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Demon Hunter - The World Is A Thorn Review
Posted by Ben Czajkowski on 03.09.2010



The world is a thorn album cover

As Christian Metal/Hardcore/Grindcore/whatever becomes a more and more established genre, Demon Hunter is one of the bands at the forefront of this movement. Since their self-titled album a decade ago, the band has come a long way from an underground sensation to mainstream success. To date, they’ve debuted in the Top 100, reached the #1 spot as US Heatseeker and #3 Top Christian Album, and have established a solid following that grows more and more with each album. All of this while remaining inoffensive without failing to disappoint, a feat that few bands are capable of.

So, how does The World is a Thorn stack up against previous their works and how does it stand on its own? In order to answer that, I must discuss the transformation that the band has gone through since their previous release, Storm The Gates of Hell. Demon Hunter lost BOTH of its guitarists. Don Clark left the band to pursue his career as a graphic designer. And to be with his family. Who wants to do that?! Ethan Luck bowed out, citing not being able to keep up with the hectic life of being in Demon Hunter and Reliant K. Guitar replacements Patrick Judge and Ryan Helm joined the band in 2008 and 2009, respectively. Only 2 original members of the band remain: Ryan Clark, frontman and vocalist, and Jon Dunn on bass.

What I term to be the more significant loss: Don, brother of lead vocalist, Ryan, worked as a collaborator and co-wrote most of the previous albums. With him out, the pressure fell squarely onto Ryan. So, there are some significant things going on to the chemistry of the group. And from the moment that the album opens, it’s clear that it’s going to be different. There’s a lot more electronic work going on that’s attempted to blend with their hardcore sound. Like in Storm the Gates of Hell, it works in some places; in others, though, it’s more of a hindrance.

Here’s the track list:

1. "Descending upon Us" - 5:30
2. "LifeWar" - 1:52
3. "Collapsing (feat. Björn "Speed" Strid of Soilwork)" - 3:38
4. "This Is the Line" - 3:59
5. "Driving Nails" - 4:06
6. "The World Is a Thorn" - 2:35
7. "Tie This Around Your Neck" - 3:29
8. "Just Breathe" (feat. Christian Älvestam of Miseration) - 3:55
9. "Shallow Water" - 3:44
10. "Feel as Though You Could" (feat. Dave Peters of Throwdown) - 3:53
11. "Blood in the Tears" - 4:49

There are two bonus tracks from the deluxe edition that I will not be covering here.

“Descending Upon Us” opens with a showcasing of Helm and Judge, layered with some echoing bells. This runs for about 1:45 before giving way to that familiar hardcore sound that melts into Clark’s harmonizing at the chorus. Rinse and repeat. The problem for me, though, was that it felt like such a muted track, in terms of its edge. An average track, at best, that gives way to “LifeWar”. I have no idea what they were thinking with this one, but it should have been axed. An extremely subpar showing. Thank God it’s not even two minutes long. Skip it. As far as lazy writing and arranging goes, “LifeWar” takes the cake. Worst track in the entire Demon Hunter catalog.

“Collapsing”, the first single from The World is a Thorn, is where the only money is: it has great energy, and it is one of the few places where the electronic sounds work well with the rest of the song. Makes me tap my foot and bob my head every time. It’s very familiar from Storm the Gates of Hell. Fans of the tracks “Fading Away” will love it. What makes it a true winner is that it includes the vocal prowess of metal god Bjorn “Speed” Strid, frontman and genius vocalist for Soilwork, among other things. Demon Hunter is no stranger to bringing in guest vocalists to add a layer or two to a track. Look at “Beauty Through the Eyes of a Predator” (featuring Brock Lindow of 36 Crazyfists) and “Our Faces Fall Apart” (featuring Howard Jones of Killswitch Engage). What concerns me is that they use a contributing artist 4 times on the album, similar to Summer of Darkness.

“Driving Nails” is your typical balladry, heartfelt track that mirrors "My Heartstrings Come Undone", "Deteriorate", and "Carry Me Down". Not a bad track, but absolutely nothing new to glean here. In fact, it suffers from some uninspired lyricism on the part of Clark. I mean, “It’s driving nails into my soul / Angels from my home”? Come on. Weak. The album picks right back up again with “The World Is a Thorn”, a purely anthemic and energetic track. A lot of screaming and growling on this one.

The rest of the album is just the same: below-average to barely-par work. The finale, “Blood In My Tears,” was more like blood in my urine: painful and definitely not supposed to be there. And the ending was like passing a gallstone. I doubt I’ll be giving this album a repeat listen, after this point. Thank God for MySpace streams because this will be one Demon Hunter album I will not be picking up.

To sum it up, I cannot find a moment anywhere where the band even tries stepping away from what they’ve already accomplished. And rather than building on what is good and solid, they manage to just pour their Seattle rain all over it. I am completely disparaging of this work, and rightfully so. There’s a clear lack of inspiration and confidence in almost every facet. However, I am confident that the band will rebound. They’ve been through a lot over the last few years, and their first four albums were solid. Mess with anyone’s chemistry THIS much, and you’re bound to give up ten goals against while only scoring one for yourself, with an assist from Strid. Hang your head, reflect, and come back, hopefully, stronger, next time.



The 411: Demon Hunter has undergone some fundamental changes to their lineup, and with them, manage to tarnish their sound, lyrics, and the image of their work ethic that they worked so hard to forge. What The World Is A Thorn displays is eleven tracks of lazy arrangements and uninspired lyrics that not even the addition of electronic layering, four guest vocalists, and attempts at pretty strings can fix. There is virtually nothing to take home from this album, and I strongly recommend just buying “Collapsing” from iTunes and skipping the rest.
 
Final Score:  5.0   [ Not So Good ]  legend


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Comments (14)

 
Less than Nothing did not have Brock from 36 on it. It was Beauty Through the Eyes of a Predator.

Posted By: Guest#0472 (Guest)  on March 09, 2010 at 01:33 PM

 
 
I couldnt disagree more this has to be one of their best albums yet.

Posted By: Josh (Guest)  on March 09, 2010 at 07:17 PM

 
 
It's funny how this guy thinks he knows about Demon Hunter, but has various errors in his review. So obviously this attempt at a "review" is well horrible.

Maybe when you go through school and actually study the band you can a decent review.


Posted By: Guest#4131 (Guest)  on March 09, 2010 at 07:29 PM

 
 
yea whoever wrote this doesnt know what their talking about, this is one of DH's best albums

Posted By: Guest#2830 (Guest)  on March 10, 2010 at 09:23 AM

 
 
Say what? This review is awful. "Tie this around your neck", "this is the line" and "just breathe" are quality songs that stand equal to or higher than "collapsing". You want a real quick review? Here ya go:

The guitars have become more sonic, Ryan's vocals are changed a bit but neither for good or bad, and this album is 20x better than Storm The Gates of Hell. To further talk about the guitars I would go as far as going that the work has grown from a competent rhythm guitarist's droning repetition to a full blown sonic attack portrayed better on this release than any album to date.

The songs are alot more anthemic than the past, Lifewar is the worst track on the cd sounding like it was directly ripped off a max cavalera release and ending a song in Jonathan Davis crybaby fashion should've been left off the mix.

I would place this album between Summer of Darkness and Tryptich and consider it a must have.

The original review is naive and did not give a clear listen because their was no need for a second listen to recognize the quality of this release.

I give the reviewer a 1 out of 10 on his ability to review and album and will definitely not be reading anything more from this dopey schmoe.

This album is great. I would have no qualms setting this release next to Chimaira's "Resurrection" and Norma Jean's "bless the martyr and kiss the child".

We could only hope Ben Czkdldhsiski has blood in his urine.


Posted By: guest (Guest)  on March 10, 2010 at 10:44 AM

 
 
You are behaving just like the stereotypical critic. You are hating on great music. I respect your opinions, but you are simply wrong. You do not understand the lyrics first of all. As with all DH songs, the meaning runs deeper than you understand, obviously. Second, your criticism of LifeWar is juvenile. If you spent a little time understanding what they meant or what the War is, you might think otherwise.

Posted By: Ben (Guest)  on March 10, 2010 at 04:40 PM

 
 
Wanted to give you some actual feedback on your review of the New Demon Hunter Album. While I have been a Demon Hunter fan since there appearance of Infected on one of the previous Solid State Record compilations, I have known them to evolve more and more and into a friendlier version of the dark yet somehow slightly enlightening lyrics over time. I can honest say your review was spot on. Being a huge Demon Hunter fan, such as getting my tix 7 months in advance for a festival they are playing this year, and buying every album nearly the first minute that I can, this album was exactly how you reviewed, and I hate to say that. but thanks for the honest and relatively in depth review. I hope it opens the eyes of the band, that criticism, although seemingly harsh comes from an honest place. Regardless of who left or is in the band, it seems more like they settled on the tracks, sheer out of the purpose to put something new out there with the name Demon Hunter instead of truly evolving into what can potentially become one of the greatest bands – Christian or Not – in that genre of music at it currently is. I’m sure if you listen to the song “Lead Us Home’ form the ‘Storm The Gates’ you may notice that a lot of the breakdowns / chorus seem directly connected as a carry-over from that song.

Posted By: Travis (Guest)  on March 11, 2010 at 11:15 AM

 
 
Sounds like no one likes this critic and his bad review.

Posted By: Guest#3503 (Guest)  on March 15, 2010 at 03:12 AM

 
 
I actually agree with a lot of what was said, though I find "Shallow Water" to be the standout track.

"Collapsing" isn't bad, but it disappointed me. When I first heard Speed Strid was doing guest vocals, I had extremely high hopes as he's one of my favorite vocalists (and remembering how much I LOVED "Beauty Through The Eyes of a Predator" with vocals from Brock Lindow, another one of my favorites). I just think it could have been much better than it was.

That being said, this album is probably the most disappointing work I've heard from Demon Hunter. I wasn't too high on a lot of Storm The Gates of Hell either, but there were enough great tracks to make the album overall pretty good. This one just doesn't live up to the standards of their self-titled album, Summer of Darkness, or The Triptych.

It pains me to say it, but I am starting to lose faith in where Demon Hunter is headed. I was not aware upon my first listen of all the lineup changes that happened between STGOH and this album, but maybe that was the reason I didn't like it was much.

Overall, a decent album in itself, but not even close to what I've come to expect from Demon Hunter.


Posted By: FLAW (Guest)  on March 16, 2010 at 01:52 PM

 
 
This guy is honestly listening to the wrong record. This album is a departure from the pervious CDs in every way. The change at guitar has given them a new energy and sound. They've done some new things here that haven't been seen. The sound has evolved from the softer STGOH to be closer to their self titled review. Absolutely awesome disc. Go get it because this is a true masterpiece.

Posted By: Chris (Guest)  on March 16, 2010 at 08:13 PM

 
 
I think Demon Hunter has a message & a desire to keep their sound fresh with each album release. The only people that should have anything bad to say about this album should be those who aren't into metal. You're a critic,not an authority.

Posted By: Michael j. (Guest)  on March 21, 2010 at 05:21 PM

 
 
OK, I'm no music critic, but I disagree with this Czajkowski (awsome last name)guy. When I heard DH was coming out with a new album,I WAS VERY HAPPY. DH has created and composed great music over the years and I am a big fan of their art. I think The World is a Thorn is different in a good way and I was very impressed with it. I like every song on there(including Lifewar)mostly because of the message they bring out; the fact that this sinful world is flawed and, not to be pessemistic, nearing it's end. Just Breathe and Tie This Around Your Neck are my favorites. With that, I give TWIAT a 10/10. Keep it up DH!

Posted By: Andrew (guest) (Guest)  on April 10, 2010 at 09:11 PM

 
 
Wow, I agree with the majority and say that this is a great album. I would also like to comment on the "Life War" song... I LOVED IT!!! I wish it went on for 30 minutes. I think it's the best track on the whole cd. It's very empowering.

Posted By: Andrew (Guest)  on May 14, 2010 at 11:01 PM

 
 
Dumbass reviewer, lol stay to your britney and justin bieber reviews.

Posted By: Rick (Guest)  on May 23, 2010 at 11:43 AM

 


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