Product Details
Unspoken King

Unspoken King
Cryptopsy

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Track Listing

  1. Worship Your Demons
  2. Headsmen
  3. Silence the Tyrants
  4. Bemoan the Martyr
  5. Leach
  6. Plagued
  7. Resurgence of an Empire
  8. Anoint the Dead
  9. Contemplate Regicide
  10. Bound Dead
  11. (Exit) The Few

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #205295 in Music
  • Released on: 2008-06-24
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .21 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Album Description
The Unspoken King is the seventh studio album of the Canadian death metal band Cryptopsy. Musically, this shifted the band's sound into a more deathcore style. This shift in the band's sound and the decrease in technicality that had made the band so influential within the technical death metal genre has sparked an almost universally negative fan reaction to this album.


Customer Reviews

Cryptopsy is still Cryptopsy4
Cryptopsy's "The Unspoken King" was greeted by almost unprecedented prerelease venom. Crytopsy has always caused a lot of whining (Where's Lord Worm? This isn't "None So Vile" etc.), but none of that compares to the hatred unleashed towards "The Unspoken King" and its deathcore styling. Many suppose this makes it a substantial change of direction and a blatantly commercial move, a laughable accusation because 1- deathcore doesn't sell that much better than straight death metal and 2- deathcore isn't all that far removed from straight death metal 3- Cryptopsy has long had hardcore elements. (Only the singing is legitimately new, and it is used sparingly.) I find almost all straight ahead metalcore and hardcore to be incredibly dull (tech-metalcore is often great, though), but the superficial elements many hardliners disdain aren't what makes these genres weaker: it's the flavorless, chugging riffs, the simplistic alternation between breakdowns and blasting sections and the trite, formulaic songwriting. Mid-range vox, breakdowns, atmospheric sections--these elements are superficial. I care about the intricate riffing, the harsh tempo changes and the winding, unpredictable song structures that define tech-death (and tech-metal in general), and these elements all remain in "The Unspoken King." Granted, they aren't as strong this time around: It's somewhat less frantic and technical, and the riff- and song- writing aren't as consistent, but it's largely the same Cryptopsy sound, just with a few new twists.

The most immediately evident change is in the production: Crytopsy albums were generally either noisy (Whisper Supremacy), raw (None So Vile) or somewhat thin (Once Was Not), but "The Unspoken King" is very clean and mechanistic (shades of Beneath the Massacre). New singer Matt McGachy is much and inexplicably loathed. He's a typical mid-range extreme metal vocalist, and he generates no strong response in me either way. (I do note, however, that attacking the vox is the main way that mainstreamers deride extreme metal in general. Strange how quick hardline DM fans are to adapt their tactics.) I can understand hating his singing, though I do not, but this shouldn't destroy the whole album, as it is used sporadically.

The opening 3 tracks emphasize the deathcore elements while still remaining entrenched in the Crytopsy ethos. All contain frequent riff and tempo changes plus some more conventionally core-ish breakdowns and Beneath the Massacre style sweeping and tapping. "The Headsman" is the best, most dynamic and fully formed track on the album, but they save the next most impressive spastic metal outburst for much later in "Anoint the Dead," a frenetic beast of a song that is as unpredicatable as any earlier Cryptopsy material. These tracks are deathcore, yes, but the core elements are integrated into the technical DM structure, not used as repetitive songwriting crutches.

The middle portions of the album move further from the basic band style, including more atmospherics and singing. They again avoid core-style cliché songwriting, integrating these elements in a seemingly random, haphazard fashion. The middle tracks aren't as strong from a songwriting standpoint, but they add a surprising variety to the album. "Bemoan the Marty", perhaps the most maligned track, is intriguing, moving from spacey atmospherics and melodic vox to frantic, jerking death metal to a skewed breakdown and back again. These varied elements all come together in the final full song, "Bound Dead," which effectively combines some epic, melodic vox with a full sampler of the various riff styles found in the album.

Unfortunately, the end of the album is a bit inconsistent, and "Resurgence of an Empire" and "Contemplate Regicide" could both be cut. Again, the flaw is not the overt core styling, but the rather dull, listless riffwriting. This, however, is likely a sign of a band losing a major songwriter and becoming somewhat stodgier and complacent with age, rather than a fundamental stylistic change.

Though I like this album, I can't help but worry for Cryptopsy's future. Auburn has since left the band, leaving them with Mounier and Langlois as the only longtime members, and with the massively negative response to this album, who knows where they'll go from here. Still, they're six for six so far, and I'll be sure to approach whatever they come up with next optimistically and with an open mind, though perhaps not many others will. . .

What Happened? Lame Beyond Comprehension.....2
From the forefront of the death metal and extreme music scene to this derivitive mess. This was embarassing to listen to, and I am proud of myself for making it almost through Track 6. I want my money back! I wanna know who these clowns are masquarading as Cryptopsy. I actually took the CD outta my player, cuz I seriously thought it was the wrong cd. Yeah, they still shred like maniacs at times, but this la la singing just smashes any momentum. They sold out to a proven formula, and the sad thing is, they aren't even very good at it. I wanna weep....if you wanna know what pride dying sounds like, try to endure this thing.

A Disgrace to the Death Metal Underground1
I'll keep this review short, but I could basically sum up what I am saying with this one fact: Cryptopsy is dead.

I can't believe that the same people that recorded "Blasphemy Made Flesh" and "None So Vile" could make something this awful. It enrages me that this band went from the decent "Once Was Not" to this disgraceful sell out. Forget the technical death metal that Cryptopsy used to perform so well in their past, but the only thing that awaits on "The Unspoken King" is extremely commercialized and completely uninspired deathcore. Just don't buy this garbage.

Money makes people do some strange and stupid things, and this is a prime example. Congratulations Cryptopsy, you have officially become jokes of death metal. Was it worth it?