
Last band confirmed - 'Inevitable End' at Elements of Rock
Submitted by archimedes on 20. April 2009 - 9:08.
The Elements of Rock festival at Ascension weekend 2009 presents the last booked band: The swedish Death Metal band 'Inevitable End'.
Already their first two EPs from 2004 and 2006 sounded very promising. So the EoR folks could satisfy oneself of their live abilities for the first time in 2006. Now the four Swedish are back with their just released first full-length disc 'The Severed Inception': Tough played Death Metal with interesting ingredients form different styles of hard music. Look forward to a heavy Elements of rock.
www.inevitable-end.com
www.myspace.com/inevitableend
so the line-up is complete:
Cage - Power Metal, USA (CD-Release Party!)
Theocracy - Progressive Power Metal, USA
Seventh Angel - Thrash/Doom Metal, UK
Dark Sky - Melodic Metal / Hard Rock, Germany
Miseration - Death Metal, Finnland / Sweden
Illuminandi - Gothic Metal, Poland
Morgenroede - Black Metal / Extreme Metal, Norway
Inevitable End – Death Metal, Sweden
Shadows of Paragon - Black Metal, Sweden
Vindex - Heavy/Power Metal, Slowakia
Rift - Metalcore/Death Metal, Germany
Dividing Line - Gothic Rock, Switzerland (CD-Release Party!)
Blood Drift - Death/Black Metal, Belgium
Disobedience - Thrash/Death Metal, Switzerland

I am a very big fan of
I am a very big fan of swedish Death Metal band. Look at the line up. It is really amazing. I like it.
dogs
LONG TIME
After 6 years, several line-up changes and even a change in genre, going from a death/thrash sound to a grinding tech death style... Inevitable End are finally releasing their debut album. Their much anticipated debut, “The Severed Inception” is an excellent blend of technical death metal and grindcore that brings bands like Brain Drill to mind. But Brain Drill aren't the only influence here, you can hear a bit of Napalm Death, Origin and various other influences (including some deathcore as well) here as well. I could write a whole paragraph full of comparisons, testking 70-297 but I'm going to just say that instead of sounding like a confused tribute band, Inevitable End manage to carve out a sound of their own. The music is driven mainly by the drum-work, as opposed to the guitar work or vocals and part of why it comes across that way is because of the sound quality and loudness of the drums. testking 70-350 The drum sound is somewhat flat, but is thick at the same time and the volume of the drums gives the album a very raw and uncontrolled vibe. The drum-kit is constantly being pounded on, but the drum-work is not devoid of subtlety or variation, which is a quality that many third-rate modern death metal bands lack. The only time that the drums actually feel predictable is during the occasional breakdown, testking 70-431 but then again breakdowns aren't exactly meant to be ultra technical, they're just there to break up the tempo a bit and get the crowd going.