There is a blank spot spreading
From the never ending noise
Now is a time for silence
So muster your strength and do what you came here to do
Make no mistake, words are not to be heard
For a message of value needs no enunciation
Search in silence, to find what you need
The key to finally setting you free
There are no grand illusions tonight
You’ll have to make your peace with what you´ve got
There’s no one left to play your twisted games with
Just walk along until you’ve gone past the point of no return
Why have you failed me
With indifferent lies
You grown to care for everyone in here
So why hide now
I’ve put all I’ve got on the line, so mend this mistake before the sunrise
I’ve placed all my trust in you
And now I fear I might have been misled
I walk through the night
To undo your hateful words
Why have you failed me
You should have gone
By the first light and now I’m left with no choice
I don’t take any pleasure in this, but it’s time to go
So I ask
Why have you failed me
With your indifferent lies
You should have kept your mouth shut
And now that you leave I know this indebtness dies with me
Stay, I’m evolving
Fiercly paving my road onwards
I’ve been trying
To fabricate a path to beyond
Stand, where there’s a glowing light
To rejoice in awe
Break my hollow feelings
And lay the final stone for you
Maximum Haardrock. This album is so fun to listen to at work. It has highs and lows, the riffs are catchy, The drums are in your face. Calle really is a riff genius. Anvbisindy
Before Ashen, I thought they were overrated. Deathcore bands seem to have a capacity to evolve quickly. I’ve seen quite a few bands in this genre grow exponentially from one album to the next, and Ashen is a particularly strong example. Metallurgical Fire
Midwestern prog-metal stalwarts go for the throat on their new EP, featuring a roiling cover of the Smashing Pumpkins' “1979.” Bandcamp New & Notable Aug 7, 2019
The metal’s band revelatory new record crosses genres and styles, effortlessly combining seemingly incompatible subgenres. Bandcamp Album of the Day Apr 26, 2024
Intense and interesting. Clearly worshipping at the altar of Meshuggah, and while vocals are absent that void is filled by a more intense bottom end, and guitar picking that becomes its own rhythmic instrument.
This is brilliant, but I’d love to see what this guy would do with some artistic collaboration. One man bands can get stuck in one dimension and the potential shown here could be a global phenomenon with just a little tweaking.
Let me finish by saying again, this is brilliant. Lute FP