I admit to being late to the Sex Prisoner game. I didn’t
pick up their s/t 7” until last year, despite it coming out in late 2010. That said, I’d be hard pressed to name an e.p.
that gets more consistent spins on my player than that s/t 7”. Also, I think it’s safe for me to say that while
their s/t 7” was the hardest thing I heard last year, this year’s State Property e.p. might be the
scariest thing I’ve heard all year.
The most cliché thing you read, in what seems like every
review these days is, “these guys aren’t inventing the wheel, they play your
typical throwback style of [insert one of the many hardcore subgenres]”. Well, that definitely can’t be said for Sex Prisoner. They aren’t inventing anything new, but they
understand powerviolence and leave their unique mark on it. Within a couple seconds you absolutely know
you’re listening to a Sex Prisoner
record. For me, that definitive Sex Prisoner sound comes from their
bass. Especially on State Property, that bass is just stalking your ass down the entire
e.p. Imagine Jason Voorhees but replace
his machete with a sledgehammer and you got the bass on State Property. The songs develop and your ear tries to
encapsulate the totality of their sound, but there’s that bass lurching over
you looking to pancake your skull into sidewalk goulash.
State Property
picks up right where their s/t 7” left off.
The e.p. starts you off with this unsettling biomechanical noise (as much
as I love some vintage, obscure movie sound bites, I appreciate this change up)
as you enter that alien ship that landed in Arizona a dozen years ago. The bass lifts you then slams you on your
head as they riff in to “Judgement II”.
That biomechanical noise stays with you as a tour guide throughout this
e.p. Coffin nail hard, caveman barks,
sprinkled in with strained shouts remain consistent with the Sex Prisoner brand of hardcore. Tempo-wise, Sex Prisoner goes from fast, violent powerviolence, to thick bass
rolls, to grooved out beat down moments.
They also have some of the sickest intros in the game; “Lost Everything”
is a perfect example on this e.p. Peacock
chest walk-in, trench digging bass, a little chug, a little groove that
transitions into total sonic destruction.
If it gets harder than “Hard Feelings”, then I need to hear it. Quintessential Sex Prisoner track; pissed
off, violent, and to the point.
Needless to say, State
Property is a wild success. It
replaces their s/t 7” in my rotation and unlike a lot of other releases from
similar bands, I actually feel like I’m hearing something new. State
Property is a hard as it gets, scary as fuck, slab of versatile powerviolence. Big ups to John at BTR for streaming this
online as well, and while I’m on the topic of BTR, their first four releases
are Spine – Subhuman, the Wake Up Dead comp, Sex Prisoner – State Property, and
the Spine/The Repos split coming out next month. Very impressive.
This review was done in late 2013 when the e.p. dropped. It was published in the Fall 2013 issue of Beyond Four Walls put out by Ryan Leach.
ReplyDelete