Mathcore Explained

Mathcore
Cultural Origins:1990s, United States
Other Topics:

Mathcore is a subgenre of hardcore punk and metalcore influenced by post-hardcore, extreme metal and math rock that developed during the 1990s. Bands in the genre emphasize complex and fluctuant rhythms through the use of irregular time signatures, polymeters, syncopations and tempo changes. Early mathcore lyrics were addressed from a realistic worldview and with a pessimistic, defiant, resentful or sarcastic point of view.

In the 1990s, the hardcore punk scene started to embrace extreme metal openly. It also started to become highly ideological, with most of the popular bands being part of subcultures. This led to bands such as Converge, Botch, Coalesce and The Dillinger Escape Plan to establish the genre.

Characteristics

Music

Mathcore emphasizes complex and fluctuant rhythms through the use of irregular time signatures, polymeters, syncopations and tempo changes, while at the same time the drummers play with overall loudness.[1] [2] [3] [4] In the words of The Dillinger Escape Plan bassist Liam Wilson, their "choppy rhythms that people get kind of tongue-twisted on" are "Latin rhythms" mixed with the speed and "stamina" of heavy metal, drawing a parallel between them and John McLaughlin's use of Eastern sounds within a jazz context.[5] Most pioneering mathcore drummers had jazz, orchestral or academic backgrounds, including Dazzling Killmen's Blake Fleming,[6] Craw's Neil Chastain,[7] Coalesce's James Dewees,[8] Botch's Tim Latona,[9] The Dillinger Escape Plan's Chris Pennie,[10] and Converge's Ben Koller.[11] As with the rhythm section, the guitars perform riffs that constantly change and are seldom repeated after one section. Early bands were almost completely atonal with the guitars or all the instruments playing polyphonic dissonance.[1] After the first The Dillinger Escape Plan records, the guitar work of most bands became extremely technical as well and "not only musically challenging, but physically demanding."[1] [12]

In a 2016 article, Ian Cory of Invisible Oranges described mathcore's emphasis on technical complexity as "the means by which" they attain the aggressiveness of punk, "but never the end unto itself", distinguishing it from "the overflowing excess" of progressive metal.[12] Writer Keith Kahn-Harris has described some mathcore bands as a mix between the aggressiveness of grindcore and the idioms of free jazz.[13]

Lyrics

Early mathcore lyrics were addressed from a realistic worldview and with a pessimistic, defiant, resentful or sarcastic point of view. They have been singled out for their philosophical and poetic elements.[1] [14] [15] [16] Some bands satirized and criticized the militant branches of the hardcore punk ideologies prominent in the 1990s.[17] Others, such as Converge's Jacob Bannon and The Dillinger Escape Plan's Dimitri Minakakis, wrote about deeply personal issues.[18]

Although musically rooted in extreme metal, some mathcore artists have shown contempt for extreme metal fictional and horror lyrics.[19] [20]

Live performances

Some early mathcore bands incorporated light shows synchronized with the music,[21] [22] while others were noted for their reckless, chaotic performances that usually ended up with fights and injuries. Guitarists Jes Steineger of Coalesce and Ben Weinman of The Dillinger Escape Plan commonly featured erratic and violent behaviors.[17] [23] [24] In 2001, vocalist Greg Puciato joined The Dillinger Escape Plan and starred in the most controversial live performances of the band until their disbandment in 2017, being described by Invisible Oranges as "the perfect physical embodiment of [the band's music]" because of his imposing physique along with destructive behavior.[12]

Etymology

Before the term "mathcore", the style had been referred to as "chaotic hardcore" or "noisecore",[25]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: February 17, 2018. Mad for Mathcore: Appreciating a Subgenre of Heavy Metal Rock Music. Columbia University. Angel. Wang. October 31, 2014. blogs.cuit.columbia.edu. live. April 2, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160402115327/http://blogs.cuit.columbia.edu/breakfastserial/2014/10/31/mad-for-mathcore-appreciating-a-subgenre-of-heavy-metal-rock-music/.
  2. Web site: February 17, 2018. Shaping Metal: Top 3 Most Influential Mathcore Albums. Brandon . Tadday . Overdrive-mag.com. November 30, 2017.
  3. Web site: February 17, 2018. Top Ten Songs: "D" Is For The Dillinger Escape Plan. June 20, 2013. Themonolith.com. https://web.archive.org/web/20180320034311/http://www.themonolith.com/music/top-ten-songs-d-is-for-the-dillinger-escape-plan/. March 20, 2018. dead.
  4. Web site: February 17, 2018. Exclusive Interview: CAR BOMB's Greg Kubacki . November 11, 2012. Lane . Oliver. Gnartallica.wordpress.com. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20180217183621/https://gnartallica.wordpress.com/2012/11/11/exclusive-interview-car-bombs-greg-kubacki/. February 17, 2018.
  5. Web site: February 18, 2018. Liam Wilson of The Dillinger Escape Plan. March 9, 2010. Bryan. Beller. Bass Player. live. August 6, 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150806024920/http://www.bassplayer.com/artists/1171/liam-wilson-of-the-dillinger-escape-plan/26050.
  6. Web site: February 15, 2018. November 29, 2016. How Dazzling Killmen Merged Avant-Garde Jazz and Punk Fury. Brad. Cohan. Clrvynt.com. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20161202191544/http://clrvynt.com/dazzling-killmen-interview/. December 2, 2016.
  7. Web site: February 18, 2018. Neil Chastain, Percussionist, Composer, and Music Director. Chastaincentral.com. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20061017210239/http://www.chastaincentral.com/content/music.html#Neil. October 17, 2006.
  8. Web site: February 21, 2018. Interviews: James Dewees (Reggie and the Full Effect, The Get Up Kids, Coalesce). Punknews.org. January 11, 2012 . Sean . Mikula. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20130318120201/https://www.punknews.org/article/45799/interviews-james-dewees-reggie-and-the-full-effect-the-get-up-kids-coalesce. March 18, 2013.
  9. Web site: February 15, 2018. Botch could have been bigger than The Dillinger Escape Plan. September 16, 2015 . Stephen . Hill . TeamRock.com.
  10. Web site: January 12, 2018. Dillinger Escape Plan - Interview. Mark. Rowland. October 17, 2002. Pennyblackmusic.co.uk. live. https://archive.today/20171225102115/http://www.pennyblackmusic.co.uk/magsitepages/article/2953/Dillinger-Escape-Plan-Interview. December 25, 2017.
  11. Web site: February 18, 2018. Ben Koller. September 14, 2006. Sickdrummermagazine.com. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20170731043628/http://sickdrummermagazine.com/the-drummers/sick-drummer-hall-of-fame/ben-koller/. July 31, 2017.
  12. Web site: February 17, 2018. The Dillinger Escape Plan: A Body of Work. Ian . Cory . November 17, 2016 . Invisible Oranges. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20161119051806/http://www.invisibleoranges.com/the-dillinger-escape-plan-a-body-of-work/. November 19, 2016.
  13. Book: Kahn-Harris, Keith . Keith Kahn-Harris . Extreme Metal . 2007 . . 4 . 978-1-84520-399-3 . Contemporary grindcore bands such as The Dillinger Escape Plan [...] have developed avant-garde versions of the genre incorporating frequent time signature changes and complex sounds that at times recall free jazz. . February 26, 2018.
  14. Web site: February 24, 2018. Coalesce. Markprindle.com. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20080617141138/http://www.markprindle.com/coalesce.htm. June 17, 2008.
  15. Web site: February 25, 2018. March Madness: COALESCE – "Functioning on Impatience". Lane . Oliver . March 1, 2017. Svbterranean.net. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20170302160922/https://svbterranean.net/2017/03/01/march-madness-coalesce-functioning-on-impatience/. March 2, 2017.
  16. Web site: February 26, 2018. Jacob Bannon loves to wax poetic, so when his opaque elegies suddenly turn to simple, direct metaphors, it's almost like your parents calling you by your full name: you stop, you notice, you listen.. The Brilliance Behind Converge's Unintelligible Lyrics. Scott. Butterworth. December 23, 2014. Noisey. live. https://archive.today/20180226062412/https://noisey.vice.com/en_ca/article/65zzbd/the-brilliance-behind-converges-unintelligible-lyrics. February 26, 2018.
  17. Web site: February 15, 2018. History . Ryan J. Downey. September 2007. Alternative Press. www.crashandbang.com. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20080418112603/http://www.crashandbang.com/?page_id=3. April 18, 2008.
  18. Web site: February 24, 2018. Converge's Jacob Bannon Untangles the Meaning of Every Song on His Band's New Album, The Dusk in Us. Pitchfork.com. November 7, 2017. Matthew . Schnipper. live. November 7, 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20171107125143/https://pitchfork.com/features/song-by-song/converges-jacob-bannon-untangles-the-meaning-of-every-song-on-his-bands-new-album-the-dusk-in-us/.
  19. Web site: February 23, 2018. Jacob Bannon (Converge) . Greg . Svitil . 1996. Veilsofteeth.com. Jacob Bannon

    I feel that [bands such as] Slayer are the Spinal Tap of metal. There's nothing to them. They're just there, and they're just a band that likes to write heavy, scary things. And there's really not an emotional depth to anything they really do. It's just all for shock value.

    . live. https://web.archive.org/web/20180223102326/http://veilsofteeth.com/jacob-bannon/. February 23, 2018.
  20. Web site: February 23, 2018. Dillinger Escape Plan Guitarist Talks New Album And Papa Roach. Rock Sound. April 24, 2009 . Ben Weinman: When I was growing up I discovered metal and it interested me, I liked that it was dark and talked about the fact that the world is not all puppy dogs and ice cream cones. But then it just got ridiculous, humorous, I look at black metal bands and they are supposed to be so evil. But it's not real. It's about fiction. About goblins and the gates of hell, pretty much a bad horror movie. . live. https://web.archive.org/web/20150413054345/https://www.rocksound.tv/news/read/dillinger-escape-plan-guitarist-talks-new-album-and-papa-roach. April 13, 2015.
  21. Web site: February 26, 2018. That Tour Was Awesome – Botch/Jesuit/The Dillinger Escape Plan (1998). Decibel. January 12, 2017. Kevin. Stewart-Panko. live. https://archive.today/20180118095821/https://www.decibelmagazine.com/2017/01/12/that-tour-was-awesome-botch-jesuit-the-dillinger-escape-plan-1998/. January 18, 2018.
  22. Web site: The Dillinger Escape Plan Hazard Warning. Natalie Zina Walschots. Exclaim!. https://archive.today/20171210072225/https://exclaim.ca/music/article/dillinger_escape_plan-hazard_warning. December 10, 2017. live. February 26, 2018. June 17, 2013.
  23. Web site: Tsimplakos . Jason . November 5, 2013 . The Dillinger Escape Plan (Ben Weinmann & Greg Puciato) . . Glasgow, Scotland . November 25, 2013 . dead . https://archive.today/20170825095332/http://noisefull.com/interviews/dillinger-escape-plan-ben-weinmann-greg-puciato . August 25, 2017 . February 22, 2018 .
  24. Web site: Apostolopoulos. Tom . Dillinger Escape Plan Biography. January 18, 2011. Sing365.com. February 26, 2018. dead. https://archive.today/20130202052253/http://www.sing365.com/music/lyric.nsf/Dillinger-Escape-Plan-Biography/EDEAB9F3FFF02E6348256CEA000DD6C2. February 2, 2013.
  25. "Botch ... a noisecore pioneer", 'Terrorizer, "Grindcore Special", #180, Feb. 2009, p. 63.
  26. Kevin Stewart-Panko, "The Decade in Noisecore", Terrorizer no. 75, Feb 2000, p. 22-23.
  27. [Steven Blush]
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  30. Web site: February 15, 2018. Converge interview with singer Jake Bannon from At Both Ends.. Jacob Bannon

    Our direct inspiration comes from bands like Black Flag ...

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  31. Web site: February 15, 2018. The Dillinger Escape Plan . Jasper. Hesselink. April 2005. www.lordsofmetal.nl. Ben Weinman

    When we first started playing in a band, we listened to a lot of bands ... even Black Flag and Dead Kennedys, who had something to say and added some honest energy.

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  83. Whitney Strub, "Behind the Key Club: An Interview with Mark "Barney" Greenway of Napalm Death ", PopMatters, May 11, 2006. [1] Access date: September 17, 2008.[25] though the genre's existence before this time is generally recognized. In the 1990s, groups now often described as mathcore were commonly called "noisecore" or "chaotic hardcore". Kevin Stewart-Panko of Terrorizer referred to groups such as Neurosis, Deadguy, Cave In, Today Is the Day, The Dillinger Escape Plan, Converge, Coalesce, Candiria, Botch, and Psyopus as falling under this label.[26] Stewart-Panko described the sound of these bands as a "dynamic, violent, discordant, technical, brutal, off-kilter, no rules mixture of hardcore, metal, prog, math rock, grind and jazz."

    The term is generally applied by journalists, rather than by musicians themselves. Jacob Bannon of Converge stated:

    History

    Precedents (1980s to early 1990s)

    Early antecedents to mathcore were practiced by post-hardcore bands of the 1980s and early 1990s. Post-hardcore is a broad term to define bands that maintain the aggressiveness and intensity of hardcore punk but emphasizes a greater degree of creative expression. Hardcore punk pioneers Black Flag incorporated characteristics reminiscent to mathcore during their mid-1980s experimental period, including heavy metal laden riffs and lengthy songs, as well as fusion-style time signatures, polyrhythms, instrumental songs and improvisational sections.[27] [28] At that time, their biggest influences were the Mahavishnu Orchestra and King Crimson during its 1972–1975 lineup. Author Steven Blush said that their new direction "proved too much for many fans", yet numerous mathcore trailblazers would later credit Black Flag as an inspiration.[29] [30] [31] Among others post-hardcore bands usually credited are Minutemen,[32] who were heavily influenced by avant-garde rock and jazz,[33] The Jesus Lizard,[34] [35] [36] inspired by progressive rock,[37] [38] Fugazi,[39] [40] and Drive Like Jehu,[41] who drew from math rock and krautrock.[42]

    Early development (1990–1995)

    In the 1990s, the hardcore punk scene started to embrace extreme metal openly and also was highly ideologized, with most of the popular bands being part of subcultures, religions or political groups.[43] Some mathcore bands started inspired by straight edge and Hare Krishna groups, including Converge, Coalesce and Botch.[44] On the other hand, the more unorthodox bands that substantially influenced mathcore remained in the underground.

    Two bands usually credited as mathcore forerunners are mid-westerners Dazzling Killmen and Craw, who at the time were considered part of the "noisier" branch of math rock.[45] [46] [47] Their debut albums were released in 1992 and 1993 respectively. They were characterized by a "metallic post-hardcore" sound but with constant time signature changes and vocals with an "animalistic sound of a man losing his mind". Three out of four members of Dazzling Killmen knew each other from jazz school, while Craw had a classical percussionist and a jazz bassist.[48] Both were joined by saxophonists on some performances.[49]

    In 1989, New Jersey band Rorschach was formed within the youth crew hardcore scene but soon developed a more complex and dissonant metallic hardcore style.[50] They were influenced by hardcore punk bands such as Die Kreuzen and Black Flag, as well as thrash metal bands Voivod and Slayer. After their disbandment in 1993, their guitarist Keith Huckins joined Deadguy in 1994 and played on their sole studio album, 1995's Fixation on a Co-Worker.[51] The discordant sound of both bands had a profound impact on the first mathcore bands.[52] [53]

    At this period, several pioneering mathcore bands began to form: Botch from Washington in 1993; Coalesce from Missouri, Cable from Connecticut and Knut from Switzerland in 1994; Cave In from Massachusetts and Drowningman from Vermont in 1995. In 1990, Massachusetts band Converge was formed but they started writing and playing what they consider "relevant" music in 1994.[54] Referring to the burgeoning mathcore scene, The Dillinger Escape Plan's founder and guitarist Ben Weinman said:

    Establishment, milestone albums and first scene (1996–2002)

    Converge was formed as an amalgamation of extreme metal, crossover thrash and hardcore punk, but in the mid-1990s they were heavily affected by early metalcore and post-hardcore bands, such as Rorschach, Universal Order of Armageddon and Starkweather.[55] [56] Their second and third albums, 1996's Petitioning the Empty Sky and 1998's When Forever Comes Crashing, developed an increasingly technical and bleak style.[57]

    At their first stages, Coalesce and Botch were influenced by Syracuse, New York metalcore and vegan straight edge pioneers Earth Crisis.[58] [59] Vocalist Sean Ingram relocated to Syracuse to be nearer to its scene, but ended up disillusioned with their ostracizing attitude and on his return to Missouri formed Coalesce. They incorporated influences from progressive metal band Tool, with founding drummer Jim Redd stating that they "wanted to be" them "with none of the quiet parts", but only using their "heavy guitars, heavy drums, wacky time signatures, and loud-quiet dynamics". Whereas their debut album Give Them Rope (1997) was considered "an underground milestone that helped [further] what was soon [universally] called 'metalcore'",[60] their sophomore studio album, Functioning on Impatience, became a landmark of mathcore in 1998.

    Botch initially tried to become a political-straight edge band but got discouraged by the "elitist" and aggressive stance of many of their participants. Their second album We Are the Romans of November 1999 was influenced by Drive Like Jehu, Sepultura and Meshuggah. This album has influenced numerous bands and met high critical acclaim throughout the years, being lauded by TeamRock in 2015 as "one of the greatest albums in the history of heavy music".[61]

    In 1997, The Dillinger Escape Plan evolved from the political-oriented act Arcane because they did not want to become part of "cliques" again.[62] They turned around their sound significantly in their second EP, Under the Running Board of 1998, and their debut album, Calculating Infinity of September 1999, drawing from progressive death metal bands Cynic, Meshuggah and Death, as well as King Crimson and several jazz fusion artists.[63] Both records created an extremely technical and fast brand of mathcore, which "launched an arms race in the metallic hardcore scene" and went on to define the subgenre substantially.[64] Relapse Records marketed Calculating Infinity as "math metal" because its sound and the album's title "sounded mathematical", yet this was not the band's intent.[65]

    In 1999, Converge released the split album The Poacher Diaries expanding drastically their technical elements, but afterwards main songwriter Kurt Ballou called it "a failed experiment".[66] This inspired him to change his focus to song structure and the "memorable" elements that initially attracted him to music, birthing their 2001 album Jane Doe. This record was the first with drummer Ben Koller and bassist Nate Newton who made significant contributions to the songwriting. Jane Doe exerted considerable influence in extreme music circles and attained a cult following.

    Other important albums of this period are 1996's Variable Speed Drive by Cable,[67] 1998's Until Your Heart Stops by Cave In,[68] 2000's Rock and Roll Killing Machine by Drowningman,[69] and 2002's Challenger by Knut.[70]

    Contemporary influence (early 2000s)

    In the early 2000s several new mathcore bands started to emerge. Norma Jean's earlier records are often compared to Converge and Botch.[71] [72] [73] Other new mathcore bands that cite older mathcore bands as an influence or are compared to them include Car Bomb,[74] The Locust,[75] Daughters,[76] Some Girls,[77] Look What I Did,[78] The Number Twelve Looks Like You[79] and Ion Dissonance.[80]

    2010s–present

    Bands such as Rolo Tomassi, Frontierer, The Armed, Black Matter Device, The Callous Daoboys, and SeeYouSpaceCowboy have been described as modern practitioners of the genre by Bandcamp[81] and Alternative Press.[82]

    See also

    References

    Works cited

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