This instrumental trio of guitar, drums, and touch guitar combine the furious virtuosity of tech metal, the improvised soloing of jazz, and certain writing techniques of contemporary classical music to give their insanity ... more »a compositional cohesion rarely heard in rock music. Despite their technical nature, their sound is accessible to musicians and non-musicians alike. Limited to 800 copies.« less
This instrumental trio of guitar, drums, and touch guitar combine the furious virtuosity of tech metal, the improvised soloing of jazz, and certain writing techniques of contemporary classical music to give their insanity a compositional cohesion rarely heard in rock music. Despite their technical nature, their sound is accessible to musicians and non-musicians alike. Limited to 800 copies.
Schizophrenic Jazz Metal of the Not So Distant Future
Igar The Terrible | Canada | 05/15/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This is my first experience with the Arctopus, and I'm sure it won't be my last. Behold...THE ARCTOPUS have a great combination of technical metal/jazz metal going on; Sometimes it will rend and flay your head and upper torso into a steaming pile of fleshy tissue, and at others it will sound like very laid back, melodic type of Jazz/Jazz metal. They Kinda remind me of "Cynic", That is If Cynic lost the keyboards and robo voices, and shot themselves up with steroids and Caffine.
This touch guitar stuff is crazy, its got me very interested in finding out more about the instrument, as I have never heard of them before. And another amazing thing about this band is that it is a three piece. I could swear that they have 2 guitarists and a bass going sometimes. The only thing I have against them is that the guitarist is prone to go into wild shred-fests every now and then, which can get on my nerves sometimes.
But everything else about this EP is top-notch stuff. It might not be very long, but when you listen to it, every second feels like three because of the insane complexity of it all. But also not to be overshadowed are the beautiful mellow passages like in Sensory Amusia...Man its so relaxing and peacefull, you could listen to that in a cafe...although 60 seconds down the line you might listen to it at a destruction durby, or at a construction site.
The arctopus has also recently signed to Metal Blade records,(Home of Cannibal Corpse, The Black Dahlia murder, etc)
So If you enjoyed this Ep like I did, Im sure that even better material will be coming from the Arctopus in the very near future. Keep Your eyes on these guys."
Behold...insanity
Hugo Guiral | France | 04/03/2006
(4 out of 5 stars)
"This truly is a gem. Off all the places, I found this EP sitting right there in the open on a shelf at my local Border's. Very strange. Having heard some good things about the band, I picked up the album, went home, popped it in, and was blown away. What we have here is a mindblowingly skillful tech-thrash band with a guitarist/bassist combo that any band would die for. They manage to go from crazy thrash to laid-back acid rock, to almost progressive emotional guitar solos, to Fantomas-esque crashing riffs that just smack right into you. The latter are probably the worst kind of riffs on this album. Unfortunately the second song has quite a lot of this. Anyway.
The opener starts with a band, tells you to wake and Behold...THE ARCTOPUS! (I had to). Anyway, it begins with mind-numbing speed and technicality. At 2:21 it goes into a great acid-rock bass section. Otherwise it blasts along at 1000 BPM with some great melodies but most of all amazing chops. Think Necrophagist without vocals and with more interesting guitar parts. At around 5:24 it heads into a great keyboard-driven portion with some excellent emotional guitar and solid drumming. It's very atmospheric. The song ends like that and simply fades into the next song.
The next song starts slow with some foreboding sounds and whatnot before launching into more craziness about halfway through. Not a strong offering compared to the first song. It pretty much seems like the guys from BTA blew their load on the first song with no steam left for the rest. Fortunataely the third song proves this wrong. It blasts out, goes crazy, does cool stuff, more great guitar work, then busts out into an awesome acid rock section with soem nice jazzy guitar. Then it kinda starts blowing up. This next section makes it feel like the album is blowing up. It's a bunch of heavy, foreboding Fantomas-esque eerie riffs with all sorts of discord for a little while. Then they fall back near the end and go crazy and it's over.
So basically, this is a brilliant display of technical ability with the occassional ear for excellent and powerful songwriting, but it seems like occassionally BTA got lazy and kinda decided to play around with some discord and sound effects. It varies things up a bit, but more keyboard driven stuff like the end of the first song would be cool. Oh, and the drummer isn't quite up to par with the rest of the band, but his stuff works. Of course, kudos to him for keeping up with the other two in the first place."
BEHOLD.... THE ARCTOPUS (Seriously BEHOLD this!)
Sunshine the Werewolf | Canada | 02/18/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"BEHOLD THE ARCTOPUS - Nano-Nucleonic Cyborg Summoning.
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This is 3 piece instru-metal Act, which takes influences from such Tech-Metal greats as Death, Atheist, Cynic, and Voivod. And even some influence from the Larks Tongue or the Discipline-era King Crimson days. They employ the use of a Warr Guitar which to my knowledge has like 10+ Strings and is about as big as a Ford Focus. (Essentially it is a bass and a guitar and so much more all in one.) Then they use another regular guitar and, of course, the drummer. Sound wise it is incredible and only further gives the band a sense of originality. This EP alone puts them up with the musicianship of modern greats such as Dillinger Escape Plan or the, also instrumental, Canvas Solaris.
As amazing as this album I do cite 2 minor flaws:
1.) The production does not give this band the justice they deserve (probably due to budget constraints... which leads to point #2)
2.) They only made like 800 copies... Which is a sin, a band this talented deserves more way recognition.
The potential these guys is through the roof - Honestly any fans of insanely technical yet smooth flowing music should keep their eyes and ears out for this fine young band.
Favorite Songs: There are only 4 Tracks and they are all equally amazing!
-4.5 Stars
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What the heck is an arctopus, anyway?
Boris Kaplun | Reston, VA | 12/24/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"True to the album title, what you essentially have here is three superhero musical cyborgs who have been summoned from some future technological utopia with the sole mission of completely redefining the present world's perception of what technical metal is, along with the stale boundaries that constrict the genre itself. They manage to do this throughout the course of an album that is approximately 17 minutes long, though the pacing and density of the music found within is such that albums four times as long may seem empty in comparison. In fact, the music on Nano-Nucleonic Cyborg Summoning is so dense and frenzied that even the guys who created it were initially unable to play it - that's right, the songs here were conceived on a computer and had to be extensively practiced by the band before they were able to recreate the madness live. Some may scoff at this, but hey - if the tools are available to you, why not use them? As far as I'm concerned, the end result more than justifies the means in every way imaginable.
The centerpiece of this show is the Warr Guitar, a 12-string monster of an instrument that covers the range of both bass and guitar and is primarily played by tapping. Colin Marston, also of Dysrhythmia, handles this thing in commendable fashion (especially considering that the thing is almost bigger than he is). However, the real wonder surrounding this is not the fact that this instrument is rather atypical for metal, but the manner in which it is played. The fret runs that are performed on this thing compounded with the sheer frenetic speed of the music and the possible range of tones make the performances simply stunning.
There's also a typical electric guitar played by Mike Lerner, who spends most of his time shredding and tapping at triple digit BPM speeds like a frenzied chimpanzee, though occasionally he brings down some impressive riffs or goes into groove-mode and lets Colin take the stage. Drummer Charlie Zeleny, quite simply, demands respect... and sympathy. Not only does he manage to keep up with the remainder of his band in terms of pure speed (which is a mammoth accomplishment in and of itself), but he also plays polyrhythmically and maintains diverse and constantly shifting patterns that never descend into trite double-bass abuse... or maybe he just hits random drums and cymbals as fast as possible. Whichever it is, he holds his own throughout. Fun fact here - Behold... the Arctopus were originally known as We Need A Drummer because of how hard it was to actually find somebody insane enough to play their music.
The songs themselves are instrumental flurries of high-speed freestyle metal complemented by bursts of noise, forays into acid rock and stoner groove, touches of free jazz, moments of doomy ambience, and even vast expanses of blissful atmosphere. The opening track, "Exospacial Psionic Aura", is probably the best thing on here and is also a prime example of everything mentioned above. It instantly slams you in the face with furious noise before taking on some semblance of a followable rhythm; then, around a quarter of the way through, Colin takes the forefront with a regretfully brief and gorgeous piece that sounds like two guitars and a bass playing different melodies at the same time; the song continues on in quite a schizophrenic manner before collapsing into a mess of noise at around 5:20 or so. At this point, Colin puts out a deep bass slide that explodes into the most unexpected thing - a 2+ minute long stretch of dense, atmospheric guitars and a flowing, dynamic, and expansive drum performance from Charlie that should leave your jaw on the ground (or if it doesn't, will at least make you say, "Damn, that was awesome!"). The track ends with a splash of dissonance, and fades into "Estrogen/Pathogen Exchange Program". Nothing too exciting going on here at first - a few minutes of ambient doom-like noises, and then the band comes in with quite an irregular beat. The real beauty of this track is towards the end, where the guitars drop out and Charlie comes in with a solo spot that begins with an unspectacular series of high-speed rolls, but gets interesting real quick as he gradually slows the pattern down more and more, eventually to the point where you can distinctly and easily tell apart each individual drum hit that makes up the overall pattern. It's a very cool approach that I've never heard from any other drummer in the past, so that was a huge plus for me.
The last track, "Sensory Amusia", has another unexpected occurrence around half-way in, where spastic metal suddenly lapses into a stretch of soothing jazziness not unlike what you might hear on a Bela Fleck and the Flecktones record. Very beautiful interplay between bass, guitar, and drums. Doesn't last very long before collapsing back into noisy mayhem, though.
This is quality. Without a doubt, one of the crowning achievements of insanely technical, eargasmic, impossibly dense, instrumental avant-metal. Many of the tech bands around these days can take a few lessons from these guys.
I'm eagerly awaiting a full length."
Instrumental Prog-Metal Fury!!!
WelcomeTheAbyss | The Flatlands | 03/19/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I don't know how long i've been waiting for this...ever since becoming a fan of them about two years ago when I came across their website. This is...tech-metal perfection, and I love the more melodic parts that they added to their songs...when I first heard them they made my jaw drop. Colin, Mike and Charlie...I love you guys...as long as you keep cranking out the music, i'll always be listening. Seriously, this is some technically ferocious,orgasmic,cranium crushing instrumental prog metal and will be loved and coveted by musicians and metal/avant-garde fans everywhere!"