Not sure if everyone is fully aware or not, but the new Parasitic Extirpation 'Knee Deep in Disease' EP is out and available for your consumption. Available for $3 at shows and $5 shipped in the US. 4 songs of patented New England Techslam.
Zines/Blogs/Whatevers, feel free to hit us up for a copy to review.
no shit!! Is it awesome?!? I'm glad ghey blue keeps me abreast of what's going on with this shit. Is there any chance you could send me a link to grab said track?
Very cool track, indeed. I was listening to this is my truck yesterday, and I was all mellowed-out and from the classical stylings, and then loops back to the first track all DUN DUN DUNDUNDUNDUN...I really wanted to drive over someone.
"This is my nephew, Ivan. I was listening to Parasitic Extirpation on my laptop when he went inside my room and jumped in the bed and started doing air guitar. I'm glad that my camera phone was within reach and I was able to get a few seconds of it. Kids rule!"
just found this review over at metal-archives.com:
This is a damn fine demo! It's very brutal, it's devastatingly well-played and produced, and it's over in just under ten minutes.
Parasitic Extirpation, on their first demo 'Knee Deep in Disease' are playing conventional yet exceptionally good mix of brutal death metal, grind and deathcore. The first three songs are all brilliantly headbangable, with lots of heavy slam riffs and pinch harmonics, and the last track is a decent, short guitar instrumental that serves as an outro. There are no samples or anything else to speak of, just pure, brutal, grinding metal right up until that little ditty that closes the whole thing. Each song goes through a ton of different sections of varying speeds, and the songs never get boring. Sure, it's only ten minutes long, but I could easily listen to an album's worth of this. It's fast, brutal, technical and generally just overall devastating.
There's hell of a lot of diversity, that's the best part. As with all good death metal, conventional song structure is completely disregarded in favour of a "what would sound the most brutal?" composition. The production adds to the severity of the music also, every instrument is mixed perfectly so that everything is heard just as clearly as necessary. The vocalist grunts and belches his way through the whole thing more than capably, and the solos that crop up every now and then shred like it's nobodies business. See, it's bands like Parasitic Extirpation that prove that this sort of music isn't mindless, and that with effort, can prove to be highly intelligent beneath of the masking of brutal retardation.
Really, this is some very good modern grind, and a full length album of such high brutality would be just what the doctor ordered. Recommended, but it's recommended even more to check out what these guys do in the future.
here's a review from the mexican RUIDO NOISE blog (translated):
After two weeks out of circulation, I return to the load with the outline of the first material that send me as the author of the web-blog (personally already had received material of other bands) for its inclusion in NOISE NOISE. This band proceeds of USES and was born by the end of 2007 of the hand of Tim Murphy -voice- and Blue Spinazola -guitar-, the two former-components of the group Porphyria. Alex Carrara -battery-, Chris Kessaris -guitar- and Drew Copeland-Will -low- (member of Proteus -Macabre Mementos Records-) they complete the formation of PARASITIC EXTIRPATION. Without it to have put on file still by no seal, autoeditan this EP composed by a fear acustico ("Etude in B minor") and three themes of a death guttural technical metal very in the wave of bands as Suffocation, Disgorge (USES) ķ Malignancy but with its own style, alternating you split slow and fast like them cited in last place and doing a small one giņo even to a classic as Morbid Angel in the minute Two of its third theme. A band to keep in mind and to which insurance I will reserve a hole in my extensive discography when they publish more material.