IBRIDOMA
- Norimberga 2.0
Punishment 18 Records
The title, unfortunately, brought about negative connotations for me regarding the "Greece 2.0" program announced by the current government with the goal of modernizing my country. A country that, ultimately, in the era of the "pandemic," demonstrated not only its lack of modernity but also its deprivation of the fundamental elements of a social state under the rule of law. A country that left the world to its fate because it was economically more expedient to confine people to their homes than to hire healthcare personnel, and it was easier to justify the harm it caused by blaming the citizens for irresponsibility. A country that during that period essentially abolished basic human rights and freedoms under the pretext of protecting human life, and implemented health protocols more hazardous to life than the virus itself. A country where games of significant economic interests were played amidst human agony and drama. A country that allowed essential safety checks for drugs to be bypassed by invoking a state of emergency, and turned its population into test subjects, first by blackmailing and then by terrorizing them. A country that sent a warning message about danger through mobile phones and did nothing else to protect the lives and property of its residents, as the authorities essentially believed that they had fulfilled their duty to protect us. And, of course, a country where thousands of human lives are lost at sea, seeking a better fate in the civilized Western world, and instead of apologizing for this loss, the authorities simply resort to demonizing them. And many more... And all of these, we observe and accept in an entirely passive manner.
I understand that we are a music magazine, and perhaps
we haven't accustomed you to such types of articles, but the new work of the
Italians IBRIDOMA, and especially their lyrics, made me reconsider all of the
above. I realized that in their lyrics, they express as artists all this agony
and human drama that contemporary society is experiencing and describe the passivity
and fatalism that we have accepted in all of the above. I think the lyrics of
the song titled "Raise Your Head" are characteristic of our era:
"We live waiting for someone to rebel for us. People are afraid of losing
everything they have got. The power of men, money, calls for you. We are
divided by hate. We want to change something without doing anything."
When addressing such issues, it's impossible not to
adapt their music accordingly. They continue to play heavy/power metal with
many melodic elements, but they've added several influences from the thrash
metal sound, especially from bands like the old METALLICA and MEGADETH. You'll
also find quite a few grooves in their sound, adding more aggression and
emphasizing the dark atmosphere of the whole release. Of course, in their
classic metal influences, you'll find references to bands like JUDAS PRIEST,
IRON MAIDEN, and BRUCE DICKINSON, but the band has the gift of filtering them
through their own style.
In the times we live in, where others decide for us
without us, always driven by profit, we need musicians like IBRIDOMA and
releases like this to provoke us and make us think. To realize that when
everything is approached from an accounting perspective, human life and its
values are diminished. I genuinely thank them because they gave me the
incentive to write one of the most meaningful reviews I have done lately and to
delve into issues of social reflection, precisely because that is the purpose
of art.
Nick Parastatidis
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