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Running Death > Overdrive > 2015, 12" vinyl, Independent > Reviews
Running Death - Overdrive

Incoherent - 50%

Felix 1666, January 22nd, 2018

Thrash metal is usually a mix of spontaneity, fury, ferocity, sharpness and energy. Under these conditions it remains a mystery why a newcomer starts the debut with a vapid, pretty lame and faceless number like "Hell on Earth". Do not trust its title, the song lacks unbridled aggression in a significant manner. Fortunately, Running Death do not only deliver mediocre pieces. Already the next song ("Psycho") is equipped with some fast-paced, insistent riffs that push it on a higher level. Thus, we can overlook the fact that more than six minutes are a little bit too long for the somewhat fragile substance of this tune.

Apart from the quality of single songs, one must accept that the band has written a comparatively high number of rather slow parts. Fiery thrash sounds different. Additionally, some songs do not come to the point or hold just too many meandering sequences. An actually good track like "Raging Nightmare", for example, fails to make your pulse race faster. Some instrumental parts destroy the power of the song in view of their pretty soft appearance. These intermezzos lead to a lack of intensity and this is a pity, because the technical skills of the band are out of doubt. Yet we all know that this is not the crucial thing. The compositional capabilities leave room for optimization, to say it politely. Good tunes such as "Pray for Death" are rather the exception than the rule. Despite its dominating mid-tempo, the song scores with a certain catchiness. I do not listen to a masterpiece, but a solid number with an effective main riff. Nevertheless, the songs fail to present a good flow. They suffer from a lot of stop-and-go parts that just do not make sense at all ("Reduced") and overlong instrumental sections are not helpful as well. The same goes for the average voice of the lead singer. I am really sorry, but this guy has nothing that recommends him for higher tasks.

I freely admit that the production is putting emphasis on the guitars and that's a comprehensible decision for a thrash album. Moreover, the sound does not suffer from any major flaws. Nevertheless, the album is too long, it does not create the necessary level of energy and there are no parts that stick in the mind immediately. No track has a long-lasting effect and thus, the verdict is clear. For sure, Running Death do not lack ambitions and manual skills, but I wish they would start to write coherent, strong and energetic songs or stop to release albums. In their current state, they are not able to hold a candle to comparable bands such as Pripjat, Skeleton Pit or Traitor. These guys impress with their spontaneity, fury and... well, all these features that I have mentioned at the beginning of this review.

Originally written for Metalegion #2.

No crossing guard necessary! - 82%

autothrall, June 14th, 2015
Written based on this version: 2015, CD, Punishment 18 Records

Unlike similarly named label mates Raging Death, the Germans Running Death have actually developed a slightly unique, punchy and compartmentalized modern thrash style which took me a little by surprise due to not only the compelling structure and variation found in many of their riffs themselves, but the clean, contemporary production through which they are all delivered. That's not to say that Overdrive has no precedent, that it's the most original approach to the medium I've experienced in modern times, or that it's the most memorable example of its class, but clearly some thought and organization went into this recording beyond just the typical 'we want to sound like band x plus band y that we found in our older brother's bedroom closet gathering dust back in 2005' derivation and aimlessness that so many of their peers suffer in the endless recycling pattern that has partly stunted this genre beyond its still standing luminaries and the few other pioneers left in its waters. Running Death might hang out just at the edge of the harbor, without going on a long cruise, but at least they're not beached whales, fattened so much off nostalgia that they can no longer sail or swim.

Some of the frilly licks and clinical harmonies assembled on the disc might contain small traces of DNA from Teutonic precursors like Mekong Delta, Destruction or even Deathrow, but I also found that this record had a lot in common with West Coast second tier thrashers of the 80s like Defiance, in particular that band's similarly clean and impactful sophomore Void Terra Firma. This is a little more forceful in execution, and the riffing slightly more varied, but the grainier, gut-fed vocals and several of the guitar progressions are cast of a similar mode, or perhaps to that of British hopefuls Xentrix on their own sophomore For Whose Advantage?, or a few lesser known German bands like Erosion or Accuser. Maybe Midas Touch's Presage of Disaster, only less bitter in disposition. But Running Death are arguably even more bizarre, for their proclivity to bust out into weird dissonant rock grooves in the middle of tunes like "Psycho". From the onset of any particular track on this album, there seemed very little precognition as to what exactly was going to happen throughout, and they tend to experiment a little more in the bridge sequences where they'll fly off the handle and experiment more with spurious tempo shifts, melodic harmonies and whatever their imaginations conjure forth. Not to say that it's always as unique as where that might lead them, but they do try.

The rhythm guitars have just the right amount of crunch to keep them tidy but not neutered, and the bass is often saturated in slightly more distorted ooze for a great contrast. The drums are perky but simplistic, the strength coming through primarily in the fills of the grooves. Vocals are probably the weakest component of the album, a little lower in the mix than might suit them, but capable of a more vicious metamorphosis in places like the chorus of "Raging Nightmare" where they reminded me slightly of a less carnal Jonas Nilsson from Raise Hell's triumphant Not Dead Yet. Yet, although so many of the components here really work well together, it's those guitars that constantly steal the show, whether they're galloping along like later Crumbsuckers' weird prog-thrash pacing or bursting into a Megadeth-like excess with leads and melodies, they are always resonating in my ears and lending themselves to one of the most credible and replayable albums I've heard yet from the entire Punishment 18 Records roster. Between the deft skill level and that sleek, cubicle thrash appeal that they muster, Overdrive is a winner, but I wouldn't mind hearing how they develop their style into something even more insane or sinister or muscular sounding in the future. Either way, this is a band I will continue to follow, because they capture that precious novelty I felt as a teenager in the 80s, exploring hundreds of paper route-purchased thrash cassettes through the genre's prime.

-autothrall
http://www.fromthedustreturned.com