It's no easy task to follow up a record that harvested as much hype as the Gallows' biting 2006 debut, Orchestra of Wolves. Many music mags (Kerrang! and NME, especially) touted the band as the second coming of hardcore punk and the praises were well-founded. Drenched in irony, Frank Carter's frighteningly hedonistic lyrics matched the icky literary prowess of Bret Easton Ellis' -American Psycho, and the group's savage intensity recalled early U.K. punk and American hardcore at its finest. After touring some arena-sized festivals, Warped Tours, and whatnot, they rethought their plans of attack for their sophomore attempt, Grey Britain, and ultimately came to a decision to revamp their sound with a metal edge. There's the same screaming angst and relentless speed that was celebrated in their first outing, but now Carter's shrieks are backed by double kick drums and explosive speed metal guitar riffs that have more in common with Slayer and early Metallica than Black Flag or the Exploited. Shifting into metalcore territory is a tricky decision, since a lot of their initial appeal was due to the fact that they were making their own personal stamp on revitalizing punk -- a genre that's becoming increasingly saturated with commercialism. Here, they seem less unique. Part of this can be attributed to producer GGGarth, the man responsible for making Mudvayne, Slipknot, and Atreyu come alive on disc. Brittle guitar tones and off-kilter rhythms are substituted for thick, beefy tones and massive group shouts on the choruses, resulting in songs like "We Are the Night" and "Graves." In the disc's most unlikely moment, "The Vulture (Acts I & II)" begins with two minutes of a sweetly sung, soothing acoustic ballad -- complete with strings -- before flipping into a tight, furious, headbanging anthem. Those not banging their heads will likely be scratching them, wondering what the Gallows are really all about and where they're headed next. ~ Jason Lymangrover, All Music Guide
Grey Britain
05/05/2009 | Reprise / Wea
All Music Guide Review
Grey Britain Track Listing
Grey Britain Notes
Not since the days of the Sex Pistols and the Clash has a band exploded from the fertile U.K. hardcore scene with such urgency, energy, and anger as Gallows. Grey Britain, the group’s second album, is a damning indictment of a country crippled by recession, and suffering from racism, ignorance and hopelessness. Hard, heavy, loud, deep and bleak, produced by Garth ‘GGGarth’ Richardson (Rage Against The Machine), Grey Britain may be the most important punk rock record in years to come out of not only Britain but anywhere.
Credits of Grey Britain
- Lee Barrall
- Drums, Group Member
- Marren Fielinski
- Violin
- Thomas Mitchener
- Remote Recording
- Bruce Ruhite
- Viola
- Andy Wallace
- Mixing
- Howie Weinberg
- Mastering
- Perry Mason
- Violin
- John O'Mahoney
- Mixing
- Richard Lancaster
- Engineer
- Ben Kaplan
- Engineer, Digital Editing
- Stephen Carter
- Guitar, Vocals, Group Member
- Robbie Nelson
- Engineer, Digital Editing
- Jonathan Carter
- Remote Recording
- Dave Daniels
- Cello
- Jan Petrov
- Mixing Assistant
- Gallows
- Producer
- Frank Carter
- Vocals, Group Member
- Laurent Barnard
- Guitar, Keyboards, Group Member
- Stuart Gili-Ross
- Bass, Group Member
- GGGarth
- Producer, Digital Editing
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