one of, if not, my favorite band. I feel that they create something that no other band has created. While I definitely have my biases, because I absolutely loved the 2009 release of Everything is Fire and Ulcerate in general, I will try to keep the review fair. So… If you're up to it, follow meeeeee!

Through other peoples' descriptions of the band, and perhaps your first impression with your first listen, they do something a bit different. This isn't the straight forward "We're gonna pummel your ass in, until your stomach oozes it's way through your intestines, and we can shove your stomach filled intestines down your throat, and then rip off your head with your stomach and intestine filled throat so that we can put it on a pike and show it off to any passerby who might just pass by our town passerbyly" Death Metal Band. No, that is not what Ulcerate is. What Ulcerate do, quite well, is create this massive atmosphere. You'll find yourself in a completely isolated a desolate void where nothing can escape. You really must listen to them to experience the proper feeling.

I've talked to quite a few people, including Quigs, who are not impressed with Ulcerate. It's definitely understandable. Allow me to explain why I think this might be. Like I said, Ulcerate are not your typical run-of-the-mill death metal band, as they do not just play ultra-sonically paced riffs. A lot of the riffage is slow, but moving. In fact, for me, most death metal does not create an atmosphere at all, they are just fun to listen to for the pummeling and driving riffs. As for Ulcerate, they transport you somewhere different. It begins to actually paint a picture, rather than show off skill. Of course, it definitely does take skill to play what Ulcerate play. The constantly changing riffs are brutal. I don't know how they remember every single one of the riffs, there are so many!

I challenge you to look at a guitar tab for one of Ulcerate's songs. If you don't know how to read tabs, well figure it out! But just look at it. It is constantly changing. Sure, you might be saying, "Yeah Dwarfskeet, but so do Dream Theater, Opeth, and Gojira." But no, Ulcerate are not the same. And I'm not just saying that because I like Ulcerate so much (I like the other three as well) it is because Ulcerate are crafting it in a different way. They bend and mold the riff and progressions in a completely different way, really you need to listen to understand what I'm talking about. Maybe it is because I also play guitar that I have the fascination with the guitars of Ulcerate. Maybe that is why I understand and follow (for the most part) what they are trying to express.

Another "problem" I feel people might experience with Ulcerate, is the lack of catchiness. There is no hook that makes you go "Oh yeah! Headbang time!" No, there really is none of that. You may find yourself bobbing your head to a riff here and there, but it's only for a few seconds, because as soon as that riff comes in, it's gone and the next one is here. So you might find yourself saying, "What is this garbage? It's just random notes thrown together. There is nothing catchy/headbang worthy/sing along to/hum to." And yeah, that's basically true. Perhaps that is where the best part of Ulcerate comes in. It is so odd, that it becomes beautiful.

In some cases, the progression is just so slow. But it's amazing. Because Jaimie isn't just blasting on the drums. He's not just a beat keeping system that throws a fill in here and there, like a lot of drummers have become. The drums have actually morphed into an entity themselves. They've become their own instrument! It's admirable, because I've never really noticed drums like I do with Jaimie. Not in death metal. Sure, I've noticed Neil Peart, and Dave Weckl among others. But in death metal, even the greats like Gene Hoglan and Mike Smith aren't changing anything up. Yeah, it's their style, but they've done it for the past few records, maybe do something a bit different. I feel Jaimie is doing that, he's letting the drums become their own instrument, that has their own say in the song. And it's beautiful.

So what about The Destroyers of All? How does it compare to Everything Is Fire? What have Ulcerate done on it? What are the lyrics based on? Why is Dwarfskeet asking so many questions? What a dick!

The Destroyers of All is phenomenal. It is classic Ulcerate. Basically the sound of Everything Is Fire, but I feel there is a big difference. The atmosphere has changed. With Everything Is Fire, it felt that I was constantly under attack by physical forces, actually being knocked to and fro. With The Destroyers of All, it feels that the attack is actually on the inside, it is more of a mental state. I like the ebb and flow of TDOA a bit better than EiF. It's as if, you are attacked, and then the mental attacks retreat, just long enough to allow you to catch a breath, and they are back, stronger than before. It sounds cliche, no? Well, listen to the damn record and you'll see what I'm talking about.

The lyrics are amazing. I was captured by them. It seems a lot like poetry. I would say Sylvia Plath, but I never really liked Sylvia Plath too much. But it reminded me of her. The lyrics are dark, and twisted. And I'm not talking about the usual dark and twisted lyrics that are so known within death metal. These aren't just cliche death metal lyrics. They seem like they're screaming, saying, "There's a problem with our race, if you'd only open your eyes, you'd see. Please… Open your eyes…" They seem deprived, longing for someone to come along and present the world of it's problems, so that we as a race can fix them. Of course, that statement I just made, seems more "pleading," I guess, and the lyrics are more like Jonathan Edwards, preaching of the fire and brimstone of Hell that awaited the sinners of the North American colonies.

‘Omens' is probably my favorite song from the record. I like it's lyrics the most, and the atmosphere it portrays is desolate and empty. Just thought I'd tell you my favorite…

I'm not going to give you a play by play of each song, because I've already written quite a bit, and a play by play would only increase the length of this article exponentially. So what I will say is this: If you enjoy atmospheric music such as Jakob, God Is An Astronaut, and Mono, as well as the brutality of death metal, I suggest you pick this record up. If you enjoy musicianship fused with technicality, I suggest you pick this up. If you enjoy catchy riffs that get you pumped, jumped, and dumped, forcing you to headbang, I suggest you listen to the tracks on YouTube or something and decide if this is your bag baby. Might need to do all that before picking the record up.

Stereo Killer

http://www.stereokiller.com/newsreviews/article.cfm?Review=Ulcerate-The%20Destroyers...

I'll be honest, it wasn't until a few weeks ago that I finally got around to listening to Ulcerate. I had heard the name thrown around but wasn't proactive in checking them out. When I finally got around to it, I was pretty impressed.

I won't come as saying that I'm some sort of expert on them because I'm pretty far from it but what I've heard is enough to keep me interested in their unique blend of technical death and drone influences.

The Destroyers Of All is a feral, yet intelligent beast that goes right for the throat. I haven't had something hit me this hard for a while. It comes out with the best foot forward and doesn't truly let throughout the duration of the album. For any fans of metal, there's something here to keep you occupied. When they play fast, I'm reminded of the heaviness and speed of a better produced Hate Eternal. The drone parts are top notch. They could do an entire album of this material and it would probably decimate anything that the last three generations of "Neur-Isis" clones could shit out.

The only drawback that I hear in this is the drum production. I wish that they could have gone for a more natural sound to them but with the material, I can see why they went with the tone that they did.

The bottom line here is that you're getting almost an hour of high quality death metal that doesn't disappoint. It's as haunting as it is brutal. A welcome gem into what has become a fairly stale genre. Hopefully their pinnacle is yet to be written because if this is a sound of things to come, they're going to slay all in their path.

The Metal Observer

http://www.metal-observer.com/articles.php?lid=1&sid=1&id=17786

Bleak. Oppressive. Dynamic.

These words proffer modest shades of ULCERATE's latest full-length, "The Destroyers of All." Hailing from New Zealand where an impressive slate of relentless music is currently being produced – Kiwis DAWN OF AZAZEL are in similar elite company – this trio has created a wall of dense sound that will leave you doubled over with eyes darting. You question when you were hit, but the real query is how many times? This 2011 release is a foreboding, unique example of how chaos reigns supreme even when we think we have it under control.

2009's "Everything is Fire," while perhaps the more up-tempo recording, was the catalyst, the blueprint for the all-encompassing anger and smoke that suffocates "Destroyers"' 53 minutes of playing time. Intent on encapsulating the obliterating, reckless, and perhaps deliberately callous and evil trends and thoughts of men, ULCERATE spread the hate and scorn in thick sheets of calculated Progressive Death Metal that is as insanely heavy as it is unstoppably interesting.

Bassist and vocalist Paul Kelland wrenches forth an anguished display, roaring upon the world and its ignorant rulers with deadly admonitions. Life is forsaken, innocence is gone. If the Mayans are correct and the close of 2012 reveals itself as an end-of-days scenario, "Destroyers" bluntly reinforces the fact that mankind squandered its greatness for vanity, royalty, and impartiality. The album-titled closer will go down as one of the most monstrously crushing and impenetrable songs of the year.

While the lyrics of "Destroyers" present a dying world filled with corrupt leaders and indifferent followers – "Cold Becoming" renders a prime example of wasted existence – the instrumentation and atmosphere the album wields carries and blows like hurricane winds. It's a very apocalyptic and hazardous sound that is undeniably Death Metal, but in effect, also much more. It's brutal without the slamming and breakdowns and monosyllabic guttural belching. It's devastating without the need for gimmicks. This is blunt and unforgiving Metal.

ULCERATE have very nearly perfected an intricate way of splicing mid-tempo riffing with awesome, manic drumming that forges into a sound that has the listener looking and ducking out of the way in fear of hurt. Even when things are slowed down and dimmed, these quiet times serve as the several eyes of the "Destroyers" storm. The album has a frightening and threatening style that I suspect none will replicate soon.

"The Destroyers of All" is an album of seven distinct songs that practically demands you listen to them all in succession, or not at all. That being said, and of course I am being entirely contradictory, the album highlights must be the aforementioned closer, "The Destroyers of All," the abyssal "Dead Oceans," and the earth-shaking "Cold Becoming."

ULCERATE's latest is one of the best of 2011 and a definite must-buy.

Scumfeastmetal

http://scumfeastmetal666.blogspot.com/2011/01/ulcerate-destroyers-of-all-cd-review.html

Find that open spot in what's left of your Tech Death overdosed on ADD medication mind. New Zealand's ULCERATE play the type of death metal which will have you seeing trails, worshipping inhumanity and they don't do it at hyper speeds. I got hooked onto this band with their 2009 sophomore release Everything is Fire. It took months for me to finally get into it. Since then my attitude with newer DM bands (tech death or brootal) is that speed and power are nice but I'd rather be blown, away that is. What makes ULCERATE interesting, which is putting it lightly especially on this new one, is that the guitars and bass are held down in a death doom mode. It's their drummer, Jaimie Saint Merat, who adds in various blastbeats, fills and jazz technique which produces an unorthodox style. I've always considered them GORGUTS meets GODFLESH in a dark alley. Their sound will not have you dancing or banging your head. ULCERATE are of a quality sound which is more of a listening pleasure. OK you might do some "air drumming" but that's it.

The Destroyers of All is haunting and heavy as represented with opener "Burning Skies". While Merat impresses behind the kit, Paul Kelland's vocals are animal like as he slowly picks away at his bass strings. Guitarist Michael Hoggard provides layers of melodic dissonance to the point where you'd think this was, dare I say, shoegazer. "Dead Oceans" picks up some momentum but is really an exercise in drummer overindulgence as frenzied guitar ambiance cascades over like glass crashing. Hoggard also provides some lower chord funeral doom. In fact most of this has an almost drone melody to it . I'm sure someone will drag out the NEUR-ISIS reference especially on a song like "Omens" with it's early ass dragging dirge which then turns into spaced out noodling. If you can make it all the way to the final cut then I'd say your seat in some post apocalyptic nightmare is assured. Just like on their previous release, ULCERATE end things with a climatic title song that seconds itself as all encompassing death doom shovel to bury you.

Sputnik Music (3)

http://www.sputnikmusic.com/review_41452

The riffs of The Destroyers Of All bellow with resounding force as the vast soundscape that they create begins to rear its head, a trait not unfamiliar to those who have heard Everything Is Fire, but one that has changed in its delivery. New Zealand's Ulcerate isn't intent on trying to create the proverbial rip-your-face-off intensity that is so often attributed to such a crushing sound, and that may very well be what sets it apart from the scores of other death metal acts that focus on creating the most violent music possible while leaving behind nods at progression and atmosphere. It's in the moments when Ulcerate slow things to a crawl and deliver a winding and dissonant rendition that bleeds atmosphere that shows a band who know that composition is the key to intensity rather than a mindset to go all-out on their instruments in whatever fashion they so choose. That's what sets Ulcerate apart- an eye for the small things that make the bigger picture of what a well-thought out death metal album can be appear crystal clear.

It's not necessarily a genre-overhauling performance in terms of innovation, no; in fact many can argue that what we have here is more of the same. Indeed, the premise of what Ulcerate is doing has changed little in their career, only appearing a bit more deliberate and drawn-out on The Destroyers Of All. The extended takes on each track doesn't mean that the band is spreading concepts dangerously thin, but instead they are doing just the opposite: developing ideas more articulately and fully, leaving each song as a finished product that does what it needs to and doesn't linger a second further (the only exception being the exit of the title track, which can be forgiven and seen as a way to wrap things up). The way tracks like "Beneath" build themselves up to a level where such unchained intensity can come crashing down, yet seem effortless and a natural progression of the track is a remarkable achievement, one that is a testament to the sheer songwriting power and diligence Ulcerate have in their compositions.

The Destroyers Of All is an album that wraps dissonant and non-conventional riffing patterns (like the Immolation-esque guitars on the opener "Burning Skies") with the astounding drum performance that fuses technicality with functionality, often laying waste to the plodding guitar riffs with thundering double bass kicks and incredibly complex beats and fills while still retaining a sense of belonging within each individual song. It can be said that the guttural vocals lack variance and become tiresome over time, a complaint that is indeed valid with a vocal performance that is good but lacking the emotional power to propel it to the next level. As time progresses, some riffs do bring about a strange sense of deja vu, but with an album with no tracks under six minutes and one filled with songs that all fall along the same mood, it was almost to be expected.

Regardless, the Ulcerate we have here is continuing to evolve from a more fast-paced, intense past to a more deliberate, yet somehow heavier present while still retaining a fervent sound that is reminiscent of their back catalogue. Their songwriting ideas haven't changed too much, they simply stretched themselves out to allow a fuller and more complete album to spawn from them. That said, their ideas have become more focused and their songwriting skills are incredibly cohesive, creating an album filled with similar ideas that somehow fails to bore the listener. Couple these skills with musicianship that is nothing short of impressive and what's left are the makings for an album that can't be considered anything less than a resounding success for a band that is beginning to make its mark on the world stage. Some may hunger for the unabated intensity of Everything Is Fire or Of Fracture And Failure, but the crushingly heavy atmospheres and undeniable cohesiveness of The Destroyers Of All may stay your craving permanently.

Sputnik Music (2)

http://sputnikmusic.com/review/41303/Ulcerate-The-Destroyers-of-All/

Within the sphere of death metal, a band's greatest challenge is, generally speaking, finding a unique sound. Granted, an assault of riffs is more than enough to get a fair amount of fans, but it is originality that separates the truly memorable, timeless bands from the swarms of enjoyable, but ultimately harmless, ensembles. This, perhaps, made Ulcerate's breakthrough album, Everything Is Fire, all the more fascinating: on it, the band had created a satisfyingly-unique niche for themselves by relying less on actual riffs (make no mistake, though, there were plenty of those, regardless) and more on atmosphere. Now, with the release of The Destroyers Of All, New Zealand's premier death-metal band has improved their formula and created a masterpiece that solidifies their position among the best in the genre.

On The Destroyers Of All, chaotic drumming, ominous, crushing riffs and absolutely lethal production create a wall of noise that utterly overwhelms the listener. However, the band adds a whole new side to this approach with their use of atmospherics: the riffs are still there, and so are the roaring vocals and overpowering drums, but they're only means to an end, rather than the focal points - their purpose is merely to generate a dense, apocalyptic atmosphere. And they're entirely successful: The Destroyers Of All is drenched with a powerful, magnificent darkness that engulfs and consumes the listener relentlessly. Such an atmosphere is created on the album by a blend foreboding, mid-tempo riffs with impossibly fast and complex drumming - a technique that is as unconventional as it is effective.

The Destroyers Of All also sees the band become a more mature unit that is not afraid to take risks and push the boundaries of its genre. This is best demonstrated by the two final songs, Omens and The Destroyers Of All, both of which approach ten minutes in length. Starting with a soft melody accompanied by faint cymbal crashes, the two-part composition keeps on growing and growing until it becomes a monstrous, corrosive cacophony that crushes anything in its path; and yet, it is laced with brief quiet moments that manage to be every bit as frightening as the crescendos and climaxes.

True to it's title, The Destroyers Of All is a powerful, fierce, and, above all, destructive release perhaps the most intelligent contemporary metal band. Like Death and Gorguts before them, Ulcerate manages to once again push the boundaries of death metal further than we previously thought possible.

Sputnik Music

http://sputnikmusic.com/review/41308/Ulcerate-The-Destroyers-of-All/

Summary: Ulcerate follow up excellence with excellence, further developing the atmosphere and textures found on 2009's Everything is Fire, while scaling back some of their more traditional death metal elements.

Seven sprawling tracks, featuring sludgy grooves and ambient textures that twist and mutate their way to dissonant climaxes. Moments of bone crushing death metal that give way to subtle, atmospheric denouements. Complex, unpredictable song structures. Dissonant, intertwining guitar lines that forgo the cliched riffing of many contemporary death metal bands. Technical death metal drumming performed with enough feel and rhythmic creativity to remain fresh and interesting. Over it all, powerful guttural roars complete the bleak soundscape.

Sound intriguing?

With The Destroyers of All, New Zealand's Ulcerate bring together the aforementioned elements to create a powerful death metal opus. The band successfully build on the strengths of 2009's brilliant Everything is Fire, choosing to scale back some of that album's intensity and Immolation-esque riffing in favor of a greater emphasis on atmosphere and almost post-metal buildups and decrescendos. The results are impressive; from the foreboding opening notes of "Burning Skies" to the crushing climax of "The Destroyers of All", Ulcerate deliver an album that is tighter and more focused than Everything is Fire while demonstrating a greater grasp of melody and dynamics. Each track builds towards it's conclusion in a logical way, waxing and waning patiently without the erratic changes in volume, tempo, or feel sometimes seen on Everything is Fire.

Furthermore, returning fans need not fear that the band's signature bleak atmosphere is lacking here. The Destroyers of All is as dark and oppressive as any of Ulcerate's previous releases. This atmosphere is aided by a clean, yet organic, production job which allows for easy separation of the multiple layers of guitar and bass present by the ear, and a master which preserves the dynamic range of the recordings. The individual performances don't hurt either; each member delivers an impressively precise and diverse effort, especially drummer Jamie Saint Merat. Astonishingly, Saint Merat recorded the drums for this album in a mere five hours, without the aid of rhythmic quantization and requiring only minor corrections which were done the following day. Quite the feat, given the complexity of the drumming featured on this record.

All that said, the album is not without it's flaws. The greater focus on ambience, coupled with the cleaner production result in an album which, at its heights, doesn't sound quite as heavy or immediate as it could. During some of the climaxes, one feels that the band is on the cusp of going to another gear and really punishing the listener, but chooses instead to hold back in anticipation of the next dynamic shift. As well, the reduced focus on death metal riffing required to build the more consistent atmosphere found here is disappointing, and the consequent lack of many really memorable riffs ultimately hurts the album. While these compromises may not sound like large issues, they are enough to make this album feel at times like more of a lateral move from Everything is Fire than a definitive step forward.

Ultimately, with The Destroyers of All, Ulcerate follow up excellence with excellence, crafting an album that feels like a logical progression from Everything is Fire. The band delivers tighter songwriting, cleaner production, and develop their atmospheric and textural elements to a greater degree, though they arguably sacrifice some of their previous intensity in the process. While this album is a great addition to Ulcerate's catalogue as well as to the death metal genre as a whole, one can't help but feel the band has a little more to give. Perhaps a truly classic album is still in the cards for this band's future.

Teufelstomb.com

http://www.teufelstomb.com/reviews/ulcerate-thedestroyersofall/

You hear that sound? That low rumbling in the distance? That low rumbling in the distance that is speedily coming closer and closer? The low, grinding sound of some nightmarish creature comprised entirely of serrated blades, ripping buzzsaws, and oozing atmosphere soaked and dripping with depression and sorrow that is progressively getting louder and more undeniable? Hello, that is ULCERATE‘s THE DESTROYERS OF ALL.

THE DESTROYERS OF ALL is an extension of the matured sound ULCERATE developed on their second album EVERYTHING IS FIRE. And honestly, Ulcerate has honed this sound down to a "T"; at this point the band could almost certainly guarantee putting out a superior album every time. These kiwis have created another release of pure aggression, insane drumming, and depressive emotion. Still channeling a weird mix of riffing in the vein of IMMOLATION and GORGUTS in a firefight and transposed across CROWPATH‘s varied and layered drumming, ULCERATE is more concerned here with fine-tuning their excellent death metal arsenal. The song structures are more restrained, song lengths are perfected, and ULCERATE spends more time making the atmosphere on this album bleed battery-acid jazz. All the elements here are applied with precise tact and judgment, crafting an album that is meticulous yet brutal, emotional yet horrific.

ULCERATE is probably going to turn into a band like IMMOLATION or BOLT THROWER: you will know what's going to be on each subsequent album and can expect the small change here or there, but the success of the albums will be in the band's ability to keep the music fresh, varied, and absolutely necessary. And this is absolutely necessary. Easily an early contender for best album of 2011, THE DESTROYERS OF ALL is helping to craft ULCERATE‘s place amongst metal's greatest.

Brutalism Zine

brutalism.com/content/ulcerate-the-destroyers-of-all

The hype surrounding New Zealand's Ulcerate got me trying to appreciate their music a couple of times in the past, and I didn't find anything particularly interesting in it for me. However, when the first single off their latest The Destroyers Of All was released online it got me hooked by its incredible atmosphere and I was anticipating their new album like if it were one of my favorite bands. And boy, did the wait pay off!

The new record lasts for more than 50 minutes, and every second of this opus is filled by a very dark atmosphere that takes you places – something that is very rare for a death metal record. The closest thing that comes to mind when listening to Ulcerate's latest is Gorguts, Suffocation and Immolation yet The Destroyers Of All is quite far from these milestone bands. Another quite bizarre comparison that can be drawn is Isis but on very strong steroids that make them do blastbeats and growls every now and then. The main thing about this record is the atmosphere and the guys from Ulcerate have managed to nail it with every riff and beat performed. In fact, you don't even feel the transition from one track to another because you drift in the dead ocean of dark light created by these three talented guys.

What really impressed me about this record is how loose the structures are and how the musicianship doesn't get in your way. For death metal it's quite a rarity to hear a record that doesn't focus on the technical abilities of members involved. However, with The Destroyers Of All you don't really feel the technical aspect of the music unless you really focus on it, and that's a huge achievement. It's like you watch a dark movie with your years and forget about the camera work, feeling like you're in the picture yourself. Pure genius!

All I can say that Ulcerate latest deserves to be listened to over and over again (exactly what's happening to me for the last week) and it's an instant classic that shows the amazing talent of these guys in terms of musical composition. Being able to create such a strong and all-consuming atmosphere by using the standard expressive instruments of death metal is very ambitious and successful in case of Ulcerate. Think of this record as a soundtrack to the dark days of your life. A very good soundtrack that you will enjoy for a very long time.

Pitchline Zine

www.pitchline-zine.com/reviews.item.php?id=001715

Hearwax Media

http://hearwaxmedia.com/?p=1497
By Alec McKay

Everything Is Fire may be the most unsettling listen I have sat through. Actually, sit? No, not sit, a prone rigor mortis stature is more accurate. To most eclectic listeners (occasionally putting a toe in the bubbling raw sewage that is modern death metal), these songs will seem nihilistic epics with a little Luc Lemay flair. Although, for those whose minds have become accustomed to methodical arrangements of showy technical (safe) death metal, this is a disconcerting brew of plodding sludge while simultaneously outplaying any other band in terms of speed and intensity; Everything Is Fire is many things, often all at once. Death Metal may be dangerous again.

It is by the time you reach the mournful interlude in "Withered And Obsolete" that you get over the fact Ulcerate are pretty interesting and start really feeling something from this album. No, it is not a touching moment, or even a breath of air from the encircling madness; it has nothing to prove... This is abstract death metal at it's finest. Everything Is Fire does not waste time by infusing audacious and attention grabbing shticks, no, that would imply that it cares if you notice its existence; It is a whispered floating leviathan, moving independently. Picture it as an obscene thing hanging in the sky, approach it, know madness...

Gone are the violent fragments, jarring riffs, and urgent rhythms to be found on previous album Of Fracture and Failure. "Drown Within" spends careful time and economical speed establishing its theme, its direction, and its point; each song is superfluously streamlined. The mix enables all the recorded elements to coagulate as a single monstrous mass, the vocals seemingly erupting out of the inharmonious crust. Nothing is accidental, nothing is skipped over; it feels like doom album. It feels like a sludge album. However, make no mistake, this is death metal; bleak, scorched, and scarred death metal. The fascinating element lies in the fact that this New Zealand band is not glorifying such an obviously bleak overtone; "Tyranny" has behaviour, and intrigue. "The Earth At Its Knees" is dripping with story and detail. Top tier musicianship (and Jamie St. Merat's staggering writing for the percussion section) shuns the sentimental chops of their contemporaries and is put to work at building a self contained world. Everything Is Fire is a civilization, a dynasty, a cave painting in a rockslide.

Yes, this album is a brilliant singular work, and it would be unlikely to find a death metal album that is as viscerally textured as this in 2009. The experience is militantly cohesive, where any form of variance is non existent; this may give an impression of extensive similarity between tracks upon first spin, but attacking this at intervals proves to shed light on the eschewing diversity. An album such as this relies on it's own merits over the listener's assumptions and expectations regarding it's genre. It is one of a kind, it is dangerous; handle with care.

8.8 / 10

Metal Psalter

http://www.metalpsalter.com/review_ulcerate_everything_is_fire.html

I've heard some pretty impressive death metal this year. Check out the impressive debut from Fondlecorpse, the newest from Slugathor, and the triumphant return of Suffocation. Everything is Fire is better than all of these releases, and with this album Ulcerate have single-handedly redefined and reinvigorated death metal.

Trimming a member and substantially slowing things down after their fantastic 2007 debut Of Fracture and Failure, Ulcerate have crafted a maddeningly abstract, brilliantly technical, and incredibly heavy collection of songs brimming with an atmosphere of menacing paranoia. If that's too many adjectives, think Immolation's debut plus Gorguts's Obscura slowed to an Incantation crawl. A quick perusal of other reviews will find references to Portal and Deathspell Omega.

Unfortunately is that none of these descriptions are particularly useful. If Everything is Fire has a flaw, it lacks immediacy and defies description. The first listen left me relatively baffled. I didn't feel competent to write this review until I'd listened to it ten times or so. It's a soundtrack to a nightmare.

The songs are brooding, meandering barrages of twisted, dissonant riffing. I'm not a guitarist, but to these ears this album is, for all intents and purposes, just as technical as your latest wank-by-numbers tech death album. But unlike, for example, Brain Drill, who throw dozens of unrelated shred-fests at the listener, Ulcerate always anchor their riffs in a cohesive narrative structure, and they excel at transitioning among the various motifs presented in each song.

That's my best effort at describing (and slavishly praising) Ulcerate's songwriting aptitude. I've been trying to write this review for two months. Just put on some headphones, turn out the lights, and listen. And pay attention.

Immaculately produced, Everything is Fire is dark and dense, yet surprisingly clear, and thankfully lacks the clinical studio production of much contemporary death metal. The phenomenal drumming is revealed through a thankfully natural presentation. The vocals, I should mention, are great. They're gruff and forceful and expertly navigate the busy and complex arrangements.

If I were so impressed with my own knowledge, taste, and foresight that I would declare an album a classic mere months after its release, Everything is Fire would be a worthy recipient of that designation. All hyperbole aside, it suffices to say that this is the finest death metal album of the year to date and is on the short list for death metal album of the decade. Believe whatever hype you hear and get this album.

Examiner.com

http://www.examiner.com/x-16267-Charlotte-Metal-Music-Examiner...
By Jordan Fogal

Ulcerate, hailing from Auckland New Zealand, have been a rising star in technical death metal. 2006 saw the band's release of their first full length "Of Fracture and Failure", a blistering assault of precise and twisted death metal. It was easy to see the band had some unique ideas going on, especially for the genre. "Everything is Fire" takes some of their more abstract and atmospheric themes and refines them. When you think of technical death metal, atmospheric is not usually a term that comes to mind. While there are some points that bring to mind Isis and Neurosis, most of the atmosphere feels closer to that of a Deathspell Omega album. Mixing the bleak atmospheric refrains into a swirling maelstrom of mind melting blast beats and discordant riffs, the band treads on new ground. It's like watching the world slowly, violently pulled into a massive vortex.

Drown Within begins with a huge stomach churning; lumbering riff that slowly builds up to chaos. The totally unpredictable patterns of the riffs, drums, everything in general is very oppressive. With more listens you catch the infernal beauty of what is going on. This is not something that can be digested in a few listens. Most tracks are in the 6 minute range and have insane, monstrous structures that can challenge the listener. The production has a rawer and hazy sound to it than their previous effort but all of the instruments and vocals still mix together well. The vocals serve their purpose but don't have much range. They might bore some listeners eventually or take some getting used to. The deep, grating vocals fit the bands dense sound well.

Caecus and Everything is Fire are the stand out tracks on the album for me. Caecus wastes no time by beginning with one of the most relentless assaults on the album. After the two minute mark, the firestorm begins to subside and the listener waits for the next wave. Everything Is Fire features a black metal inspired intro riff that soon dissolves into total dissonance as the vocals growl "We are lost without fate, Reap what we have sown, We diminish, all nameless." The lyrics are just as crushing and bleak as the music, painting a burning, smoldering landscape of oblivion. While hardly unique, the lyrics still bring something a little more thought provoking to mind than some of their blood soaked peers.

"Everything is Fire" will probably not receive the recognition it deserves. I stated before the album requires some focus and time to completely enjoy. Not everybody listens to death metal for a challenge. Regardless, this album is one of the top death metal releases this year and has held my attention much longer than most technical death metal bands can. Ulcerate have taken a step big forward and created something unique. Hopefully they will be rewarded for their exploration into sonic oblivion.

Check out their myspace at http://www.myspace.com/ulcerate

Imhotep

http://www.imhotep.no/?did=9091004&aid=9069488
By Marcin "Dethster4life" Lewandowski

Just when you thought you have heard it all, in comes something like that. Let's classify it: Brutal Death Metal. Better yet, PROGRESSIVE Brutal Death Metal. Yeah, whatever... Whatever label I give this unbelievable display of absolute supremacy of metal over all, does not matter.

When was the last time you heard metal music that made you go: "Shit, these guys cannot possibly be mere human beings"? Well, I just did. Seven fucking times. And I feel like I only NOW am finally getting what it MIGHT be all about. And normally, friend, I would get bored and tired of listening to an album 7 times in a row, it would all too predictable, you know, that feeling of "I get this album, I figured it out and it's time for it to be placed in the shelf. It's great but I had enough for now". Not so with Ulcerate.

You know, back in my born again Christian days, I remember my pastor would often raise the Bible and excitingly shout: "This is not like the other books, IT IS ALIVE!!!", and that is precisely how I feel about the new Ulcerate album. Once you taste it, it won't let go, it will drag you in, like a hungry black hole. It will steal your soul, hook you up to a life-sucking machine "Matrix"-style and suck, suck and suck the life out of you 'til your useless carcass disintegrates into a pile of atoms. And THEN it will go to work on you. And the fucked up thing about it is, YOU WANT IT TO DO SO.

I am just describing the feeling you get when you commune with this album, but other feelings like sadness, depression, anger, despair, fear and mystery (is that a feeling?) will envelop you and consume you through and through. I have taken the task of dissecting it into separate sounds, hooks, melodies, riffs, and believe me, it is impossible before you listen to this for at least 6 times.

The music is highly structured, chaotic, brutal, beautiful, sad and creepy at the same time. These guys don't use guitars - they use chainsaws, electric transformers, pneumatic hammers and other construction tools, or at least it sounds like it. But they must be guitars: I hear hooks, melodies, harmony, guitar wizardry at ridiculously high speeds and brutality, and every single track has it all. Everything you would want from a metal album is here, but it is so intricately interwoven with utter, horrifying chaotic brutality, you need to spin this motherfucker a few times to find these little nuggets and sugar cubes.

Yes, "Everything Is Fire" is a very, very challenging listen. It demands your full attention, don't bother to listen to it while you study, fuck, or read, do not try to fall asleep to it. It won't let you. It is jealous of your attention and won't reveal itself to you unless and until you honor it with your whole being.

Then, and only then, you will hear the sound that can be compared to somewhat (although they really don't sound like anyone else) to Nile (intricacy, technical prowess), Behemoth (brutality, heaviness), Machine Head (wailing guitars), Neurosis (convoluted songwriting, 1000-riff songs), Immolation (high pitched guitar squeals), Mastodon (see Neurosis), and Deftones (slow, guitarless, ambient passages in-between salves of brutality and speed), Krisiun (brutality, uncompromising heaviness and extreme ideas) and... I am sure you can pick many more influences yourself.

Let me say this again: Ulcerate does not sound like anybody else. Their originality is 100% Ulcerate. But, listening to them I was reminded of the following albums: Machine Head "Burn My Eyes", Immolation "Close to a World Below", Deftones "Around the Fur", Mastodon "Remission"", Behemoth "Satanica" and "Demigod", Nile "Black Seeds of Vengeance" and "In Their Darkened Shrines", Krisiun "Southern Storm", and maybe Sepultura's "Chaos A.D." and "Roots". Again, no rip off or derivation noted or spotted just made me think of those while listening for some reason.

I won't spoil the surprise for you, but for one song (my favorite): cut number 7, "Soullessness Embraced" features two awesome riffs: first around 2:30 mark, another, a BRUUTAL but catchy riff ending the song around 5:43 mark.

Ulcerate experiment with different sounds of their instruments rather than going for the same pitch throughout. Even within the same song, the guitars change: now they sound like horde of angry wasps, then they trade places with hornets, finally turning on buzz saws and chain saws. There's even one moment that reminds me of when a tree hit my power lines near the house, the stop and go, terrifying, deafening hum sounds exactly like what Ulcerate achieves on number 4, "Caecus".

Moreover, "Everything Fire" is littered with slow riffs, mid paced riffs, heavy slow and heavy, super fast riffs, melodies (not your metalcore sweet melodies, though), hooks, grooves and unbelievable brutality and speed, all complete with sudden slow-downs of Deftones/Neurosis-like ambience, melancholy and creepiness.

And damn, if I didn't have the album of the year picked already (Gollum), and now I totally have to dethrone it. At least now I know, not just think, KNOW, that no one can beat these guys to the number one slot on my personal end-year list, and I am sure on many, many others'.

This is not only an obvious album of the year - this is THE greatest Death Metal album of all time, period. Yes, I am aware of Morbid Angel, Nile, Behemoth, Immolation, Suffocation, etc., own key albums and love them all, but this still stands: Ulcerate "Everything Is Fire" is no less, but THE greatest Death Metal album of all time, period. No one comes close to these guys, no one. I wish I could give it more than 6 points.

I wish for you to be as blown away by this as I am.

Now, guess what I am going to go listen to?

Sonic Frontiers

http://sonicfrontiers.net/blog/?p=523#more-523
By Josh Haun

New Zealand's Ulcerate are really onto something with their latest album, Everything is Fire. The sound can best be described as mind-warping, discordant technical death metal, with hints of post metal atmosphere buried within the gaping maw of the musical vortex the band so effortlessly conjures up. Hypnotic and mesmerizing in a way that at times defies description, this album is the equivalent of a death metal acid trip into the farthest reaches of space.

While it is true that Everything is Fire is a wonder to behold from a technical standpoint, the members of Ulcerate don't use their impressive musical chops for anything that sounds even remotely like showing off. Rather, they are far more interested in creating all-encompassing soundscapes that come off like the musical counterpart to the murky, swirling mouth of the blackest abyss. You don't just listen to Everything is Fire, you get drawn deeper and deeper into Ulcerate's twisted, hallucinogenic world, where blind idiot gods sit upon thrones forged from pure chaos energy. This is the soundtrack to H.P. Lovecraft's Great Old Ones slowly lurching and heaving their slimy tentacles out of inter-dimensional portals and the deepest, darkest cracks of the earth, ready to take over the horrified planet.

The heavy black and post-metal influences becomes readily apparent while exploring the constantly contorting song structures of Everything is Fire, as if the members of Ulcerate hold Neurosis, Gorguts and Blut aus Nord in equally high regard. In fact, it is this ability to infuse their reality-bending assault with atmospheric subtlety and nuance that truly sets them apart from their tech-death peers. Whereas so many other bands are clinical to the point of being almost robotic in their complexities, Ulcerate are able to bring the sort of seething malignancy you'd expect to find on a black metal record and seamlessly weld it onto their tech-death framework. The result is an album that evokes black waves of oceanic musical entropy washing over you, slowly eroding your mortal soul. There is a depth of feeling and emotion to be found within the album's myriad nooks and crannies, something which is all too rare within the tech-death realm.

With Everything is Fire, Willowtip has once again hit pay-dirt with an utterly devastating yet textured and intelligent release from a young band ready to rip the death metal rule book to shreds and blast it into the heart of the black hole. Easily the most intriguing and unique technical death metal record you're going to hear in 2009.

MetalReview.com

http://www.metalreview.com/Reviews/5029/Ulcerate...
By Chris McDonald

As modern death metal continues to push the envelope of demanding musicianship, overbearingly complex song-structures, and pristine production, one eventually has to ask, "Where do we go from here?" What is left to accomplish in a genre where superficial qualities are often placed above real compositional prowess? At what point does death metal move beyond the role of mere auditory violence and become a means of genuine artistic expression?

The answer to this question lies in bands like Ulcerate. Beginning their career as a fairly straightforward brutal death metal band in their demo phase, this New Zealand-based outfit ventured into increasingly complex and esoteric territories with their debut LP Of Fracture and Failure, which happened to land them the attention of Willowtip Records. While their debut full-length explored a harsh and fairly unconventional style of death metal, I never would have believed that it would evolve into something this dark, distinctive, and utterly fantastic. Ulcerate's progression into their current state may not be too radical a departure stylistically, but that doesn't mean I was any more prepared for what this enigmatic group had in store for me this time.

Everything Is Fire is, without question, one of the bleakest albums I've ever heard. Every aspect of this work, from the cataclysmic music to the distant vocals and unrepentantly nihilistic lyrical themes, feels vivid and alarmingly convincing. Even someone unwilling to appreciate the artistic merit of death metal would be hard-pressed to argue that the guys in Ulcerate approach their craft with almost unnerving sincerity. There is absolutely nothing remotely tongue-in-cheek or feigned about this album, and this is what makes it so simultaneously frightening and powerful.

Music-wise, Ulcerate forgo the dry production and self-indulgent musicianship of their peers in favor of something less immediate but massively intense. Imagine the leering dissonance of Deathspell Omega channeled through the overactive maelstrom of Gorguts and delivered with the off-kilter savagery of Immolation, and you have at least a basic idea of what to expect. But obviously written descriptions cannot really do this album justice. Throughout the entirety of this disc it feels like the band is trying to musically simulate the apocalypse-whirlwinds of incredibly precise snare rolls and blastbeats back a constantly shifting bedlam of atonal chords and furiously discordant tremolo riffs, occasionally broken up by brief moments of quiet reflection before the looming pandemonium returns. The way the band seamlessly transitions into the calmer moments of clean guitar and jazzy rhythm work greatly increases their effectiveness, and these intermissions are all the more impressive considering how well-suited they feel in the context of the punishing overall sound.

And punishing it is. In case you hadn't guessed, Everything Is Fire is a brutally unforgiving listen. Even for someone well accustomed to the more challenging strains of death metal, this record will take some time to show its true colors. But let me assure you that it's completely worth the effort. Ulcerate's ability to craft unexpected hooks and jaw-dropping instrumental dynamics is even more amazing considering how unstructured the songs initially seem. The two guitar tracks rarely mimic each other in the riffing patterns, each exploring and repeating their own individual themes while occasionally reuniting to deliver a bone-chilling tremolo flourish or jagged harmonic in unison before descending back into the ordered chaos. When the band does flirt with actual melody, such as the segments of haunting serenity offered in "Withered And Obsolete" and "The Earth At Its Knees," it feels like a brief pause in a furious thunderstorm when the sun finally manages to penetrate the clouds, offering a fleeting glimpse of relief before being swallowed back up again in the uproar of lurching grooves and sudden tempo shifts. A fairly murky and raw production places the vocals and percussion more in a supporting role, despite being admirably performed; this is undoubtedly a guitar-centered album, and as such the guitars are given enough room in the mix to shake you with their force while still revealing their innumerable subtleties, while the merciless drums seemingly follow a path all their own. In short, Ulcerate are not only masters of their individual instruments, but of focusing their collective abilities to create music that transcends the limits of its respective genre to become something greater.

Let me stress again; do not take this record lightly. Those looking for anything less than a demanding listening venture would be well advised to search elsewhere for their death metal fix. But anyone willing to properly invest themselves in this album will know that Ulcerate have delivered something amazing and, dare I say it, visionary with their efforts here. Rarely do I hear extreme metal so deep and engrossing, so chaotic on the surface and yet so meticulously calculated underneath. Aside from being as brutally heavy as anything you'll hear this year, Everything Is Fire is a bold look into the darkest abysses of the human psyche, communicated through music so technically articulate and seething with rage that it commands your utmost attention. So lock yourself in your room, turn the lights off, get some good headphones, and experience this album, as it demands to be experienced.

6/6

Chronicles of Chaos

http://www.chroniclesofchaos.com/reviews/albums/2-5762_ulcerate...
By Jackie Smit

If the idea of a musical summit featuring Meshuggah, Suffocation and Immolation as the main players sets your pulse racing, then you need to heed my advice and run, nay sprint to your nearest record purveyor and get your hands on the sophomore album by New Zealand's Ulcerate. Liberally blending the aforementioned acts' best bits into a surprisingly unique and coherent alchemy, to label _Everything Is Fire_ as brutal is a gross understatement. The eight songs contained here are visceral to the point of sounding apocalyptic, and what makes them even more so is the vein of tar-thick atmosphere that seeps into every crevice of the disc's fifty minutes. Victoriously atop this smouldering heap of sonic rubble stand the guitar duo of Oliver Goater and Michael Hoggard who mangle, contort and twist practically every one of the album's myriad riffs to where they take on an almost otherworldly quality. Not to be outdone, Jamie Saint Merat's work behind the drumkit is nothing short of breathtaking. His onslaught is relentless, dynamic, never settling on a single rhythm for longer than is absolutely necessary. The fruits of their labours -- eight songs that as a rule all exceed the five minute mark -- are virtually faultless, each simmering with personality that makes them both memorable and practically demands repeated listens and analysis. Among these "We Are Nil" is a current personal favourite, but to be honest it's nigh on impossible to choose. What is glaringly obvious though is that in an ideal world _Everything Is Fire_ should serve as a vivid warning to every death metal legend and superstar: there are a new set of contenders in town and they have enough talent between the four of them to dethrone a great many of the so-called genre leaders.

9/10

Teufels Tomb

http://www.teufelstomb.com/reviews/ulcerate-everythingisfire/

Fuck.

Really, that is all that can be said to describe the sophomore effort by kiwi technical death metallers ULCERATE. FUCK.

Wait, no. That's not accurate at all. Let me try something better. Just give me a second.

Wait for it... wait for it....

HOLY FUCKING SERRATED BLADE SOAKED IN BATTERY ACID SAWING THROUGH THE SHAFT OF THE POPE'S ERECT, ROTTING MICROPHALLUS!!!

ULCERATE has compiled one of the best god damn albums I've heard all year, if not the best. See, kids, this- THIS- is how you write a technical death metal album. Just ignore the fact that the album sounds like it was named by a Russian immigrant for a second, will ya? It has skill, it has technique, it has all that shit, but EVERYTHING IS FIRE has something more. It oozes no, it hemorrhages fucking atmosphere. The darkness prevalent on this record is so thick, so dense, so impenetrably bleak and dirty that you will want to carve the skin off your dick and use it for a lampshade while furiously impaling your balls with an iron stiletto heel, all whilst screaming "FUCK ME HARDER MR. MAGOO, FUCK ME HARDER."

ULCERATE has upped the ante from the last time they reared their collective, ugly, menacing grimace in our direction. EVERYTHING IS FIRE can best be described as the unholy triple union of IMMOLATION, GORGUTS, and CROWPATH with the brooding, netherworldly gaze of PORTAL witnessing the blasphemous consummation. You have IMMOLATION's sense of technical, melodic rhythm, GORGUTS' complex, multi-faceted structure, and CROWPATH's sprinkled, inventive drumming and dirty sludge (echoing elements of INTRONAUT's progressive workings) with a wall-of-sound effect that would satisfy the biggest PORTAL and MITOCHONDRION fans.

The riffs are chaotic, massive in complexity, harmonic in structure, and would easily make Bob Vigna wet himself in delight. Jamie Saint Merat's drum performance is tight and immense, creating a cacophony of percussion that will appeal to all fans of technical drumming. And new vocalist Paul Kelland fits the music much more than previous vocalists: he emits a coarse, mammoth growl that sounds like the closest approximation to a human mastodon that our pitiful vocal chords will ever achieve.

EVERYTHING IS FIRE is so mind-warpingly intense that it could probably render you sterile. Seriously, I think my left nut just exploded. To say this is a mandatory purchase would be a massive understatement of an order so vast it would be obvious to braindead children. If you haven't picked up an ULCERATE album before, EVERYTHING IS FIRE is the album to do so, no excuses allowed. Bow to your new god.

Live for Metal

http://www.live4metal.com/reviews-733.htm
Review by Steve Green

Is there such a category as Dissonant Death Metal? I bloody well hope so as that's exactly where I'm lumping Kiwi's Ulcerate. I can cope with the Death Metal side of the band quite easily, but the constant barrage of twists and turns and technical nuances is way above my comfort zone. Imagine a nagging hangover which will never go away. The pounding on your skull is never-ending, except that the pain appears in different positions at ever opportunity and you feel more and more nauseous as the process continues. That's how Ulcerate make me feel. Trapped in a world of non-stop pain and brutality.

On the upside, their musicianship is fantastic, particularly drummer Jamie Saint Merat who is just jaw droppingly amazing. I'm also blown away by Ulcerate's use of atmospherics and textures, especially the slower drawn out sections. The ebb and flow of styles has a completely natural feel and none of the clever shit (ie: the crazy twist and turns) feels forced. Fuck, even though most of it goes way over my head, I'm impressed nonetheless. I'm sure the musos amongst you will be creaming yourselves over this beast.

Grind and Punishment

http://grindandpunishment.blogspot.com/2009/05/...

A name change may be in order for these Kiwis because their third album and Willowtip debut does anything but singe an acid hole in your stomach lining, In fact, this may be the most soothing death metal album I've heard in eons.

I missed the band's prior two offerings (there's a reason this isn't called Death and Punishment) but I'm starting to think I need to broaden my musical horizons a skootch.

Drawing from Neurosis' murky palette of constantly shifting grays spiked with lambent flashes of burnt umber concussion fulminating through the eye of every storm, Ulcerate manage to distill the familiar tension/release pattern of Isis and their ilk through a distinctly death metal prism. I don't think I've heard a death metal album this expressive and emotional since the late, unsung Mindrot's cacophonous bloodlettings. On the technical front, the band packs all the chops of a prime Nile, but has the common courtesy to play at a recognizable tempo that allows appreciation of their musical mastery. And Ulcerate know how to orchestrate both a good song and a compelling album experience. Smack at the fulcrum of Everything is Fire, "Caecus" alights the stairs of the celestial tower before razing the limitless horizon with a blastbeat holocaust finish. The dry sinew and snapping tendon sound of "Tyranny's" bass line is could launch a thousand burning ships in its own right.

Where a lot of your patience testing lesser Isis clones will talk about their music as a journey rather than a destination, Ulcerate clearly have a goal in mind. Everything if Fire doggedly leads you through its labyrinthine moods and tones on the way to the title track, an eight minute tour de force that recapitulates and then overshadows everything that went before, moody interludes slaughtered by Ragnarok riffing only to spiral to even more glorious cyclopean peaks. It's the soundtrack to Lovecraft's night terrors.

This is not the kind of band where you download a track or two to listen to at your leisure. Everything is Fire is the kind of album that demands your full attention and repeatedly listens and rewards your devotion with worlds of emotion and majesty.

Diabolical Conquest

http://www.diabolicalconquest.com/reviews/ulcerate...
By Roman Temin

Looks like the 'brutal death metal' [my least favorite redundancy] genre is finally starting to grow up... in fits and starts, anyway. A couple of years ago, Defeated sanity put out Psalms of the Moribund, an album that was single-mindedly pummelling, with slam riffs aplenty, but also surprisingly cerebral, with plenty of subtlety and lots of fresh ideas included. Now we get this, the second full-length from New Zealand's most famous non-hobbit residents, Ulcerate. A much more refined effort than their debut Of Fracture & Failure [2006], Everything Is Fire represents what could potentially be a major wake-up call to the band's peers in the 'BruTech' community - a rather vociferous suggestion that maybe Gorguts were on to something when they violated all the long-held traditions of death metal with Obscura a decade ago.

Indeed, Everything is Fire features ample Gorguts-isms, along with influences from a variety of other forward-thinking extreme metal pioneers, such as Immolation, Deathspell Omega and Blut Aus Nord. The riffing on this record centers largely around a variety of alternate-picked harmonics, frequently shifting back and forth between consonant and dissonant chord voicings, and using an expansive tonal range. There's very little on this album that would resemble traditional death metal riffage - no power chord chugging, no Bolt Thrower style harmony leads, no galloping palm-muted straight-8th-note runs, and no solos whatsoever. Despite all this, the record is remarkably brutal and, in many places, genuinely unsettling. But it's obviously not the ham-fisted 'I'm gonna bash this bitch's head in, then gut her and rape her emptied corpse' style of brutality that so many Suffocation wannabes have polluted our ears with over the years... more of a 'the world is slowly crumbling around me, and I'm powerless to stop it' type of brutality. Don't be mistaken, there's still plenty of thick bottom string attacking, but it's almost exclusively coupled with fluttery upper-string chord play and ringing arpeggios. Everything is Fire is, at its core, a dense flurry of sound that demands the listener's undivided attention before it can give itself over and be fully absorbed.

The songs on this record are arranged in a linear, refrain-free style that's becoming increasingly popular in extreme metal. Much in the same way as Deathspell Omega's recent efforts, each of these eight compositions treks through multiple movements of varying tempos and moods which, if you follow the lyrics [a bit tough since the vocals are buried in the mix], do a pretty impressive job of reflecting the shifting tenors between Paul Kelland's verses. The esoteric structuring, coupled with the heavily layered riffs [most of which are differently accented through each repetition, either with tonal augmentation or amorphous time signatures] make this an album with a very steep 'learning curve'. It would require a superhuman effort to absorb everything that Ulcerate throws at the listener in one sitting. As of the writing of this review, I've listened to this album probably 30-35 times and I'm still picking up on various nuances. This is even true of those post-rock-tinged 'mellow' passages, where the band seems to take cues from the likes of Neurosis, inserting furtive melodic panaches into the wall of sound - elements that make me wish a 5.1 or 7.1 mix of this album existed. It's impressive enough on record... but if these guys can pull it off in a live setting, it would be an accomplishment worthy of Guinness [if not the record book, then at least a round of brews]. Half of the bands to whom Ulcerate can draw a direct comparison don't play live at all, and the other half are limited in the number of songs from their catalog they can pull off in a live setting without stripping them down significantly. But there's not a single song on Everything is Fire which can effectively be minimized in such a way.

There's still room for improvement here, make no mistake about it. In their ambition to create a uniquely dense and challenging record, Ulcerate do at times make missteps when it comes to arrangement. This can be witnessed a little under 3 minutes into the opener "Drown Within", where there's a remarkably sloppy transition between two very different riffs, as though several bars worth of music was mistakenly cut from the song. This occurs a handful of times throughout the album's 50-minute duration, hampering what is typically a very fluid collection of songs. It's still a massive improvement over the band's debut, which contained all kinds of slipshod arrangements. Here's to hoping that Ulcerate can fully ace this test in time for their next album. Because if they do, we may have to rewrite the death metal history books to accommodate a new standard-bearer for excellence in the genre.

9.3 / 10

Metal as Fuck

http://www.metalasfuck.net/zine/reviews/2009/ulcerate...

Thankfully not yet another breakdown band!

Although I have been unfamiliar with the work of Auckland band Ulcerate, I can safely say they are a band I will be keeping a close on eye on in the fututre. And for good reason! Their recent release Everything is Fire is a deep, layered and sophisticated extreme metal release, without having to rely on the current formula of over-the-top speed and/or sudden repetitive breakdowns.

Everything is Fire lays out before the listener a recording that is mature and extreme far beyond its years.

The robot-like drumming of Jamie Saint Merat, whose fluid flows and jumpstart blasts underpin the rythym section of the band, as he skillfully lays the foundation for the stringed section to perform thier aerobatics. The twin guitar attacks of Michael Hoggard and Oliver Goater simultaneously swirl and stab through the oft-times chaotic layering of the music. These guys break through the wall to punctuate with cleverly timed solos, "acoustic" sections, and just plain neanderthalism.

The bass, or should I say gravel-grinding work of Paul Kelland, whom also fronts the vocal duties, unhinges any high-priced dental work you may have had. His vocals are also of a deeper register, ranging from a throaty growl to a unsettling bellow as he venemously spits the lyrics with direction and intent.

Standout tracks for me would be Withered and Obsolete, Caecus, The Earth and its Knees and the title track Everything is Fire.

Drawing more from the books of Athiest, Cynic and Cephalic Carnage and thankfully staying clear of what seem to be de rigeur at the moment, Ulcerate give the extreme music world cause to both celebrate and foul their collective trousers.

Teeth of the Divine

http://teethofthedivine.com/site/reviews/ulcerate-everything-is-fire
By Erik Thomas

After the clinical tech death assault that was Of Fracture and Failure, New Zealand's Ulcerate has made a few changes to their sound and thankfully replaced vocalist Ben Reed (bassist Paul Keland now performs vocals) and the end result is yet another simply killer Willowtip release and one of the most striking death metal albums of 2009 (and beyond).

Whereas Of Fracture and Failure was a more surgical dervish that hinted at some twisted Deathspell Omega throes, Everything is Fire fully embraces the atonal slicing of Deathspell Omega and adds the murkier, backwards discordance of Immolation making a death metal album that's an oppressively claustrophobic listen and seethes with blistering dissonance and tangible malevolence at every turn.

From the opening lurch of "Drown Within" it's obvious that Everything is Fire is not a nice, clean tidy tech death metal album. And when the song does eventually explode it's a vortex of undulating, squealing riffs and unpredictable percussive patterns that's hard to wrap your head around in one listen or even many casual listens. The lengthy tracks that comprise Everything is Fire need to be absorbed completely as the sonic voracity of every note literally seeps into every vein and pore of your being, deeper with each listen. Tracks like the monstrous "Withered and Obsolete", "Caecus" with its mind fucking ambient refrains (cementing the Deathspell Omega influence), and utterly chaotic climax, scrawling shitstorm of "Tyranny" and the compeltely schizophrenic, psychotic structures of the title track all deliver those rare, indescribable moments that make you challenge your expectations of what death metal is and should be in the future.

The rougher, muddier production suits the style shift perfectly as do Kelland's more suitable, gruffer vocals, which are smartly mixed to be in the background somewhat. And thusly Everything is Fire is that rare Altars of Madness, Effigy of the Forgotten, type of death metal album that raises the bar and sets the standard for the genre for the next few years, though not everyone will immediately feel that way.

Metal Obsession

http://metalobsession.net/ulcerate-everything-is-fire

While I do like to spread my musical activities over a variety of genres, there is always one haven that I come back to - Death Metal. The genre contains everything I like in heavy metal - heaviness, technicality and generally, musicianship. I've got bands like Psycroptic there, Necrophagist, Decapitated and Quo Vadis too, and by the time the first track of Ulcerate's 2009 album 'Everything is Fire' had finished, I knew it was also joining my collection - a full blown brutal death metal album, verging on a perfection that can never quite be attained.

On writing this review, I asked myself what exactly does constitute a classic death metal album to me, and the answer I came up with was diversity. While its basis should clearly be on heavy, brutal music, a variety of influences in death metal has always stood-out as a highlight and sets certain bands apart from the rest. During the 50 pulsating minutes of 'Everything Is Fire', Ulcerate demonstrate a host of ideas including rigorous technicality, atmospheric mood changing riffs, post-metal segments and forward thought derived through experimentation on all instruments.

The riffs and progressions by both guitarists are fascinating throughout the album and easily surpass what you would expect if you judged the band on the 'outsider preconception' of death metal. The key to their success is that neither guitarist contradicts or works against the other. They have fierce sections with subtle interludes too. Put simply, both guitarists in their perfect harmony, always, deserve your attention. The frantic pace set by drummer Jamie Merat is also worthy of note, which in its progressive manner, truly challenges the listener and helps to provide a kaleidoscope of visualisations for you to digest. And the vocals in their oft demonically low-end range add massive depth and even more character/brutality to the album.

I would like to go back and pick up on the 'forward thought' point I made earlier, as this is especially where the band shines through when compared to recent releases that I've heard in the genre. The music created on 'Everything is Fire' contains subtle technicality, bold experimentation and overtly progressive, atmospheric riffs, which leads me to my humble and hopefully not too ridiculous opinion that the Ulcerate brand of Death Metal is the new benchmark - the direction that the genre should work towards next.

Everything is Fire is a challenging listen. It has taken an eclectic mix of the past, and mixed it together with some new ideas that the band themselves have introduced. The album will open your mind to their intelligent creative concepts and let you hear the future in your ears.

9/10

Concrete Web

http://www.concreteweb.be/reviews/...
By Ivan Tibos

Ulcerate debuted in 2007 with Of Fracture And Failure (Neurotic Records), but this album couldn't convince me completely. This second studio album, however, stands for a huge progression within the band's musical history. Everything Is Fire lasts for fifty minutes and brings the same kind of Grindcore / Death Metal, but simply better. First of all, the songs have more draft. Almost all compositions have an additional mathematic-technical intelligence, without that enervating and exaggerated over-mixed hooking and breaking (a sickness many bands suffer from nowadays). Besides, several tracks contain the nicest tempo-changes and experimental intermezzos. Secondly, the performance is much better. On Of Fracture And Failure I missed some kind of cohesion, but Everything Is Fire shows a less clinical band. The details are better worked out, and so are the different lead- and rhythm elements. And tertio the sound and production: clean but not over-polished, safe but not cheap, and more 'complete' than Of Fracture. The average duration of the tracks is pretty long, at least for Grind/Death-stuff (between 5:23 and 7:52 minutes), and that's a risk, but Ulcerate easily succeed to keep these sonic assaults interesting. Unexpected yet sometimes surprising tempo-changes, technical whirlwind guitars, devastating drum patterns, pounding bass lines and rough grunts, some experiments and a weird symbiosis of emotions and chaos, recorded to please every open-minded Death / Blast / Grind freak!

84/100

Sonic Dice

http://www.sonicdice.com/2009/04/17/album-review-ulcerate-everything-is-fire
By Rich E

Now this was a real surprise to me. Having had a brief look at the press release and seen that it had been put with the 'Black Metal' camp, I braced myself for some blood-curdling squeals and tempestuous tempos. I was wrong. Neither would I say that these four guys from New Zealand could be put with the brutal death metal lot just as easily. Their sound combines texture with melody; with minimalist playing and maximum shredding, to create an atmospheric and punishing record.

Last month, I noted of the lack of decent Italian death metal bands to have made an impact in UK, with the exception to that rule being Fleshgod Apocalypse and their new album 'Oracles'. I could probably say the same about Ulcerate. In fact, I'm not sure if I could name any New Zealand-based death bands without having to try and look them up.

'Everything Is Fire' has all the experimental and doom tendencies that propel the dark and ambient side of metal from bands such as Neurosis (as can be heard on 'Drown Within'), to the more 'straight forward' post-metal sounds of Isis. But this is expertly woven into a death metal fabric, with Jamie Merat's shuddering drumming and the often frantic but virtuosic guitar playing (as on 'The Earth At Its Knees'). Michael Hoggard and Oliver Goater's guitarwork complement each other well. The two seem to share the same goal, with neither guitarist pushing in a different direction which can often lead to unbalanced dynamics within the band.

'Everything Is Fire' is definitely a modern death metal album but, without leaning too much on playing or grinding the fastest at all times, the band create a huge sound that transcends contemporary atmospheric and post-metal yet retains much of the furious playing and low-end grunt.

4/6

Archaic Magazine

http://www.archaic-magazine.com/article.php?aid=46074
By Dave Waite

Ulcerate's 2007 debut full-length "Of Fracture and Failure" was a technical death metal work out of truly epic proportions, disregarding that shitty pro-tooled to fuckery, clean cut approach for a far denser and darker sound that was (and is) more akin to Immolation or "Obscura" era Gorguts than the mechanical, Nicky Clarke sponsored wankery that seems to infiltrate every airwave. Even more disjointed than the debut, new album "Everything is Fire" throws all conventions soaring through the air yet still maintains that very song-driven approach that enables them to stand out as an entity unto themselves. The Immolation influence can still clearly be heard looming throughout the albums backbone but is now mixed with a sense of mangled experimentalism a la Deathspell Omega, which in turn enables these eight songs to crawl that extra bit deeper under the skin. Far from mere second rate copyists Ulcerate inject a whole different sense of brutality into their music that is very much their own, letting the material take on its own natural form rather than flooding it with endless bouts of soulless self-indulgence. A wonderfully organic production enables the faultless musicianship to maintain a very human form, showing in true light just how sickeningly good and diverse these musicians can be. Whether it be their lightning fast blasting ("Drown Within"), mammoth grooves in time signatures that would give Stephen Hawkins a headache ("Everything is Fire"), or dropping things down to an unearthly crawl ("Caecus"), Ulcerate let their obvious dedication to both their art and their instruments shine through, which in essence makes this the awe-inspiring death metal album it really is.

Necroslaughter

Translation from German...
http://necroslaughter.tk/2009/03/ulcerate-everything-is-fire/

One of my absolute favorite albums is and remains the classic Gorguts From Wisdom To Hate "(2001 to Seasons Of Mist), which is damn nasty, dissonant melodies, with incredible brutality and an evil mood an incredible atmosphere, that of his peers examined. Only in the aspect of evil and incredibly dark mood it created bands like Immolation or Ingurgitating Oblivion to the intensity of Canadians ranzukommen. A combination of the two repeated elements, dissonance in Extrema grundbösen attitude and I would not really expect more großartig, technical bands usually tend to Frickeln in inhumane tempos, melodic arcs, or both, and correct evil, dark death metal is, unfortunately, has become a rarity.

All the more surprised I was when I next work of ULCERATE could hear! On just their second plant "Everything Is Fire" Latzer the four guys from Auckland there a chunk of unbelievable hatred, misanthropy and nihilism that one might think, the apocalypse had already begun. So (!) Sounds like the soundtrack to the world now!

At a high technical level on a good 50 minutes of "Everything Is Fire" ever in terms of the Songdienlichkeit and atmosphere worked. The technique is never an end in itself and drag the songs in any forced Progressiveness. Rather the opposite is the case: In doomiger methodology, the riffs are often so disastrous long repeats that another, more disturbing aspect to the already very frighten music companion. Here are some phrases and themes of the melodies skillfully recorded and again with variations worn by the song, such as in "We Are the Nile." Another compositional masterpiece of the genre of Death Metal ULCERATE create with their skillful play not only with the tempo, but also the dynamics. Thus begins the opener "Within Drown", for example, relatively low and increases in a Cresendo of horror ever further, until it is in a veritable blast-eruption peaks. "Tyranny" is also sent by an increase in covers and a fade, but the middle also includes a portion of the dynamic stark contrast appears almost fragile - until it turns into a thick carpet-noise-over again. And this rug is available in various places on "Everything Is Fire" again! The band sometimes creates a so dense and intense sound that is hardly put into words. And the incredibly disturbed effect of the music falls apart, despite the incredible density never a vulgar noise wall.

Besides the music, the sound of the CD, the evil and sinister atmosphere. The instruments themselves have a very warm and organic sound, especially the drum sounds like a real instrument and not according to a sewing machine. So warm and organic and so hateful and dark, it's a pleasure!

Apart from the incredibly good and intense music here reminds me of the artwork on the CD positive. Even if the cover is very abstract, it is to match the music, away from skull-and-Satan shit cliches that would otherwise have not, unfortunately, as a synonym for the dark and evil will be seen. Very nice variety!

For me, "Everything Is Fire" now has an intelligent genre classic, even if I have a drawer for these "Dark Death Metal" is missing. Fans of Immolation, and Gorguts, Morbid Angel and the late Hate Eternal ULCERATE should in any case antesten. Who's with dark, dissonant Metal technical and can not do, should in any case, the fingers of the disc can, they could leave irreparable damage ...

Aversionline

Aversionline.com

Having been a big fan of New Zealand's Ulcerate since their demo days, I was quite excited when their latest full-length, "Everything is Fire", showed up in the mail from Willowtip. This time out their bassist is handling the vocal duties, and they've also got one new guitarist, but thankfully their sinuous take on death metal remains unchanged: So you can expect eight generally lengthy compositions that are jam packed with tactfully technical musicianship consisting of hectic flurries of colorful percussive flare and loads of dissonantly mangled riffs with an overall sense of thick, churning energy that really creates an intriguing atmosphere. And to be honest with you, while I initially felt that a hint more restraint may have amped up the power factor on their last effort, "Of Fracture and Failure", that material has really grown on me since that time, and the more I think about the Gorguts comparison that I made when I wrote about that record, the more I realize that Ulcerate was already taking that weird, warped, fucked up, Gorguts-styled discordance and - in my opinion - doing something a little more emphatic and moving with it. I know such a statement is complete heresy for many, but... what can I say? I stand by it, and this material absolutely follows suit. Yes, there's something chaotic and over the top about the band's songwriting style that doesn't always create that immediate impact, but there's also a completely relentless sense of darkness and feeling amidst everything they put forth, and I really admire the absolutely furious intensity that they balance with just enough breaks of slower, slightly more tangible rhythm segments. When all is said and done, Ulcerate is an outstanding band that has yet to disappoint, and I wholly recommend everything they've recorded to date, while continually looking forward to hearing more.

...this burning inside cannot be defined. Our empty convictions erode in time. Stand on the edge of abandon, and stare into the searing sun. Forfeit now, for nothing we know. Everything is fire.

The CD's listed as a pre-order at Willowtip, but as far as I can tell it's already in stock at numerous distros (and digitally), so I assume orders should be shipping as they're placed.

Metalnews.de

Metalnews.de
by Alex Eitner

Roughly two and a half years after their excellent output "Of Fracture And Failure", ULCERATE from New Zealand return with their programmatically entitled second full length "Everything Is Fire". Believe or not but with their outstanding combination of [Brutal] Death Metal and atmospheric parts as well as Post Hardcore references they manage to even surpass its predecessor!

However, "Everything Is Fire" seemed to be a bit ill-fated initially: Firstly, it turned out that the screams of former vocalist Ben didn't really fit the new material very well, leading to bassist Paul Kelland reintroducing the deep growls that were already prominent when the band was formed. Secondly, problems with Neurotic Records appeared on the horizon which eventually led to ULCERATE signing a deal with Willowtip Records, with Candlelight Records handling the European distribution. Fortunately, a new guitarist, Oliver Goater, has joined the ranks of the band while the main song writers Jamie Saint Merat and Michael Hoggard present themselves as a well-oiled and smoothly running machine - and this can be heard during everything second of the amazing "Everything Is Fire"! Aiming for speed records and technical showing-off doesn't seem to be on the agenda at all and is therefore avoided as a whole. The songs as such play the most important role even though ULCERATE obviously act on the highest technical level and compose very diverse and demanding tracks. Thus, this is the major plus of the quartet hailing from Auckland because they always pay heed to the important aspect of dynamics that gets often neglected in favour of mere technical wankery by a lot of technical Death Metal bands. As a result, the tempo gets reduced frequently in order to introduce very calm, though often times disturbing parts which occasionally remind of such acts as NEUROSIS or ISIS and which are then followed by intense, aggressive and frantic outbursts in the vein of GORGUTS, HATE ETERNAL and IMMOLATION. There are no drawbacks since all of the songs are on a similar high level due to the fact that they are extraordinarily well arranged and very coherent while benefiting from sudden twists and turns, yet without being chaotic at all. In addition, the excellent, very natural-sounding and powerful production as well as the brilliant craftsmanship of the individual musicians needs to be mentioned, even though it is especially the extremely diversified and precise drumming of Jamie that needs to be pointed out.

"Everything Is Fire" is undoubtedly one of this year's highlights as it really pushes the envelope while leaving a major part of the competitors far behind. ULCERATE unerringly pursue the vision of their own sound and, given all the apparent brutality, technicality and speed, they write first and foremost excellent songs that still reveal new details even after countless spins. This sums up the major advantage of "Everything Is Fire" although the album, as much as its predecessor, is not easily accessible and requires a bit of time to fully develop its sheer intensity for the listener - but it's well worth it! Apart from that, don't pay heed to the rather misleading classification by their record label that ULCERATE play Black Metal as this couldn't be further from the truth than Axl Rose handling drum duties for DARK FUNERAL as of now. However, ULCERATE don't really care about genre conventions in any case, resulting undoubtedly in a very welcome breath of fresh air. Great album, great band!

6.5/7

Allmusic.com

http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:kifoxzu0ldse
by Phil Freeman

New Zealand's pretty small, so it's no surprise that its metal scene is proportionately intimate. That being said, Ulcerate are competitive with the best bands from anywhere on the globe. Viva globalism! Their music combines the brutal, downtuned riffing of traditional death metal (think Immolation or Morbid Angel) with the dissonance and shifting time signatures of Gorguts and slow, atmospheric passages reminiscent of Isis. None of the eight songs are less than five minutes long, and the album-closing title track nearly hits the eight-minute mark. The track titles, for the most part, tell a story not of gore but of fatalism and disillusion ("We are Nil," "Withered and Obsolete," "Soullessness Embraced"). Bassist/vocalist Paul Kelland declaims in a guttural roar that's more subtle than the usual monster noises, and his rhythm section partner, drummer Jamie Saint Merat, combines the percussive intricacy of Isis with the ability to blast the listener through the wall on a tidal wave of double kick drums. Meanwhile, Michael Hoggard and Oliver Goater sculpt one intricate scaffolding of jagged, art-metal guitar after another, avoiding whammy-bar excess (and, indeed, traditional solos) in favor of almost postpunk discipline. Their use of repetition seems to owe as much to Shellac as to Suffocation, and their ability to move the music forward at what seems like a crushingly slow pace while in fact playing quite fast is hypnotic. This is a seriously impressive album by a band that deserves an audience far beyond their tiny homeland.

4 / 5

Metalreviews.com

http://www.metalreviews.com/reviews/detail.php3?id=5207

Whoa, now this was a surprise. Hailing from New Zealand, Ulcerate have been tagged by certain ignorant internet users as Deathcore, which is probably the sole factor keeping them from being the name on everyones lips. What the band actually are will take a little more exploration, but the only way you could call them Deathcore is if you also called, say, Gorguts or Morbid Angel Deathcore. Ulcerate play a form of intense, technical and brutal Death Metal that forms a dark and compelling atmosphere; pretty unique in their field although there are shades of the aforementioned legends lurking in the background, as well as a hint of Origin and a pinch of Necrophagist. Songs vary between five and seven minutes in length, and are very complex really, this isnt moshable stuff, this is sit-down-with-your-eyes-closed-and-space-out stuff. Absolute and utter concentration is vital if you want to get anywhere near to understanding whats going on here, such is the sheer amount going on in each track.

The players, at a level of technical mastery few can hope to surpass, are simply wonderful, whether its vocalist and bassist Paul Kelland, the excellent Jamie Merat on drums, or the astonishingly good Oliver Goater on guitars. Merat never simply blasts but indulges in a variety of clattering percussion styles, reminding me of Pete Sandoval at his best. Goater, however, never riffs as much as creates strange sounds, the guitars often sounding like they are taken from Post-Black Metal bands like Blut Aus Nords more experimental works. Thats actually a good way to sum the band up: MoRT, but Death Metal, with better percussion and less annoyingly abstract overall of course, its far from describing the band to a T, but it does give you a sense of their interesting individuality. What are really special are the moments, such as partway through We Are Nil, where the band switch to clean melodies and sound like Isis for a heartbreaking second, adding that special drop of atmosphere, or the subtle switch to Jazziness on Caecus, reacting brilliantly with the overall feeling of dread. Listening in a dark room late at night, I was stunningly creeped out by the sudden chilling ambience at the end of Earth At Its Knees, and the powerful start to following track Soullessness Embraced made me jump. Everything Is Fire is the sort of album that sucks you deep down and doesnt let go, if you take the trouble to really listen and get involved.

Although its an exhausting listen, something that you have to build yourself up to, and is far from accessible, Everything Is Fire is a stunning piece of Death Metal. Original, atmospheric, genuinely horrific and technically supreme without being too obtuse Im starting to find parts of the album perversely catchy in their heaviness after the repeated listens Ive given it Ulcerate have here created a monster that will shock newcomers to the genre and excite veterans, and they deserve every accolade they receive for it, assuming they get any... This is one band that youd be an idiot to ignore if you want more from Death Metal than the grunt nblast which gets the headlines.

Killing Songs: We Are Nil, Caecus, Tyranny, Soullessness Embraced, Everything Is Fire

90 / 100

Metalteamuk.com

http://www.metalteamuk.net/mar09reviews/cdreviews-ulcerate.htm

Sitting here eating breakfast (porridge in case you wondered) I decided for background purposes to type ulcer into an image search and now I dont want I want breakfast anymore. I am not sure if it is the picture of the syphilitic sore, the ones on feet and toes or the ones in the stomach that disconcerted the most. Needless to say I am not hitting the second page of results having ascertained that an ulcer is not very pleasant at all and I am glad never to have suffered from them. The reason for such exhausting research is to get to grips with New Zealand group Ulcerate, who I assumed and I am guessing took their name from a condition that makes you feel rather painfully unpleasant. If that is the case then they have picked the right one as that is how listening to their music really makes you feel.

This is the groups second album and one that sees their line-up apparently returning to the lower pitched vocals they were employing at their demo stage. Bassist Paul Kelland stepped up to the microphone and the group streamlined to a quartet for this release. This is what I would call uneasy listening, its not full of the joys of spring that is for sure but is designed to unsettle the listener and take them to a pretty damn bleak place. I originally misread the album title as Everything Is Fine which would have perversely worked a treat as it evidently is far from it listening to this.

Godfleshian riffs hone in on you with Drown Within, bass is really thick and guitars sound like scalpels. There is almost a wall of noise here and then the vocals join in and the velocity picks up with blasts flying at you and riffing disconcertingly going all over the shop, not quite with mathcore pretensions but certainly with a paralytic lurch about them. Classifying this is difficult. The vocals and drumming patterns suggest death metal but the rest of the assault has a feel of groups such as Blut aus Nord at their most obtuse and even the dragged through a fucking hedge backwards charge of Deathspell Omega. If all that sounds up your street you obviously exist in a pretty bad place and I could not describe this as music to be enjoyed, but endured.

There are occasional moments of expansive relief such as on We Are Nil when drums ease up and things slow to a doom tinged flow. Still things are discordant and nag away and as the track finishes in this style you are all too aware that the next Withered And Obsolete is going to suddenly hone in and slap you silly all over again. The Earth At Its Knees and indeed quite a lot of this has a really apocalyptic feel to it, a wall of noise virtually knocks you back like some sort of catastrophic end of days. At the end of this 50 minutes I feel like I have run the gauntlet so if you are looking for challenging music this certainly does the job. I think through choice I would only listen to it before going out on the kill so.. well you get the point. Time to go chisel the porridge out the bowl.

- Pete Woods

Terrorizer.com

http://www.terrorizer.com

We at Terrorizer like to shout about good music from time to time, so when we heard Ulcerate's new album, 'Everything Is Fire', come dripping out of the stereo speakers, office cronies subsequently lost their shit and we simply had to tell all you guys!

This is Ulcerate's second full album, their first being 'Of Fracture And Failure' which came out courtesy of Neurotic Records/Willowtip in 2007 - In 2009 they are brought to you via Willowtip/Candlelight.

Formed in 2002, this band have had more lineups than Baltimore Police Department, though current members Jamie Saint Merat on drums and Michael Hoggard on guitars remain from the original squad, back when the band was named Bloodwreath in 2000-2001.

There is no argument, these guys can play; the album is as honest and organic as death metal gets, it's superbly produced and well structured, combining the sounds of latterday Hate Eternal with the horrific and cavernous atmospherics of Deathspell Omega or Portal. But you can hear that for yourselves right?

...So brace yourself, dear listener, for a sonic beating of the highest order, Ulcerate are toxic and terrifying, defining the word 'brutal' without having to shove it in your face..

Aversionline.com

http://www.aversionline.com/blahg/2007/09/13/ulcerate-of-fracture-and-failure-cd/

Having been most impressed with the demo material from Auckland, New Zealand death metal act Ulcerate a few years ago, I was looking forward to checking out their debut full-length, "Of Fracture and Failure" (on Neurotic Records), when it showed up in the mail recently. I referred to the general tone of their demo recordings as "a mix of Cryptopsy (but not that over the top), a dash of Suffocation, some of the Florida classics, and even a few more modern shredding riffs akin to the Polish scene" - which still stands to some degree, as this is still thick, brutal material - but they're definitely leaning in that more "over the top" direction these days in terms of infusing a greater deal of explosive technicality and chaotic songwriting arrangements. I'd also throw a Gorguts mention into the mix now, though, because along with the aforementioned characteristics comes a certain air of churning dissonance and just, well… weirdness that really works in the band's favor. While I tend to be turned off by these types of frantic and frenzied compositional tactics, Ulcerate proves to be a top-notch act in that regard by continuing to provide enough little fits of breathing room for the listener to latch onto unexpectedly atmospheric twists or flat out crushing grooves - not to mention the fact that their playing is excellently tight (the drumming is fuckin' great) and the production values are nice and beefy. It might be a slightly more enjoyable listen were they to ease up and restrain themselves just a hint more often, but I'm still quite pleased with this effort, and would expect the band to start garnering quite a bit more attention based on the merits of their material. Well done...

Empire of Death

http://www.empireofdeath.com/

With a remarkable delay (what a notice, talking about Neurotic Records?!) here it is, the debut album for Ulcerate, band who succeeded to reach a bit of popularity thanks to 'The Coming of Genocide' ep. That release gave to the death metal and brutal metal crowd an original band, with very clear ideas in mind, performing a mixture of brutal-death metal with Immolation influences, full of technique and cleverness. After having heard what those guys were able to do it was normal thinking about a great work for the first full-length release, maybe something able to take the music they made on the ep and develop it in a more consistent and skilled way. And that's what 'Of Fracture and Failure'exactly is, a brutal album, very personal with modern ands futuristic sound. Yes, you read well. For the band is not enough taking the cliches of brutal music, which start to be a bit boring, but starting with the very first release they demonstrate lot of attention to the originality, creating 9 songs of unheard violence, perfectly balanced between brutality and intelligence, harmony and brute force. Ulcerate start again exactly where they stopped with the previous release, but in the same time they push to the limit: Immolation's influences are now more present (very good choice), the songs are more intense, and we can find a little bit of madness that reminds of Meshuggah; the result is incredible. The sound is more complex and difficult to assimilate: I can swear I was really surprised the first time I heard the album, and i needed lots of times to understand "Of Fracture and Failure", but be sure, if you are patient and brave, you will never stop to listen to it. Technically speaking, the guys were professionals yet on "The Coming of Genocide", but on the new release they show all they can do with the instruments (listen to the rhythmic section): the riffing is twisted and convulsed and show true violence and versatility, neither the drums nor the bass lines are banal or boring, and Ben Read loves to spew pain and insanity in the ears of the listener, alternating intelligible growls and sharp screamings. The cd starts in the better possible way, with the amazing "Praise and Negation", a concentration of brutality and (il)logic that will blow you off: the beginning sounds like an homage to Immolation's "Close to a World Below", and then the guys speed up with devastating blast-beats, psychotic and asymmetrical riffs, artificial harmonics and so on, creating a solid wall of sound. Ulcerate want to demonstrate that they can play other killer songs, and so here it is: "Ad Nauseam", alternating typical brutal passages and cold solos reminding of Meshuggah. "The Mask of the Satyr" is as heavy as a panzer and it destroys everything, but sometimes the band begins to play hypnotic guitar phrases very modern, and some plotting palm-mute passage. "Becoming the Lycanthrope" and "To fell Goliath" are heavy songs with dark guitar riffs, with an unpredictable development, heavy as a giant. With the long "Martyr of the Soul", these guys from New Zealand bring us one of the most difficult and complex songs of the entire platter, with inconceivable drum patterns, incredible time changes and amazingly sharp riffs. In this song too is easy to see the Immolation and Meshuggah's influences, but they are not plagiarists at all, they have personality and can really play well. After a little break with the instrumental "Failure", it's time for "The coming of Genocide", with a new incipit and still more violent than lots of other songs. The platter ends with the masterpiece "Defaeco": it's unthinkable to describe such an insanity in song-writing, all we can do is sit back and let us be blown off by the fury of Ulcerate.

"Of Fracture and Failure" is a really good work, Ulcerate are an intelligent band that wants to try, even if sometimes we might think that with little less complex songs the result would have been more easy-listening. Anyway "Of Fracture and Failure" is a masterpiece, we couldn't expect more from a debut album, Ulcerate hold the future of brutal. If you want to see this future, "Of Fracture and Failure" is for you.

Deadtide.com

http://deadtide.com/reviews/albums/page.php?id=4073

Reviewed by Keefe [ positive ]

Fear the grinding Kiwi death machine. This is fucking incessant, unyielding and beautiful. A musical canvas splatter-painted with fragmented guitars and heavy-artillery blasts of some of the tightest rhythm out there. Imagine a more focused or reigned-in Dillinger Escape Plan. No free jazz or breakdowns, just chaos incarnate with the double bass and blast beats constantly challenging the tempo threshold. Amazing. Like a bad PCP trip... but fun.

Ulcerate have aptly named themselves. I can feel a sour spot opening up inside my stomach as I type. If I turned the volume up just a bit I bet I'd get facial contortions. Fuck. These guys are good. Call it extreme ADHD HC. Do not listen to this shit on the road unless your car has a roll cage.

Standout Tracks
press play and relinquish all control

Decibel

http://www.decibelmagazine.com/reviews/oct2007/ulcerate.aspx

Reviewed by Shawn Bosler [ positive ]

Pulling the trigonometry

Even though we've come quite a ways on the schizometer from the kind of controlled cacophony that Canuck fuckers like Cryptopsy specialize in, it's hard to talk about a band of utterly spasmodic, ultraviolent, extreme-ADHD, stick-on-one-riff-for-more-than-two-seconds-and-your-brain-implodes metalworkers like Ulcerate without mentioning the mighty 'Topsy. Whether it's those death-tech masters or French prog gods Magma, when a band is led and envisioned by the drummer, in this case, Ulcerate's drum magi Jamie Saint Merat, get out your abacus: It's number-crunching time!

On Of Fracture and Failure, these New Zealanders'debut full-length, Ulcerate cinch themselves as underground tech-spazz godheads. Nine excellently-played, excellently-produced songs of total tsunami-swirling mindfuckery that kill and kill again before you even know what hit you or before you even determine if the wormhole-digging blurs were, like, real riffs or just some meth-driven guitar wank.

Closer inspection reveals a definite, and (most importantly) deliberate method to their madness: Songs like 'Ad Nauseum'and 'Failure'slither between huge jelly-jigglin'groove riffs a la fellow New Zealanders Dawn of Azazel and Immolation's warbly weirdness and jagged, mega-dissonant, stuck-on-fast-forward, cyborg-raping-human burns. New raw-hamburger throatist Ben Read does an excellent job maintaining balance and cohesion with the dual-guitar/bass-drum melees. Appropriately, the album cover art (allegedly created by Merat) features some octopus-looking, Lovecraftian alien creature that much like these awesome, but hard to digest jams just may remind you of the unstoppable Sigourney Weaver nemesis. Tech freaks: Bring your sleeping bags; there's a lot here to study (and freak on). In fact, that may be the only complaint: There's too much to chew on, sometimes at the price of repetition.

Disagreement.net

http://www.disagreement.net/reviews/ulcerate_offractureandfailure.html

Once upon a time, there was a band from New Zealand, all fed up living in a country that was musically only assimilated to lo-fi indie sounds from the Flying Nun label, so they dug a hole straight through the Earth and ended up in the Netherlands where they were signed to Neurotic Records. While this is technically not really impossible (if you care to live in a Jules Verne universe), it isn't of course the way it happened. But imagine my surprise when I first listened to the second album from Ulcerate, and later found out that they were from kiwi island, and not from the American East Coast.

Ulcerate play their technical death metal on an incredibly high level, and even leave bands like Immolation or Dying Fetus behind them. The band combines the sheer aggression and brutality of the genre with the crazy progressiveness of math metal bands, and more than once, they sound as if Meshuggah had decided to become a death metal band. From time to time, especially on their longer songs Failure and Defaeco, there is room for breathing, but apart from that, Of Fracture And Failure is a forty-five non-stop ride through polymetric odd time signature shifting math death schizophrenia. The thing is, this works so much better than all the Converge and Dillinger Escape Plan clones, because Ulcerate never have any hardcore elements, which in my opinion makes bands more accessible.

This is true progressive music written and performed by true artists. It may be noisy as hell and hurt your ears, but everyone who feels ready for a real musical challenge should check out the brilliant Of Fracture And Failure. Ulcerate prove that there is more to New Zealand than filming juvenile fantasy movies and charming lo-fi pop.

Global Domination

http://www.globaldomination.se/reviews/ulcerate-of-fracture-and-failure

Reviewed by The Duff 9/10

Well, it had to happen sometime - the fusion of tech death and post-rock, this ain't something unique to New Zealand (the home of band Ulcerate), but just something that was bound to occur eventually given enough time. The best thing about it is, though, is that it hasn't been done in the most obvious sense on "Of Fracture and Failure" (I was expecting the lush soundscapes to creep in, but instead found everything to be kept very ugly), resultantly giving one of the best tech death albums I've heard - on par with Spawn of Possession's "Noctambulant", an album I'm fucken nuts about, and definitely something I thought unlikely to be leveled any time soon.

What Ulcerate deliver on their debut full-length is essentially razor sharp, vicious guitar lines combined with discordant, unusual riffs much akin to Immolation, sections that remind me specifically of Hate Eternal (never thought I'd see the day I'd mention Hate Eternal as a major influence, seeing as they're not the most original of bands), some slower-paced death metal grooves and the dark ambience provided by bands such as Neurosis (as well as some thrashy moments on the rare occasion - see "The Mask of the Satyr").

The shorter songs on this album are amazing; short and focused kicks to the skull, filled with countless tempo changes, confusing and oft-kilter rhythms, and riffs comprising a potent mix of both brutality and groove; the furious pace is pretty much constant throughout the album, although there are some really relaxing (if very dark) moments that allow one to breathe (chiefly found within the longer tracks). The guitars throw you all over the place, and yet the process via which the riffs have been assembled has been very well thought out; this album flows extraordinarily well. I also seriously admire the way in which the band lures the listener into thinking the music's going one way, only to lash out with something completely unexpected.

The drumming on this disc is astounding, as Jamie Saint Merat (who also covered the artwork) sounds like he's on a mixture of steroids and amphetamines, yet is so limber that his performance comes across as exceptionally tight without sounding anywhere near over-exertive. His repertoire of techniques is extensive to say the least, and his transitioning from one style of playing to the next very fluid, at the same time he mixes things up with such variety that he seldom appears to repeat himself - a very inventive player who, as impressive as the guitars may be, makes this album the gem that it is!

The vocals are quite common, but varied - Ben Read is clearly talented, just nothing truly exceptional (unlike the rest of the band). The production couldn't be more fitting; best described as "fuzzy", it offers the necessary edge for the more vicious guitar onslaughts whilst offering an almost accommodating, warm tone throughout the rest.

My one gripe with "Of Fracture and Failure" is the song "Martyr of the Soil", which is just too fucken good that it makes the other two lengthier tracks appear a little less remarkable (as if they are simply two normal length tracks each with an added, really cool atmospheric fade-out that makes them pass the six/seven minute mark) - a bit of a shit gripe, I know, hence why this scores a:

9 drummers with Duracell's up their nostrils out of 10.

Gutteralzine.net

http://gutturalzine.net/reviews/ulcerateeng.htm

Reviewed by Gore 93/100

Technical Death Metal coming from New Zealand? To be honest, the only extreme metal band I know which is from New Zealand is the satanic Death Metal band Dawn Of Azazel. Ok they have for metal circumstances an exotic origin. But if you want to know how they sound like, that's easy to divine, if you noticed that the band released this album on Neurotic Records and if you take a look at the last few releases of the label, you should know what you can expect. Extremely blasting, weird and technical Death Metal. But labeling the band as another soulless technical Death Metal band wouldn't be fair and a big mistake, because the band knows how to write real great varied songs without losing any brutal and technical elements of the music. The simplest way to describe the music would be if you imagine a mix between bands like Psycroptic and new Visceral Bleeding on Hate Eternal speed, with many experimental song structures. The tight musicanship is only breathtaking and the band is still able to write songs, which are sticking in your head. This is really rare for many new technical Death Metal bands today. But that doesn't mean, that "Of Fracture And Failure" offers easy silent music. The stuff here is really aggressive, fast, brutal, hectically and it would multiply the chance to become a heart attack for every average music consumer. In short, the most songs are composed of extreme blast beat attacks, in the veins of Hate Eternal. But the whole thing here isn't that straight to the face Death Metal like Hate Eternal are playing it, its way more experimental. Sometimes the many breaks and tempo changes can induce you to lose your nerves. But always if the music is too stressful, the band attached some really brilliant quiet chill out parts into the songs. Anyhow, the band reminds me in these moments on non-Death Metal bands like Converge, Burst or Neurosis. So this album isn't only for Death Metal freaks. Also Grind and Mathcore fans could have a nice time with this full length album. Especially the vocals are more in the Grind & Hardcore vein than in Death Metal. But singer Ben Read is bawling, screaming and growling in such a great aggressive way, that it seems like he screams for one's life. I don't see any reason, to rate the vocals in a negative way, because they really fitting perfectly to this kind of sick music. The current "none plus ultra" label for technical Death Metal Unique Leader Records should come up with some new good releases soon if they don't want to be overrun by Neurotic Records. Because talking about the point of quality, Neurotic would definitively win the battle at the moment. Unfortunately I don't have any information about the previous releases of the band, so "Of Fracture And Failure" is my first musical trip with the band. But I'm really happy, that I made this experience. So if you have been disappointed about technical Death Metal releases recently, just check out Ulcerate and I guarantee that you will enjoy this album, as far as you're into extreme hectically, aggressive and technical Death Metal and when you're open minded for anomalous sounds. Also the great artwork and the amazing designed booklet are other reasons to buy this album. Of course the CD comes with a limited slipcase, which is typically for Neurotic Records. For all the people, who are still irresolute, the playtime of this release is much higher than average albums in this genre. Over 45 minutes of pure technical Death Metal as it should be. This is extreme technical, freaky, fast and brutal as hell without sounding mediocre or boring. Ulcerate breathing new life into the scene and if friends of psycho technical bands like Odious Mortem, Atheretic, Psycroptic, Visceral Bleeding or Hate Eternal miss out this piece of work, they will bite the dust with the certainty, that they have ignored a great band. I hope that none will be so dumb and that I will get the chance to see this band live on stage soon. My conclusion is that this album is the perfect soundtrack to let off frustration after a fucked up working day.

Masterful Magazine

http://masterful-magazine.com/review_result.php?wynik=detail&rodzaj=recenzje&id=1817

Reviewed by Wouter 8/10

New Zealand's Ulcerate are another entry in the technical death metal scene and that their debut is released through Dutch tech death specialist label Neurotic Records therefore comes as no surprise. Combining technical death metal, akin to Spawn Of Possession and Psycroptic, with modern post-metal (Neurosis is an influence), Ulcerate breathe a fresh wind through a genre that is otherwise steeped in unwritten rules. Ulcerate's material is loaded with sheer brutality, unexpected tempo-changes, interesting rhythms plus tons of groove to boot. Drummer Jamie Saint Merat is the star of this disc; providing a groovy, non-stop barrage of blastbeats and relentless fills and rolls, while also drafting up the spectacular artwork that adorns this disc. Guitarists Michael Rothwell and Michael Hoggard fit together extraordinary well, in the process delivering riffs that flow naturally while always putting listeners on the wrong foot, by going the polar opposite of what one would expect to hear next. Ben Read is a bit unspectacular behind the mic, his vocals are adequate enough for a band like this. However, some interesting vocal lines could potentially lift the material to an even higher standard. The pace of "Of Fracture and Failure" is generally very high, but the band includes moodier, calm sections in their longer cuts that give the album quite a dark aura. The production of this album is clear with enough rough edge around the guitars to give them the necessary punch, while retaining a warm sound for the remaining instruments. "Of Fracture and Failure" comes highly recommended for fans of modern technical death metal. Another great find by Neurotic Records.

The Metalforge

http://themetalforge.com/modules.php?name=Reviews&rop=showcontent&id=1138

Reviewed by Michael O'Brien 4.5/5

A remarkable debut release

Brutal death metal is a genre that can be quite difficult to appreciate at times. It took me some time to get my head around some of its intricacies. I would now consider it to be one of my favourite sub-genres. Unfortunately there don't seem to be many bands from the southern hemisphere that are playing it so I was excited to hear what New Zealand's Ulcerate had to offer, especially considering the only other band from New Zealand that I can name and really enjoy is Demoniac who bit the dust a long time ago.

Straight off the bat it is clear that Ulcerate have a bit more to them than some of the more generic brutal death bands around. The music is essentially a riff soup that is continually stopping, starting and changing tempo. There aren't any direct comparisons to be made to other bands though there are plenty of influences including Hate Eternal, Dillinger Escape Plan and Meshuggah.

The sheer intensity of this album is something to behold. It is hard to believe that this is the band's debut release. It has all the characteristics of a band that have been playing and recording together for years. It is a credit to their musicianship and provides a glimpse and a hint towards what they may be able to achieve in the future.

Not only is Of Fracture and Failure extremely heavy, it is ultra technical also. There isn't a moment where the entire band are resting on their laurels. While the guitars are shredding away, drummer Jamie Saint Merat is putting in one of the most spirited performances I have heard for some time. Though he isn't the fastest drummer I have ever heard (but certainly not a slouch by any means) his choice of beats and fills is really interesting and creative. His playing reminds me a lot of the late Steve MacDonald from Gorguts.

The only area that deserved a bit more attention was the production which is a bit thin and flat and doesn't really do the music a lot of justice. Everything is audible but lacks the bite and the punch that would push the sound to the next level.

Though it would be great to claim them as our own, it is still fantastic to see a band from the southern hemisphere that can easily match the big boys blow for blow. They are an asset to New Zealand's metal scene and should have a long future if things keep going the way they are.

Metal Review

http://www.metalreview.com/3725/Ulcerate-Of-Fracture-And-Failure.aspx

Reviewed by Jason Jordan 16/18

Anno 2006 was an excellent year for technical death metal, and with all the buzz surrounding Psycroptic's Symbols of Failure and Spawn of Possession's Noctambulant, it's a pity that fellow Neurotic signing Ulcerate have gone largely unnoticed. The New Zealanders can compete with their ilk on most fronts, even if they come up emotionally short like many bands of this kind often do. Still, despite its callous nature, Of Fracture and Failure is a very good tech death debut that warrants more recognition than it has received thus far.

Instrumentally speaking, Ulcerate are on the ball. The musicianship is truly staggering, especially when one considers the members' respective ages. But when a band chooses to specialize in technical death metal, virtuoso-caliber musicianship is a must. The production suits the recording, too, though there could be more clout behind the double bass, which is arguably the toughest component to produce exactly right, unless you're an easy sell. Incorporating two forms of vocals in the way of growls and raspy screams does add variation to a sameness that makes Of Fracture and Failure difficult to remember when it stops spinning. In fact, a significant portion of Ulcerate's music is an emotionless blur. It certainly devastates when it's unfolding, but it also inadvertently numbs the listener while doing so. Though each of the nine tracks has a refreshingly different beginning, by the time they hit full stride, it becomes a chore to distinguish between them. In other words, good luck picking "Becoming the Lycanthrope" out of a line-up unless you've absolutely studied each track. Particularly badass, however, is the fade-in of "Martyr of the Soil," and because it clocks in at 7:34, it's second only to closer "Defaeco" in the length department. Others range from approximately three to nine minutes, with most hovering around the four-minute mark, which results in a 45-minute album.

While Anata may be superior as far as emotion is concerned, and Odious Mortem may be superior as far as memorable songwriting goes, Ulcerate deserve accolades for what Of Fracture and Failure does get right. There are still kinks to work out, but hopefully this five-piece have a long, prosperous career ahead of them during which they can do just that. Neurotic were indeed wise to sign 'em.

PyroMusic

http://www.pyromusic.net/index.php?p=reviews_revi...

Reviewed by Spiritech 8.3/10

To use a cliché, the New Zealand Metal scene has gone from strength to strength in the last few years. Auckland's Ulcerate, who have been at it since 2003, are another in a long line of quality Extreme Metal acts from across the ditch. The band's initial demos caught the attention of up-and-coming Dutch label Neurotic Records, who have released their proper debut full-length, 'Of Fracture And Failure'.

Featuring current 8 Foot Sativa members (geez, those guys seem to be everywhere in the Kiwi Metal scene!) Ben Read (vocals) and drummer Jamie Saint Merat, Ulcerate are hardly novices. Relentless, efficient musicianship and tight songwriting are what drives Ulcerate's uncompromising brand of Death Metal. The band showcase plenty of influences, which perhaps shine through a little too strongly occasionally, but it's far, far from plagiarism.

The music sounds so immediate and vital it doesn't matter though. 'The Mask of the Satyr' is relentless and 'Becoming the Lycanthrope' sounds like an ungodly mix of Suffocation, Meshuggah and Hate Eternal, only combined with the band's emotionally-charged personality. 'Praise And Negation' has an Immolation crossed with Necrophagist intensity and the more clinical sections of 'Ad Nauseum' recall Meshuggah, but with a twist. 'Defaeco' has a more brooding intensity to it that ensures it never loses your attention during its eight minutes.

The band does precious little wrong. The vocals are a vicious combination of throat-lacerating screams and growls, showing real depth. There's great variety in the riffing, and the drumming is tight and creative, with some truly devastating fills and ferocious blast-beats unleashed at regular intervals. The musicianship is quite technical, (see 'Martyr Of The Soul) with complex changes in tempo, unsettling use of dynamics and intricate, often stop-start riffing, but not to the point where it becomes distracting, or detracts from the actual songs.

This is a very accomplished effort: forceful, precise Death Metal with its own identity. It's little wonder that Ulcerate are winning over Extreme Metal fans everywhere. With 8 Foot Sativa about to release a new album, here's hoping Ulcerate don't become an afterthought. These guys are on to something here.

Terrorizer magazine

Issue 161 / Sep 2007

Teufels Tomb

http://www.teufelstomb.com/reviews/ulcerate-offractureandfailure.html

Reviewed by Necro-Tron [ positive ]

Recently Willowtip struck a deal with Neurotic Records to rerelease domestic editions of several of their records here in North America. Some of these reissues have included recognizable releases like Psycroptic's Symbols of Failure and Spawn of Possession's phenomenal Noctambulant. The deal also included a few other releases that most metal fans may not be familiar with, such as Ulcerate's Of Fracture and Failure.

Hailing from New Zealand, Ulcerate play a brand of technical death metal that has about as much fury as a wildebeest on crack, fucking a hippo with a mechanical, cybernetic hydraulic penis like there was no tomorrow. That penis, by the way, has a buzz saw that ejaculates acid. Take an extremely pissed off technical death metal version of Crowpath and their near-wall of sound technicality, sprinkle it with light spicy elements of Gorguts and Immolation's drumming, and place in the vocal seat a disgruntled version of The Red Chord's Guy Kozowyk who seems to have his style set permanently to death growl mode. Then season it with a very modern production that takes its cues from the Devin Townsend school of production aesthetics and you have Of Fracture and Failure.

It takes awhile to get used to, but the music more than grows on you after the first few listens. Of Fracture and Failure is an extremely intricate record that runs the gamut from jazzy, ethereal moods to chaotic cacophonies and other sonic blitzkriegs. Jamie Saint Merat's drum performance is crushing and complex, with a varied range of techniques that keep the performance from falling into repetition. Ulcerate's dual guitar assault possesses an extremely catchy sense of brutality that becomes more addictive than the most potent, vile tasting beer out there. They pack a fuck load of ugly into those riffs but the way they play with your head will more than keep you coming back, like a snaggle-tooth addict looking for a fix. Ben Read's growling screams are perfectly fit for this type of carnage, sounding pissed off and about as moody as the guys from Watchmaker. I've never heard Read in his other band 8 Foot Sativa (which Merat also plays in), but I'll be damned if they don't accommodate Ulcerate aptly.

Ulcerate is another quality export from New Zealand, alongside other acts such as Dawn of Azazel. Of Fracture and Failure is a must for any death metal fan looking for an extremely heavy technical experience and is an excellent addition to both Willowtip and Neurotic's stable of musicians.

Vampire Magazine

http://www.vampire-magazine.com/article.php?aid=43422

Reviewed by Dave Waite

Doing more twists, turns and somersaults than a gut full of rotting vindaloo, New Zealand's premier brutal death metal outfit Ulcerate blast through new album "Of Fracture And Failure" with a degree of musicianship that has to be heard to be believed. Sounding like a cross between Hate Eternal, Immolation and Cryptopsy all in one go, Ulcerate are a mixture of technical finesse, dark atmosphere and sheer, bloodied intensity that manage to just stay this side of chaos.

After being totally blown away with their "Coming Of Genocide" EP (see review in the archives) thanks to their technically advanced, 'song' orientated approach to death metal, it is fantastic to hear that their debut full length has not lost any of it's vehement potency. Just how these guys even begin to figure out where these songs are going remains something of a mystery, switching time signatures/riffs every two seconds yet maintaining a solid, powerful groove that without would sound like a disjointed (albeit well played) mess. Opener "Praise And Negation" and second track "Ad Nauseam" set things off to a most brutal start with the guitars spewing forth discordant, sinister riffing and drums blasting at speeds that would even give Origin a run for their money. Superbly executed in every sense, the low to high grunts of vocalist Ben Read help give these intense musical workouts the sense of structure needed to prevent the stop/start rhythms from getting lost in translation.

If your ears have been good enough to let you get to the end of the album without bleeding or packing in all together, then you will find some sort of solace (though not much) by way of final track and album highlight "Defaeco". Incorporating slower tempos with a more darkly atmospheric edge the huge sprawling chords and clever song structuring bring out everything that is so special about this band in just eight minutes of pure death metal mastery. Although in its entirety not there quite yet, "Of Fracture And Failure" is, for Ulcerate, their next monstrous step towards refining a sound that will separate them from the many tech death metal bands out there, and judging by this, boy do they warrant it.

Vile Magazine - Print publication, out mid-2007

http://www.www.vilemagazine.com

Reviewed by Thomas Fura 5/5

Is this cd from 2006? Yes. Do I care? Not really. Reason being, this death metal act hailing from Auckland, New Zealand have written an absolutely uncompromising, raging and unique album that debuted to a less-than-deserved amount of attention. I've been listening to death metal for 12 years, so I've heard a lot and get bored with most.but when I pressed play on this cd, It instantly made me jump up in my chair.

Right out of the gates, Of Fracture And Failure sets the mood for total annihilation. Scorched-earth vocals combine with calculus equations reinterpreted for the fret board, and the drumming is far beyond the too-often used "machine gun" description; if you played this cd on a loud enough system, I'm pretty certain that the drums would cause enough seismic activity to send California to the bottom of the ocean.

What makes this album so great is that Ulcerate take the outstanding death metal base they built with their debut The Coming Of Genocide and have aggrandized the sound by forging it with the technical, frantic urgency of bands such as Creation Is Crucifixion or The Dillinger Escape Plan as well as the disorientating, soul-numbing drone of bands like Isis. No other bands sound like this right now, and I'm pretty sure that even if they tried, they couldn't top this.

I can't stress enough how great of an album this is, especially if like me, you hunger for a sense of creativity and distinctive style in the bands that you listen to. The only advice that I can give you in this review is that you go out and get this cd. I don't care how you get the money; sell your furniture if you have to. Buy it, put it in your player, turn it up loud and let Ulcerate pulverize you until your organs turn into a soup-like homogenate. Dare I say, if you ignore this album, you should think twice about calling yourself a fan of extreme metal.

Five of Five stars.

Aversionline.com

http://www.aversionline.com

8/10

Fuck yeah, this is more like it! An excellent demo of brutal, moderately technical death metal from New Zealand. Guttural growls with a few higher screams layered in the background, a great mix of tempos that includes some odd time signatures as well as all the death metal staples, thick rhythms with a little dissonance, a tasteful amount of tremolo picking that doesn't get too tiresome, etc. Imagine a mix of Cryptopsy (but not that over the top), a dash of Suffocation, some of the Florida classics, and even a few more modern shredding riffs akin to the Polish scene. I'm definitely into this. They throw around a lot of changes, but they can write songs that are fluid enough to feel coherent and well arranged, it's crazy enough to jar you, but not so over the top that it becomes a mess. There are some really fucked up leads in "Second Death" that have a weird sort of obscure jazz fusion sound, but the playing is twisted so it sounds warped and unusual, and I like that. The recording is very fucking good for a demo as well. There's room for improvement of course, but believe me when I say that I've heard a great number of death metal records over the years released by the largest underground labels that do indeed sound worse than this demo. The drums are really crisp, which works to accent the tightness of the performance, but they're also really dense. The guitar tone is thick and textured with a good level of control, the vocals are dense and not too loud in the mix, and the bass peaks through enough to add to the tracks. If I could make any alterations I would smooth over a few inconsistencies in the drum sound, give the bass more prominence (without muddying things up), and see what happens from there. But they're off to a great start. The CD-R comes in a slim jewel case with a professionally printed booklet as well as artwork on the CD face, and the layout looks great as well. Clean text, nice artwork… even the band photos are well handled. The lyrics don't do much for me, but I'm not turned away by them: "Abysmal tongues blaspheme the stigma of the dead hand, Condemning those who drink the blood that drips from the crucifix of Golgotha, Abysmal tongues bless the standard of the strong, And command the bearer from the text divine..." This is about as good as I can imagine a death metal demo getting. I'd highly recommend picking this up, and I'd expect this band to get signed very soon. Nice work.

[Notable tracks: The Coming of Genocide, Second Death]

Deadtide.com #1

Reviewed by Peter Johnston

Ooh, this is good! Ulcerate's demo The Coming of Genocide is very simply horrific and heavy as all fuck death metal. Managing a sound that nestles between Immolation, Nile and your favorite speeding brutal death band, this New Zealand act destroys just about everything with the four songs here. Favoring the faster paces and a penchant to use some very sour guitar lines (hence the Immolation nod), the music here is very one of a kind and refreshing, especially considering how heavy and technical it is.

Finally, despite the "demo" status of this album, the band has put it together with fantastic artwork and pristine production, fucking cheers to that!

Damn, I'm dying to see what Ulcerate does next. Pssst, Relapse, you'll want to sign these guys for as many albums as you can get!

Standout Tracks: All
[Notable tracks: The Coming of Genocide, Second Death]

---

Deadtide.com #2

Reviewed by Kyle Huckins

Ulcerate are crushing technical death metal from New Zealand, and they are nice enough to compile their first two demos on this disc that I have here now. Allow me to break the review up accordingly.

The Coming of Genocide

This is the band's 2004 demo and it is the first four songs of the disc. The guitar tone reminds me very much of Immolation, and the vocals add to the resemblance as James Wallace sounds a lot like Ross Dolan. The songs are all nice and fast, written with the intent of crushing all in their path. A brilliant production adds to the fun as the bass needs to come through well to make this work. The drumming is quite mad too as Jaime Saint Marat is trying his best to impersonate an octopus with an amphetamine habit. They also throw in a little Decapitated just for spice. They can play and they can crush, though they prefer to do both at the same time. I can't totally fellate them due to the resemblance to Immolation being almost total, but this is a really crushing slice of death metal that I would recommend highly. I just hope on future material they distance themselves from Immolation a bit. Not too much since those records are mighty, but just a little.

2003 Demo

This is the band's first demo and it is the back half of this CD. The production isn't nearly as good on this demo, though the songs are quite murderous. The pitch of the snare sounds a bit higher which is throwing me off a little. The music is very much in the same vein as The Coming of Genocide, though it is not as polished. That said for a first demo this is truly homicidal stuff. The first song also shows off the fact that the band can actually play slower material when it so chooses. However I think they rarely see the need, just like me. My name is Kyle Huckins, and I approve this album.

They also threw some multimedia stuff on here, but it always crashes when I try to watch it in my machine so I can't tell you what the deal is with it. Sorry guys, hope the full length kills like the demos do.

Grindead Zine

Reviewed by Uffe Nylin 4.5/5

Ever thought about how the musicscene in New Zealand could be like? Well, if you have I guess you are one step ahead of me since New Zealand for some reason has been one of those countries that I never related to this kind of music, or any music at all (sorry inhabitans of New Zealand, nothing personal :)). Well, Ulcerate will definantly open up a whole new vision for me when it comes to New Zealands musiclife. This is Ulcerates second demo titled "The coming of genocide", truly a fitting title for this vicious onslaught of technical brutality. Musicians like the ones in Ulcerate sure is hard to find, everything is flawless, I would like to call this "intelligent" and technical death/grind that has tons of suprises in store for the listener since you dont really have any idea what will happen next, but although its very technical, its still catchy enough to make you remember particular parts in each song.

Categorizing Ulcerate would show not to be an easy task, but after listening and trying to analyse this is as well and honest as possible, I would like to say that this sounds like Gorguts meets Cryptopsy (the new stuff and with that I mean the music, not the vocals) meets Origin. Its technical (as I've mentioned many times in this review already), mostly fastpaced, but still shifting and never grows boring. Vocals are agressive growls, not ultra"br00tal", but personally I think it dosent have to be ultra brutal to be good.

A very cool and suprising thing with the soundproduction of this demo was that although its totally D.I.Y., its still very good, clean and professional as hell, even better than many cds that has been recorded in professional studios. One other thing that showed that these guys have class is the highly professional artwork and the booklet even containing lyrics (some kind of antichristian/apocalypse/ society related stuff). Would've been nice if more bands could use some money to get some nice coverart, booklet etc.

This album gets 4,5 out of 5. I'll do anything in my power to spread the word about Ulcerate since this band really deserves to get out there! If you are into technical and advance death/grind you should check out these guys and if not, you should at least check out the samples on their page to hear what great musicians these guys are.

Metalcrypt

http://www.metalcrypt.com
Reviewed by Chaosphere 4/5

Brutal death metal can be a tricky genre to get right. Overdoing the technicality and savagery can result in music that goes right over most people's heads and sounds like the musical incarnation of schizophrenia, while not enough can lead to something that makes absolutely zero impacts. Ulcerate have managed to straddle this thin line quite well with their second demo effort, and thrown a killer self-production job into the bargain. Seriously, this sounds like it was done in a decent quality studio, not in a bedroom over a couple of weekends. The drums are crystal clear, the guitars tear at your face with vicious precision, the bass rumbles mercilessly and the vocals boom over the top (although sometimes they're a bit too loud, which is the only gripe I can think of). The packaging, too, is top notch - pro-printed insert, full colour label on the CD-R, and killer artwork done by the band's multitalented drummer.

As for the songs, they're quite surprisingly distinctive. There's a definite set pattern here, with an even distribution of high-speed tremolo shredding underpinned by meticulous blasting, some slower - almost doom-death - parts which burst back into high speed, and of course some insane guitar solo's. That's not to say it's devoid of melody, since some of these riffs will stick in your head quite well. In particular, the opening riff-set in the title track, the crunching outro of "Unhallowed Ascension" and the equally crushing finish of "Second Death" stand out in this manner, as does the lead guitar abuse in the last two songs. The bass generally follows the guitars, but occasionally ventures into its own counterpoint sections, but is always an audible undertow holding the chaotic, unpredictable nature of these songs together. Changes occur fairly regularly too - one section will flow quickly into a different tempo without warning, and a lot of these parts have a very jagged, angular feeling offset by the more straightforward moments.

Overall, this is a very clinical, yet savage release - fairly typical of the better modern brutal death bands, which means fans of examples such as Deeds Of Flesh, Gorgasm, Nile and Hate Eternal will find much to enjoy here. To get hold of a copy, just email the band on ulcerate AT gmail DOT com, or visit their website for further details.

Metalfanatix

http://metalfanatix.com
Reviewed by Jeffrey D. Adkins 81/100

In the many different metal genres certain types can get lost in the bunch. Ulcerate puts together a technical brutal death device in the likes of Gorguts, Suffocation, and Incantation. It's all furious, intense, and heavy but they still took the time to add technicality to separate them from all those repetitious death bands. From the moaning death riffs to the expeditious drum blasts 'The Coming of Genocide' has ferocity written all over it. And at the helm of the band, guttural death vocals similarly approached like Glen Benton of Deicide. They are mostly deep, pissed off vocals with an occasional scream. Do not think you are going to hear Glen on this disk; it's just a similar approach. All four tracks are at least decent, this is really well rounded CD even though it is a demo. I can't wait to see what these guys can accomplish; hopefully someone will wise up and give these guys a shot to cut a record. 'Second Death' and the title track, 'The Coming of Genocide,' seem to fulfill my daily necessity for some brutal, vicious music. These four tracks will only last you around fifteen minutes, but Ulcerate gets right to the point, and every brutal death metal fan should be pleased at what they hear.

Metalfanatix

http://metalshtorm.com
Reviewed by Adrian Papworth

Dark technical death metal from this New Zealand band, who have on this 4 track demo managed to completely overshadow HATE ETERNAL, IMPERIOUS, HOUR OF PENANCE and other bands of that ilk, including of course everything MORBID ANGEL have put out since 'Domination', and arguably that release also. Is that a big call? Download an mp3 and make up your own mind. I think the thing that really makes this band stand out is that they've taken the tech US death sound epitomised by bands like DEEDS OF FLESH (PSYCROPTIC, DECREPIT BIRTH, you fill in the rest) added some MORBID ANGEL flavour and imbued it with a dark oppressive atmosphere. The musicianship is superb, the recording sounds fantastic and slick as fuck, which is funny when you read that the drums were recorded in someone's bedroom. That kind of makes sense though, the kick sound has that clicky triggered sound (which I like and suits the style) while the rest of the drums are very warm. If that makes any sense whatsoever and doesn't have you checking your browser to make sure you didn't accidentally go to AVERSIONLINE webzine. The songwriting is great, things build up well and the whole experience is really satisfying. Fantastic coverart also, a heavily stylised 'Hellraiser' type deal. For fans of the technical US death style, this demo is sheer pornography. Get on the bandwagon before these guys put out a full length cd, if someone doesn't sign them based on this demo the scene might as well die now and get it over with.

Supreme Brutality.net

supremebrutality.net/reviews/thecomingofgenocide_cd.php
Reviewed by Per Laursen 4/6

It's not like an every day event hearing death metal from New Zealand but I recently had the pleasure of receiving the new four track demo "The Coming of Genocide" from brutal death metallers Ulcerate and there's really no reason to deny or drag it out: this band kicks major fucking ass.

Right from the opening track "The Coming of Genocide" it's clear that we're dealing with a band with some serious potential. Ulcerate seem inspired by combos like Immolation, Suffocation and Deeds Of Flesh and it does shine through a little but only in a positive way and the Immolation references are especially undeniable in the fourth and final track "Second Death", but I wouldn't describe Ulcerate as being a copycat 'cause they clearly have their own ideas. Furthermore, I must say that I'm really impressed with the professional layout and design of the booklet. If Ulcerate continue with the professionalism they've shown with The Coming of Genocide, then it should just be a matter of time before they get signed. And honestly I can't wait to hear more from these New Zealanders.

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Supreme Brutality.net #2


I reviewed The Coming of Genocide demo from the upcoming New Zealand based death metallers Ulcerate back in 2004. Listening to it today it still sound as great as it did then. Now it's been re-released by Italian label The Flood Records and with good reason I'd say. Besides the four songs originally on the demo the four tracks from Demo 2003 has also been included.

Musically Ulcerate is operating in the same territory as combos like Suffocation, Immolation and Deeds of Flesh. The influences are definitely there, but the band never tends to sound like just a blueprint of the aforementioned though the Immolation references are clear at times like in "Second Death". Ulcerate clearly know how to write some good songs. The band understands to vary things and keep it interesting by adding lots shifts in the music. Moreover Ulcerate also know the importance of having a solo here and there. No doubt these New Zealanders are good at what they do.

The sound is fat and powerful so you never really notice that the album is a collection of demo material. The CD version of The Coming of Genocide is a great appetizer while we wait on the debut full-length out on Neurotic Records later this year.
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