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Anti- Records -- One Day as a Lion
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Raw, socially conscious post-hardcore in the vein of early Boysetsfire from a former member of Thursday (Bill Henderson)? Yeah, Procedure have some pretty good things going on on Shift Pacific. It's far from great, but offers quite a fair deal to like.

While the band bills themselves as hardcore, they're full supporters of a distinct, gruff sing/scream dynamic, so I feel obligated to apply the 'post' prefix here. However, said dynamic never actually sounds at all forced -- rather, the production isn't overtly glossy and the vocals tend to be significantly burly; these dudes sound like they should've been at the forefront of the movement (and well, at least one of them kinda was). They can be melodic and emotional one moment ("Yet, It Moves") and awfully pissed the next (the appropriately titled "What the Hell," which has a genuine breakdown). "Drawing Dead" even throwns in double-time tempos, pushed by a good punk rock vigor; "Resight the Blind Eye" offers some poundingly fast verses, too. The melodic crossections of closer "Amber Waves" best brings out the band's elements that seem close to the abovementioned BSF.

Scattered throughout are some instrumental interludes (the near medieval acoustic ditty "Sometimes, You Didn't Want to Know the End," the haunting, electronically swirling "Within These Walls, We Will Outlast Them") which offer some odd "reprieves." If that's their intention, I think it's a bit unnecessary since there's enough of a dynamic running through the record where the listener is never really in need of catching his or her breath.

Plenty of regards to species survival and advancement are what the album generally depends upon; while the commentary appears usually vague, the band seems most direct in "In Loco Parentis," making specific references to factions like the FCC and Howard Stern to criticize media control.

Shift Pacific is certainly genre-blending and diverse, but I think a bit too much, really -- it seems all over the place and disjointed as a result. Still, I like what I hear, and once it seems the band is more comfortable in their skin the end result should be even more compelling.

Yet, It Moves
Death Imitates Art

STREAM
In Loco Parentis






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    Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, May 28, 2006 at 10:48 AM (EDT)

    I really like what I hear.

    Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, May 27, 2006 at 9:43 PM (EDT)

    danperrone, u mad

    Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, May 27, 2006 at 9:32 PM (EDT)

    brian, u mad

    Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, May 27, 2006 at 10:43 AM (EDT)

    boysets fire is boring and i dont care if they are post hardcore, they are boring like hell...

    Posted by danperrone on 2006-05-27 09:07:55

    hahahahahahaha

    listen to this anonymous fool

    Posted by inagreendase on 2006-05-27 00:10:07

    Oh yeah, Boysetsfire have never written emotional hardcore songs before. Ever. Their discography is completely void of emotional hardcore. Can't find any. At all. Nope. None.

    Posted by Anonymous on Friday, May 26, 2006 at 11:54 PM (EDT)

    allmusic seems to think they're emo aswell

    Posted by inagreendase on 2006-05-26 23:44:56

    Allmusic seems to agree with me.

    Posted by Anonymous on Friday, May 26, 2006 at 11:34 PM (EDT)

    you say you can't understand why someone would label botch as post-hardcore in a recent review, but here you label boy sets fire as post-hardcore? durrrrrrrr.