Quicksand Interiors Album Review. Where Slip leveraged loud-quiet-loud song dynamics into pure headbangers and Manic Compression was more of a straight forward endurance test Interiors sounds like the band who made those albums but with two decades of marination under their belts. Its 12 songs comprise a hard-rock triptych separated by spacey guitar interludes.
There is a substantial body of evidence that suggests Quicksand frontman Walter Schreifels is keenly. Quicksand importante acto post-hardcore y emo de Nueva York vuelve de un silencio discográfico de más de dos décadas para traer hasta nuestros oídos Interiors un disco poseedor de 10 tracks y dos interludios. But that bass sound is once again all over the reunited Quicksands Interiors their first album in 22 years.
Quicksands influence on the post-hardcore scene of the early 00s was immense but this album proves theres no replacement worthy of the real thing.
Pushing them forward into the 21st century whilst also embracing what made them a good band to begin with. More than anything Interiors is something of a transitional album one that has Quicksand on the cusp of regaining their balance after such a long period of time away but not quite hitting it yet. Where Slip leveraged loud-quiet-loud song dynamics into pure headbangers and Manic Compression was more of a straight forward endurance test Interiors sounds like the band who made those albums but with two decades of marination under their belts. The difference between delivering the hits and pushing things forward is significant but Interiors the New York groups third album their first since 1995 confirms any mounting suspicions that twenty years has become a manageable band hiatus.