DEADLOCK — The Arsonist

MetalMusicArchives.com — the ultimate metal music online community, from the creators of progarchives.com

DEADLOCK - The Arsonist cover
2.63 | 6 ratings | 2 reviews
Buy this album from MMA partners

Album · 2013

Tracklist


1. The Great Pretender (03:57)
2. I'm Gone (03:28)
3. Dead City Sleepers (03:54)
4. The Arsonist (03:30)
5. Darkness Divine (03:50)
6. As We Come Undone (03:54)
7. Hurt (05:33)
8. The Final Storm (03:54)
9. Small Town Boy (04:09)
10. My Pain (03:34)

Total Time 39:43


German CD edition:

11. Dead City Sleepers (Erode-Remix) (06:19)
12. As We Come Undone (Philip Abbas-Remix) (07:47)

Total Time 53:49


12” vinyl and Japanese CD edition:

13. Dead City Sleepers (Acoustic Version) (02:37)

Total Time 56:26

Line-up/Musicians


- Sabine Scherer / vocals
- John Gahlert / vocals
- Sebastian Reichl / guitars, keyboards
- Ferdinand Rewicki / bass
- Tobias Graf / drums

About this release

CD and 12" red vinyl 2LP (300 copies) released 26th July 2013 on Napalm Records (NPR 503).

CD released 26th July 2013 in Japan on Avalon (MICP-11104).

Mixed at the Hammer Studios in Hamburg by Eike Fresse.
Mastered by Olman Viper at the Hertzwerk Studios.
Cover art by Niklas Sundin.

Thanks to Stooge for the addition and adg211288, Bosh66 for the updates

Buy DEADLOCK - THE ARSONIST music

More places to buy metal & DEADLOCK music

DEADLOCK THE ARSONIST reviews

Specialists/collaborators reviews

J-Man
On paper, the music of German melodic death metal act Deadlock doesn't sound like something that would appeal to me very much. The band's ultra-melodic and almost “commercial” approach to extreme metal wouldn't usually be my cup of tea, but something about 2011's Bizarro World really grabbed my attention and put Deadlock on the radar for me. I loved the way the album blended catchy hooks with atmospheric arrangements and heavy riffs, and although a few important changes have been made with 2013's The Arsonist, Deadlock's sixth album once again shows their music in full force.

The Arsonist features a few lineup changes, as vocalist Johannes Prem has left the fold and ex-bassist John Gahlert has become Deadlock's new male vocalist. Ferdinand Rewicki of Fall of Serenity has taken over bass duties on The Arsonist, and the album also marks the departure of longtime guitarist Gert Rymen. These lineup changes may have inspired a bit of a change in Deadlock's music, as The Arsonist draws more heavily on the band's groove-oriented and metalcore-influenced side than did past releases. Although the album isn't a radical departure from Deadlock's earlier efforts, I could see it alienating fans that are allergic to chugging riffs and breakdowns.

That being said, tracks like “The Final Storm” and “The Arsonist” are top-quality Deadlock, and the rest of the album is still enjoyable from start to finish. The Arsonist is a definite step down from Bizarro World, but I'm happy to hear that the band is exploring new things... even if the older formula yielded more exciting results.
adg211288
The Arsonist (2013) is the sixth full-length album by German act Deadlock. In the couple of years since the release of Bizarro World (2011) there have been a couple of changes within the band as vocalist Johannes Prem left the band, having performed with them since their 1997 inception. Rather than recruit a new frontman from outside the band bassist John Gahlert switched roles and his bandmate from Fall of Serenity, Ferdinand Rewicki, took over as bassist.

The change in Deadlock goes deeper than a personnel switch though. For the first time since I started listening to them with their album Wolves (2007) I'm presented with an album that cannot be called melodic death metal, the genre which their past work has more or less operated within. It's metalcore the band is producing now. Sure, the band has long also been associated as a metalcore act and included in that scene but to my ears that's always been a grave misconception, and I've been vehemently against Deadlock being mentioned in the same breath as any genuine metalcore act. I can't do that any longer because The Arsonist is at least primarily metalcore album. There are other aspects included in the sound, as always, particularly the female vocal dominate songs move away from metalcore towards more of an alternative sound, but the main focus of the music has seen a definite shift this time around. In fact I'd go so far that there isn't even a trace of the melodic death metal left at this point.

And I just keep asking myself why oh why have they done this? Rewind a few years to Wolves and here was a genuinely interesting melodic death metal act (I don't say that about many melodic death metal acts, for the record). They were able to kick out both intense riffs and beautiful melodies, something with carried over to their vocals between Johannes Prem's growling and Sabine Weniger's (Sabine Scherer, these days) clean singing. They had an underlying progressive quality and weren't afraid to throw in outside influences. On Wolves it was techno sections, which they pulled off. Including a full-on rap/hip-hop section in following album Manifesto (2008) not so much, but their last album Bizarro World was a generally solid affair even though it didn't stand up to their earlier standard. The Arsonist is a decidedly mixed bag of songs as far as the quality goes though.

The album gets off to a poor start with The Great Pretender. A good showcase for their new direction it may be, but it's also one of the weakest songs of a generally poor to mid-range quality bunch along with Darkness Divine. I'm Gone and Dead City Sleepers don't help the album's case much, although I do slightly prefer them due to their more dominate use of Sabine Scherer's singing, which is as beautiful as always, if somehow coming over as being out of place this time around, a problem that I strangely didn't have with the past melodic death metal releases. The title track is where things finally start to take a turn for the better though. It's still not great but showcases that Deadlock still have a bit of that experimental side when we get to hear some electronic elements.

It's As We Come Undone that earns the status of being the first generally good song to appear on the album though. It's quite catchy when Sabine sings the chorus and the more metalcore dominant verse works better than anything heard previously. Hurt, that follows, is also a great track. But at the same time I think it really points out that there are serious flaws within the album when a ballad gets picked out as a highlight. The quality takes another downturn after this though. There's nothing as weak as The Great Pretender again, just more average to good stuff. Final song My Pain combines metal and trance/techno/dance music (not up on this type of stuff to really say more exactly than that) in much the same way that Renegade from the previous album did, although the feel is different. To be honest it is more pop than the earlier track was, and pop is feeling found across the majority of The Arsonist (to be fair though, it's been present in the Deadlock sound for some time), especially on the Sabine led tracks.

Overall this is a disappointing release from Deadlock. It has its moments though so is more of an 'it's OK' release of ups and downs than an outright bad one. The Arsonist is a definite downturn for them though yet at the same time it's still got more going for it than most of the metalcore albums I've listened to. I think that's because deep down Deadlock does still have that bit of variety in them to break the monotony that I get from most releases out of this genre. An above average tier rating is deserved.

59/100

(Originally written for Heavy Metal Haven: http://metaltube.freeforums.org/deadlock-the-arsonist-t3117.html)

Members reviews

No DEADLOCK THE ARSONIST reviews posted by members yet.

Ratings only

  • DippoMagoo
  • TheHeavyMetalCat
  • powermetal2000
  • aecht

Write/edit review

You must be logged in to write or edit review

MMA TOP 5 Metal ALBUMS

Rating by members, ranked by custom algorithm
Albums with 30 ratings and more
Master of Puppets Thrash Metal
METALLICA
Buy this album from our partners
Paranoid Heavy Metal
BLACK SABBATH
Buy this album from our partners
Moving Pictures Hard Rock
RUSH
Buy this album from our partners
Powerslave NWoBHM
IRON MAIDEN
Buy this album from our partners
Rising Heavy Metal
RAINBOW
Buy this album from our partners

New Metal Artists

New Metal Releases

Hin helga kvöl Atmospheric Sludge Metal
SÓLSTAFIR
Buy this album from MMA partners
The Cycles of Suffering Black Metal
BURIAL OATH
Buy this album from MMA partners
Facilis Descensus Averno Death Metal
SAEVUS FINIS
Buy this album from MMA partners
Merciless Crossover Thrash
BODY COUNT
Buy this album from MMA partners
More new releases

New Metal Online Videos

More videos

New MMA Metal Forum Topics

More in the forums

New Site interactions

More...

Latest Metal News

members-submitted

More in the forums

Social Media

Follow us