In both title and content, 2010's
The Violence Beneath EP reflects the inner turmoil afflicting post-metal ensemble
Mouth of the Architect over the two years following the release of their third album,
Quietly. In a nutshell, the Dayton, OH-based group parted company with guitarist Steve Vernon for the second time in four years, so they wisely decided against rushing their next long-player during a period of transition, opting instead to release this four-tracker comprised of two new songs, one live recording, and a rather surprising cover. Taking them one at a time, the opening title track plays it safe and vicious with a relatively uniform sludge metal assault, while the then-minute-plus meditation, "Buried Hopes," tackles a wider range of sonic and emotional moods, in keeping with the band's ambitiously atmospheric earlier work. So, too, the uncharacteristically brief and heretofore unreleased live offering "Restore," which summarizes
MotA's compositional arsenal rather neatly before giving way to a wholesale deconstruction and subsequent trance-metal reconstruction of
Peter Gabriel's "In Your Eyes," which is entertaining, to say the least, and haunting beyond belief. All told, this foursome combine into a well-rounded and timely stop-gap so that
Mouth of the Architect can collect their thoughts and draft their next move, leaving supporters hopeful that this latest piece of turmoil, like the others, will be overcome and inspire even more imaginatively schizophrenic metalgaze music. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia