Intervals
Price: $8.49
Artist: See You Next Tuesday
- Nascence
- In the End
- The Life In Death
- Eternity?
- Alpha
- She Once Said I was a Romantic
- Daydreams
- Nightmares
- In the Beginning
- Forever on Deaf Ears
- Goodnight (Our Last Dance)
- This Time the Keys Are Broken
- Dedication to a New Era
Two years after signing with Ferret Music, See You Next Tuesday are older and definitely not wiser, but are still pretty kickass. Comprised of four unassuming guys from suburban Michigan, See You Next Tuesday has made another move forward in their progression as a band, this time stepping in to record their new album, Intervals. Recording with Dan Kenny and Joe Cincotta at Full Force Studios (This is Hell, Suffocation, etc.) in Long Island, NY and mastering the record with Scott Hull (Pig Destroyer, Agoraphobic Nosebleed). Intervals sees the band expanding on elements of melody, aggression, and time that Parasite foreshadowed. Bassist Travis Martin remarked on the new record, Intervals is the first album that the four of us have written together, since Fox joined the band only a couple of weeks prior to the recording of our first Ferret release Parasite. It is a more mature album and definitely darker sounding. The presentation of the album is also much more serious. The funny song titles are gone, the jokes are gone, it has a different feel to it. Accounting for this change is the band s thirst for new sounds while staying true to a metal mindset. Guitarist Drew Slavik relates We aren t really a grind band because what most people perceive as a grind band is playing extreme, fast and in your face for a short period of time. We don t adhere to a certain time length for our songs and we experiment, for example I listened to a lot of screamo while writing the new record and though we aren t playing screamo, there s an emotional component that came through in the guitar playing on the new material. Completing the line up is vocalist, Fox, bassist Travis Martin and Andy Dalton on drums.
They ve Done It Again! - The second album from See you Next Tuesday on Ferret Records is just as good, if not, better than their original release, Parasite. Note: if you hated Paraiste, chances are that you won t like this album much more. SYNT music has become much more poetic and mature in the past two years, and it really shows in the lyric s structure. The whole album plays out like one long, incredibly brutal song. Buy it, love it, enjoy it.