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Hazardous Mutation

Hazardous Mutation in Bloomington, MN
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It had to happen: with the fever for retroactive musical styles running especially rampant through the heavy metal community in the mid-'00s (see parallel examples from
The Sword
,
Witchcraft
Wolfmother
, and others), some band was bound to try resurrecting the once thriving confluence of thrash and hardcore generally labeled as "crossover." And few who remember the sub-genre in its original form would dispute that Richmond, Virginia's
Municipal Waste
really did their homework, delivering in their second album, 2005's
Hazardous Mutation
, as authentic a blast of '80s crossover thrash as has been heard since its fall from wider public awareness. From the carefully observed two-minute-tops song rule, to the lightning-fast shouted vocals of frontman
Tony 'Guardrail' Foresta
(and his cohorts' gang choruses behind him), to
Ryan Waste
's razor-sharp buzz-saw guitars (and virtually no solo breaks in sight), and even the million-photo collage gracing the CD booklet (such things were popular back in the day),
addresses most every requisite crossover detail. Except where concerns the lyrics, which are predominantly focused on sci-fi and fantasy horror themes (
"Unleash the Bastards,"
"The Thing,"
the title cut, etc.), or comic yarns about juvenile delinquency (
"Blood Drive,"
"Mind Eraser"
) and copious and varied substance intake (
"Accelerated Vision,"
"Bangover"
) -- not political incompetence, social injustice or anything remotely that serious. Oh well, it's not like veering from reality diminishes the mosh-pit-churning efficacy of standout moments
"Deathripper"
and
"Terror Shark,"
among many of those cited above. And even though it's a little too early to file
with any of the crossover genre's unchallenged ancient classics, suffice to say that, if you were ever a fan of mid'80s gems such as
Agnostic Front
's
Cause for Alarm
, the
Cro-Mags
'
Age of Quarrel
, or
Murphy's Law
's eponymous debut, prepare for a happy visit to your past over the course of these bruising 26 minutes. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia
The Sword
,
Witchcraft
Wolfmother
, and others), some band was bound to try resurrecting the once thriving confluence of thrash and hardcore generally labeled as "crossover." And few who remember the sub-genre in its original form would dispute that Richmond, Virginia's
Municipal Waste
really did their homework, delivering in their second album, 2005's
Hazardous Mutation
, as authentic a blast of '80s crossover thrash as has been heard since its fall from wider public awareness. From the carefully observed two-minute-tops song rule, to the lightning-fast shouted vocals of frontman
Tony 'Guardrail' Foresta
(and his cohorts' gang choruses behind him), to
Ryan Waste
's razor-sharp buzz-saw guitars (and virtually no solo breaks in sight), and even the million-photo collage gracing the CD booklet (such things were popular back in the day),
addresses most every requisite crossover detail. Except where concerns the lyrics, which are predominantly focused on sci-fi and fantasy horror themes (
"Unleash the Bastards,"
"The Thing,"
the title cut, etc.), or comic yarns about juvenile delinquency (
"Blood Drive,"
"Mind Eraser"
) and copious and varied substance intake (
"Accelerated Vision,"
"Bangover"
) -- not political incompetence, social injustice or anything remotely that serious. Oh well, it's not like veering from reality diminishes the mosh-pit-churning efficacy of standout moments
"Deathripper"
and
"Terror Shark,"
among many of those cited above. And even though it's a little too early to file
with any of the crossover genre's unchallenged ancient classics, suffice to say that, if you were ever a fan of mid'80s gems such as
Agnostic Front
's
Cause for Alarm
, the
Cro-Mags
'
Age of Quarrel
, or
Murphy's Law
's eponymous debut, prepare for a happy visit to your past over the course of these bruising 26 minutes. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia