It flows in one direction, and still it hits you hard.
The future stares back in the mirror.
A parallel frequency, it echoes back, unable to grasp.
You can believe in anything. All things begin, and ends with the past.
You can believe in anything. It’s all the same, It’s all the same!
Glimpse through the veil of time and space, see it warp around itself.
Black holes, they are the universes version of hell.
Earth to dust dust to earth, what is it worth.
Cluster of energy, in motion, is there an universal emotion?
You can believe in anything. All things begin, and ends with the past.
You can believe in anything. It’s all the same, It’s all the same.
It’s all the same!
Breath in, breath out, in the hour of need, killing time.
The horizon is there just annihilate, me!
We are building new worlds - rather than discover our own
Is it ‘cause we’re afraid,
That we are so god damn alone? So god damn alone!
You can believe in anything. All things begin, and ends with the past.
You can believe in anything. It’s all the same, It’s all the same!
“… And Everything In Between” was a great introduction to the band, and after having listened to it 2975295 times in a relatively short while I could appreciate “Artificial Void” (which is perhaps a bit more intricate?) better. Alice M.
The modern, clean sound is almost clinical in it's precision. This is technical metal at it's finest in similar vein as Tesseract and Periphery.
Though they follow the formula, there is enough integrity in Boundless to create a unique experience and makes me come back to this album time and time again.
The only detractor I can raise is the mastering. In certain sections there are too many instruments vying for the same audio spectrum and the sound becomes a bit muddy. Still, 4 stars. King Jonas the Humble
Scalding metalcore from Spain, “Where the Waves Are Born” swings from clean to growled vocals over blindingly intricate fretwork. Bandcamp New & Notable Mar 19, 2023
Midwestern prog-metal stalwarts go for the throat on their new EP, featuring a roiling cover of the Smashing Pumpkins' “1979.” Bandcamp New & Notable Aug 7, 2019