There is real extremity to be found here. The chaotic six-strings and clattering drums of Dead End opens the album with an atmosphere of breathless panic, while the title track drops curtain with a sense of unhinged acceptance in a hail of bludgeoning instruments and unsettling dissonance.
But it’s the moments of contrast that make the record’s arc really pop. Climb Out is built around mind-bending drum beats and stomach-churning confusion. Stone Tapes finds hopelessness in its twangy lines and clean singing. Half Love wraps throat-ripping despair around almost Mastodon-like Southern prog swagger.
Ultimately, it’s proof that pain is more keenly felt in three dimensions delivered by musicians who’ve given years to drawing these jagged shapes from the depths of their souls.
Verdict: 4/5
For fans of: Converge, Pupil Slicer, Trap Them
Pessimist is released on October 27 via Church Road