Hideous Miscreation’s EP “Delusions of Grandeur” is available for FREE.
Download Hideous Miscreation’s Delusions of Grandeur HERE.
Straight out of the gutters of London, Hideous Miscreation combines irrational speed with dynamic brutality. Influenced by popular death-core bands like Fleshgod Apocalypse, Job For A Cowboy, and my state grown The Black Dahlia Murder; Hideous Miscreation takes it one step further, nearly surpassing their influence in all qualities. Hideous Miscreation shows all the bands that WANT to be, how to be it, and shows bands that are already IT, how to do it faster, louder, and with more ruthless ferocity and brutality.
Forming in 2009, Hideous Miscreation has already made an impact in their local scene, working their asses off to self-produce their first full length with a new guitarist. All these guys need a is a little tend and care gore and scare, and a nice tour state side to get all of the scenes rendering their name.
Hideous Miscreation – Delusions of Grandeur
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Born To Lift The Veil
Enveloped Within A Cocoon of Human Structure
Woven In Fragments of Putrid Disgust
Disciples Of The Full Moons Bloodlust (2010)
Woven Fragments Of Putrid Disgust (2010)
Disciples Of The Full Moons Bloodlust (SPEEDCORE REMIX)
Taking a look at the names of the songs and EP art, it’s easy to see what their main influence is as a piece of metal art. “Disciples Of The Full Moons Bloodlust”, “Enveloped Within A Cocoon of Human Structure”, “Woven In Fragments of Putrid Disgust”; Hideous Miscreation stems from “Lycan” and Werewolf mythology. Each song tells a story of lycanthropic transformations brutalizing humans for food, struggling to retain their humanity. Listening to Hideous Miscreation gives me visions of a modern American Werewolf in London, where David Naughton is replaced by Megan Fox set in a dystopian future of murder and cannibalism.
The one thing that stands out the most musically is Hideous Miscreation’s vocals, headed by Luke Griffin. The sloppy sludge vocals could push people away, or gather listeners. To me, it adds to the picture of the band. Luke sounds like someone mid-transformation, slurring their words as their jaw breaks and reforms. The speed at which he spits out the lyrics is double the speed of most metal bands today, more evidence that Hideous Miscreation wants to be faster and heavier than any of their American counterparts.
If you know of a band you think Rely On Horror would want to listen to, send a message to cbrandt@relyonhorror.com.
Keep on killin’, horror fans.