Not only was I Lost in The Sound of Seperation but now I wondered how their new record would sound without Aaron Gillespie on Drums and vocals, but if you're "In Division" on how they sound now and how they used to sound, just listen to the first track, which opens with McTague's throat-destroying growl, and it sounds perfectly awesome the way it is. I "Catch Myself Catching Myself" repeating the same things over and over,but sometimes I miss the ball, and the other team gets a homerun.This dirty and slow creeping bass tries to run from those screams that just rip the eardrums.A spacey breakdown after two minutes has come to help us "so I can breathe again" even with this "Paper Lung," but the ending finishes me off with that barrage of furiosity.That must be why the latter track is not nearly as abrasive; I am journeying to heaven, or experiencing astral projection . This track ideal display case for Chamberlain's heartfelt vocals, and the atmospheric and dreamy guitar passages, that soon cause those waves to topple the boat over after 3:15 as McTague comes storming in, and the drums come into clearer focus screaming "How do I know what side I'm on" will not give you the answer nor will it be an "Illuminator" in the path to find yourself, but if you read the lyrics, and his voice being a descriptor I would have to say he's on the dark side.It starts with this fast beat and then changes again,and back to the fast beat. A quiet afternoon on the ocean with fog and ominous clouds, the ship is gone, and all is there is a piece of "Driftwood" with engravings of this sound of a motor from a helicoptor which jumps into this percussive, distorted beat, some vocals with eastern flavor, and instrumentals that might be classified as techno. "A Divine Eradication" will have only the best tempo changes and instrumentals survive. A nice bassline and bombastic song that has Chamberlain on the soapbox rallying the help of God, and convincing others it's time to wake up barricaded by this stone wall of drum pounds. While McTague has the final words "Revolt/We stood by defeat for so long/We've been under your control/We will not be a part of your disease." latnemurtsin ecin a si "Reversal." The next track mysteriously ended up entering the review after instead of before the previous track; it poses a very powerful question"Who Will Guard the Guardians?" I was reading the lyrics and thought it meant one thing,but read it again, and my initial interpretation seemed wrong. It seems as if it's one about finding oneself, and also how instead of voicing other's opinions he will voice his own "This is what it feels like /This is disintegration /This is what it feels like /This is isolation /I can't find the light /Inside this empty room I cannot find myself/I wont let you down," but "I'm not using my lungs anymore/This is the last time/Write it down/I won't be your voice anymore" in the track "Vacant Mouth" which is a galloping angry screamer."My Deteriorating Incline" is another heavy screamer proclaiming "I'll change for the better/It can't get much worse." The final track has this record "In Completion," but let me tell you to chck out the bonus tracks, which are remixes, but give a whole different spin on each of the songs Paper Lung (machineA Remix), In Division (Toxic Avenger Remix), and Catch Myself Catching Myself (INNERPARTYSYSYTEM Remix). If I had to choose 7 tracks I would choose: In Division, Catch Myself Catching Myself, Paper Lung, Driftwood, A Divine Eradication, Who Will Guard The Guardians?, and In Completion. 

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