Terror Danjah's first album in seven years is a sort of back-to-basics affair, focusing on the type of grime instrumentals he made his name with during the 2000s. Sir Spyro lends a hand to the jazz-inflected "TBC," and "Scene 1" features lovely vocals by Nii-Teiko, but otherwise this is a purely solo effort, with no guest rappers or attempted pop crossovers. The tracks generally concentrate on the basics, namely stripped-down angular beats and dark textures -- just witness the Hitchcock-worthy "Nightmare" or the eerie, lurching dubstep tracks "After Dark" and "Snowfall." A few somewhat festive moments are strewn about, such as the gorgeous, steel pan-heavy "Wavy" and "Red Card Riddim," which sort of resembles a hollowed-out soca beat. The clunky guitar riffs on the bluntly titled "Metal" fall flat, but "Module" and "Invasion" tactfully employ aggressive bass squelches without overdoing it and ending up sounding obnoxious. Solid work, overall.