Cover of To The Lovers, Farewell Discipline And Punish
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For fans of experimental music, lovers of dubstep and sludge genres, and listeners interested in genre fusion and electronic innovation
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THE REVIEW

SLUDGESTEP.

Or at least that's how the creator describes it. To me, honestly, it seems like a fairly spastic dubstep with extremely wobbly basses, distorted keyboards, epileptic rhythms, a slimy groove behind the wall of sound and a hint of Frenchcore. Now, listening to it, a doubt came to mind.

Does it make sense? Does it make sense to mix two genres as different as sludge and dubstep, moreover without any real reason? Can something interesting come out of it? Fifteen minutes tell me yes, then I think about it again. In 2012, does it still make sense to experiment, or try to blend absolutely antithetic sounds? Or are we past the expiration date, better to devote ourselves to the irony of post-modern pastiche or nostalgia (even for things we don't remember)?

In the meantime, I would say download it, this one (for free, on the side). Maybe it's utterly useless, but maybe it's a future masterpiece. In the meantime, it rocks.

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Summary by Bot

The album 'Discipline And Punish' by To The Lovers, Farewell is an experimental blend of sludge and dubstep, dubbed 'sludgestep' by its creator. The reviewer notes its spastic rhythms, distorted basses, and a hint of Frenchcore. Though questioning the sense of mixing such different genres in 2012, the reviewer encourages downloading the free album, suggesting it could be a future masterpiece. Overall, the album is praised for rocking despite its unusual fusion.

To the Lovers, Farewell


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