Dry Kill Logic – The Dead and Dreaming Review

Dry Kill Logic
“The Dead and Dreaming”
Repossession Records

It has not been an easy road for the New York metal crew known as Dry Kill Logic. After toiling on the indie scene as Hinge, the band was signed to Roadrunner Records and forced to change its name … twice (from Hinge to Hinge A.D. to Dry Kill Logic).

Though the band offered up a killer debut, 2001’s “The Darker Side of Nonsense,” it soon dropped off the “metal radar.” According to the band’s Web-site, the band was hit by a one/two punch: the events of Sept. 11 and the fact that Roadrunner Records “temporarily stopped supporting aggressive music and encouraged Dry Kill Logic to record more melodic songs that would be easier to push to commercial radio.”

Fast-forward three years and Dry Kill Logic (DKL) are as aggressive as ever, yet still maintain that sense of melody and overall musical tone that is practically trademark DKL. While the transition from its debut to “The Dead and Dreaming” has been less than smooth (the band’s guitarist and bassist quit in the interim), DKL has persevered and the listening public is, in turn, treated to a bombastic masterpiece of metal.

Tearing open with “Lost,” the band immediately returns to form with thunderous beats and steamroller-riffing undercutting Cliff Rigano’s instantly recognizably voice — an almost half-growl that seethes with urgency while still maintaining a melodic edge. Rigano walks a fine line between death metal and hard rock without ever fully giving up to one side or the other. And he can turn on a dime to offer up more melodic vocals and, dare I say, straight-up sing. This juxtaposition of vocals is the main hook on tracks like “Paper Tiger” and “With Deepest Regrets” where Rigano will growl through the verses before sweetly offering up the chorus (a sound more common today amongst bands like Killswitch Engage or Nonpoint).

The band sounds much more tight and raw when compared to prior offerings. Phil Arcuri is a demon behind the drum kit, pounding away from track to track and always sounding fresh. If it’s Rigano’s voice that pulls the entire DKL sound together, it’s Arcuri’s backing beats that frames the entire mix. (Speaking of mix, the drumming is made all the more aggressive with the cymbals, at times, almost getting lost in the tracking.)

Guitarist Jason Bozzi and bassist Danny Horboychuk easily find their places in the band. Horboychuk plays well off of Arcuri but is in no way a subtle addition to the band as the DKL sound has always been bass-heavy (though it’s not clear if he actually played on this disc as the bass guitar work is credited to Bozzi — possibly due to the fact the band spent a couple of years working on the album). Bozzi adds an extra dimension to the band as guitar solos are liberally sprinkled throughout the album.

The only weak point on “The Dead and Dreaming” (and this is stretching it), is that the band tries to replicate the sleeper success of “Goodnight,” the acoustic track which closes “Darker Side of Nonsense.” In this case, “No Reason” is a strong enough track, but almost comes across as forced. (It may have worked better with a more explosive, powerful ending.)

Either way, much like 40 Below Summer, DKL have made the best from dropping off the major-label scene to deliver a more-than-solid follow-up to a killer debut.

Jonathan Widro is the owner and founder of Inside Pulse. Over a decade ago he burst onto the scene with a pro-WCW reporting style that earned him the nickname WCWidro. Check him out on Twitter for mostly inane non sequiturs