24 Nov 2024
UsernamePassword

Remember Me? | Join | Recover
Click here to sign in via social networking

Kaosis - Album Review: Hitech - Lowlife

15 Oct 2019 // A review by Steve Shyu

Kaosis is Hamilton's first and only face-painted, mask-wearing industrial dubstep metal band. And they sport that badge with pride. Having now played in Australia's Dead of Winter Festival, plus two nationwide tours, as well as headlining two Rail Records' Smash the F**king Rails Festival in their hometown, the six-unit group have finally released their long-awaited debut LP, titled Hitech - Lowlife. Having seen the band perform multiple times, Muzic.net's own Steve S. bore the honour of checking out their new album, and here's what he reckoned:

Straight off the block you know this isn't just another metal record. It's electronic, it's glitchy, it's got distorted guitars, and it has rap verses?

Those with hip-hop roots will likely catch Cypress Hill as an influence; fans of heavy metal can expect nods at the likes of Rob Zombie, Fear Factory or Ministry. Within electronic production realms, Kaosis pride themselves on being able to mix up this combination of metal guitars, guttural rapped vocals, cemented in with layers of electronic effects. Programmed drums are chosen over studio-recorded drumming, as makers of electronic music would do, but in the style of nu-metal, Kaosis did not hold back on rapid-fire double-taps on bass-drums.

Also, the aural theatrics are great fun. From the sci-fi, dystopic intro, filled with the sound of panicked screams and machine whirls, through to Zombie, which paints a bleak and violent invasion with faux-news announcements, right down to the doom-ridden End of Fear, eerie with atmospheric, echoing synths and distant screams, makes listening to this album an eventful little journey.

Personal picks are the more energised and fast-tempo drum & bass numbers Battleground and Throw ‘Em Up. As the album is predominantly grooved with the lower BPM a la dubstep, when the tempo changes up to double-time, the fun-factor is ratcheted up and there is no looking back.

The vocal and electronic synth components take up majority of the mix, and the true highlights show when individual features of the music take the spotlight, even if briefly. Like on Battleground, where the main synth hook takes over just after the chorus, or on Throw ‘Em Up, when the lead guitar plays a quick but effective riff, adds more meat to the stew and gives listeners time to digest between the verse-chorus plugs.

However, even at just nine songs (setting aside the intro track and the remix), one does experience a little listening fatigue, where half the songs are of a similar beat, and lyrical motifs and digital effects loop a number of times in one tune (granted, some forms of electronic music do this). Those with an ear for producers like Excision or early-Kill the Noise will likely find this release to be a fun ride.

Make no mistake; this is one hell of a debut album. No other group in New Zealand so far has created as unique a sound. To have pooled influences from so many genres, this is arguably one of the most creative kiwi albums of recent years.

Kaosis are taking their hard-hitting and laser-bathed stage show to Japan next month – Be sure to follow them on Facebook as they conquer the Land of the Rising Sun, and download their tunes on their website.

Rating: ( 4 / 5 )
 

About Kaosis

Like a swarm of cochroaches breaching scorched earth after a nuclear fallout, Kaosis leached out from the darkened fringe of the south pacific metal scene and have been feasting on the remnants of the metal status quo ever since.

Kaosis crush kaleidoscopic soundscapes of robotic warfare into their bone crushing distorted riffs, while adrenilating risers and arrhythmia inducing percussion seduce the audience into the hypnotic volatility of the sweat drenched pit.

Kaosis meld industrial metal, horror-core, DnB and dubstep into an titanium cast and then smash it back to atoms. Live, Kaosis present an experience that is bewildering, seductive, viscerally volatile and intensely engaging.

Visit the muzic.net.nz Profile for Kaosis

Releases

There are no releases to display for Kaosis.

Other Reviews By Steve Shyu

Gig Review: Dougfest 2 - Night 2 @ Last Place, Hamilton - 26/10/2024
28 Oct 2024 // by Steve Shyu
DougFest is back. Bigger, bolder, and heftier than the first.
Read More...
Muriwai - Album Review: Muriwai
02 Oct 2024 // by Steve Shyu
Muriwai is the latest undertaking by Bob Bickerton and Ariana Tikao, a new and greatly anticipated collaboration in Aotearoa’s world of traditional music. Bob is a highly influential sound engineer, performer, educator, a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to music, and composer who has worked in the New Zealand music industry for almost 50 years.
Read More...
Fan Club - EP Review: Towards The Sun
09 Jul 2024 // by Steve Shyu
2024 is set to be another monumental year for Tamaki Makaurau’s Fan Club. Just last year they claimed a multitude of awards, including the top prize at Raise Up’s New Found Sound, and placing first in the Auckland Central Final of the SmokeFree RockQuest.
Read More...
Havening - Double Album Review: Wavelengths of Light
26 May 2024 // by Steve Shyu
Big things are happening for Bonnie O'Donnell. Under her alias of Havening, she’s been eagerly crafting bucketloads of electronic music, releasing them all as not one, but two albums.
Read More...
Gig Review: Homegrown 2024 @ Wellington Waterfront - 16/03/2024 Part 2
18 Mar 2024 // by Steve Shyu
With nothing of last night's rainstorm in sight except puddles in the asphalt, the sun warmed the air to counter the day's cold breeze. There was plenty of talk of a cold snap on the way, but I was confident my tee and hoodie combo would suffice.
Read More...
EP Review: PHNX
11 Mar 2024 // by Steve Shyu
Aotearoa, look out for a rising star on the horizon.Under his stage name PHNX, 18-year-old singer-songwriter and producer Phoenix Simpson has released his self-titled debut EP and it’s a gem.
Read More...
EP Review: Ben Ruegg
29 Feb 2024 // by Steve Shyu
Ben Ruegg is one of the most hard-working people I personally know. He's a Muzic.
Read More...
Bevan Mical - Album Review: Division & Difference
12 Dec 2023 // by Steve Shyu
Since 2017 Bevan Mical has been busy. Hailing from the small Waikato town of Turua, he’s now onto his fourth full-length album, this one entitled Division & Difference.
Read More...
View All Articles By Steve Shyu

NZ Top 10 Singles

  • APT.
    ROSÉ And Bruno Mars
  • DIE WITH A SMILE
    Lady Gaga And Bruno Mars
  • BIRDS OF A FEATHER
    Billie Eilish
  • TASTE
    Sabrina Carpenter
  • I LOVE YOU, I'M SORRY
    Gracie Abrams
  • ESPRESSO
    Sabrina Carpenter
  • SAILOR SONG
    Gigi Perez
  • LOSE CONTROL
    Teddy Swims
  • A BAR SONG (TIPSY)
    Shaboozey
  • GOOD LUCK, BABE!
    Chappell Roan
View the Full NZ Top 40...
muzic.net.nz Logo
100% New Zealand Music
All content on this website is copyright to muzic.net.nz and other respective rights holders. Redistribution of any material presented here without permission is prohibited.
Report a ProblemReport A Problem