Bring Me The Horizon


Sempiternal – adjective
           Eternal, unchanging; everlasting

His writings have the sempiternal youth of poetry.

You don’t believe in second chances until you want one for yourself, and eventually it is all you wish for. When you’re stuck inside your head reality becomes a continual mess. The demons shadow grows and slowly removes all the rainbows from your thoughts.

Bring Me The Horizons latest barbaric explosion relates to the lost and wounded.
Instead of recruiting more enemies to their following, they have gained respect. They’re not just kids jumping into trouble with underage slut bags, the boys have gripped onto a sense of direction with profession, decent musicianship and a tonne of hard work.  They have embraced their bad days and unleashed their aggression through metalcore. 

This time, Oli Sykes throttles his singing vocals and uses his screams to scratch the surface. Sonic atmospheric backgrounds and synthetic textures are a suiting consequence of Jordan Fish, a new addition. Terry Date’s producing allows you to hear every layer without washing out the melody or bleaching Oli’s unique and recognisable yelling.

The most attractive part of the album is the song writing. Gut wrenching lyrics covering the raw low points we fall in. It investigates the dark corners of your mind. Oli and his crew dig up their souls and translate their struggle to the listener. Touching on faith after Oli Sykes forced introduction to god, and all those places we turn to when we’re stuck in a crescendo.