Album Review: Disturbed - Indestructible

Album Review: Disturbed - <i>Indestructible</i>

I was a sophomore in high school when “Down with the Sickness” hit mainstream rock radio stations in March of 1999.  I remember I was still new to the metal genre, and upon hearing the song, I began to think, “This is the kind of song you break bones too.”

I then remember buying my own copy of The Sickness and saying that David Draiman had remarkable singing talent, while he simultaneously coined his now-famous, barking mad scream (as heard in “Voices”).

And from that point on, Disturbed was ever emblazoned into my memory as real anger management music.

For every metal band, going through changes of musical orchestration can be a series of “make or break” moments for them.  In the case of Disturbed, you can be exactly that - disturbing - or you can be vampiric or dark and pop/rock melodic with powerhouse guitars and synth ruling your choruses. Believe took a very nu-metal turn, with melodies and a mildly positive message in some songs, while maintaining a strong, “in your face” persona.  The downside was hearing “Prayer” on 96 Rock every 5 minutes - which is why I rarely listen to radio, anymore.

Disturbed is a great mainstream metal band with a nasty habit (from Believe on) of being overplayed.  I partially blame MTV, but then again - who doesn’t?  Ten Thousand Fists was decent, in the arena of making a heavy metal monster out of one of my favorite songs of all time - “Land Of Confusion” by Genesis - and bringing serious edge back after Believe.

So, does the band’s latest creation put “ten thousand fists in the air” or leave you wondering whether or not you “can remember” the real Disturbed?

The answer is so simple, it defies song-by-song analysis: they landed right where they should be.

Indestructible is one of those few mainstream metal albums that leave you moshing in your best friend’s living room one minute, and just banging your head the next - neither of which can be trivially discounted in such a genre.  With the title track’s ominous beginning, one might think it’s another Believe, but no.  This song booms in with Megadeth drums and monstrous guitar, while Davey-boy summons demons from the pits of hell to do battle.

Afterwards, you get the first single, “Inside The Fire”.  Melodic in base nature, but with lyrics pretty meaningful by heavy metal standards, Draiman chants on about the tale of a man who is given an offer he can’t refuse - follow the Devil himself into hell so that he may be with his love for eternity.  Ah, how the dark romantics loom glorious.

Normally, this is where I’d say “…and this one is so and so, and it’s good/bad,” but that serves no real purpose, here.  That can be both good and bad, to some degree.  Every song on this album speaks it’s own mind, but at the same time they are all pretty much identical.  I know you’re asking, “How could this POSSIBLY be a good thing?”

Let’s do the math, shall we?  Metal can be placed into four very broad categories - punk and thrash (early Metallica, Anthrax, Suicidal Tendencies), orchestrated symphonic dark metal (Opeth, choice Cradle of Filth, Lacuna Coil) 80s hair bands and glam rock (KISS, Poison, Motley Crue), and everything else that makes you want to be murdered in the Wall of Death mosh pits to the likes of DevilDriver.  This album covers 3 out of 4 categories intermittently, while maintaining the truly dark and twisted aspects of Disturbed’s heyday.

How good is this album?  If you’re comparing it to your local metal bands in the bars or guys playing the 2nd (or 3rd) stages of Ozzfest and Mayhem Festival, then it’s marketable rock but not something to kill your mother over.  If you’re buying this album at FYE, then by all means trash the kitchen, do a few shots of Jagermeister, and kill a small animal for fun.

I cannot stress this enough - it is MAINSTREAM METAL!  This is about as hardcore as radio has been since The Beautiful People or The Sickness had moms and dads breaking car stereo knobs in panic.  Until they play Ankla on 96 Rock, I doubt I’ll be turning that station on much unless I have a craving for classic tunes.  I recommend this album for anyone who was a child of the 90s nu-metal or heavy metal scene, because regardless of what is and is not radio friendly…

Disturbed is finally kicking a little more ass, again - even if it is in popular fashion.  Like I said, they are right where they belong.

Rating: ★★★½☆

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13 Responses to “Album Review: Disturbed - Indestructible

  1. Are you crazy? Ten Thousand Fists was their best album up to date. And to others if you don’t like the genre of Nu Metal why the hell are you even reading the review?

  2. I love how people take the review of a mainstream metal band so seriously.

    Those four categories are as broad as they come, and unless you’ve got a radio station that kindly plays local metal bands, this is the hardest you’ll find on radio (I recommend your generic MP3 player, instead).

    I do hope you’re not saying that category specifically does not exist, because if you are then you’re forgetting a lot of bands who glorify (whether seriously or laughably) some ‘dark presence’ in their music.

    And in regards to Revrant, Brian Posehn said it best…

    “Metal by numbers, one two three. Follow these rules, and you’ll see. Cookie Monster vocals and yell like a Wookie…metal by numbers, ‘Cookie, cookie, cookie!’”

    Growls come standard, among other things. Of course it’s serious business to them, they wrote the song. Whether the business is selling records or summoning a Basilisk is both beyond me and of little concern. The review is not to give them a rock crown…it’s more like a gold star.

    I swear, sometimes it’s a wonder that these militant music buff commentaries aren’t posted on cork-board next to the Crayola diagrams of trees and stick figures.

  3. I think the review needs to listen to more metal. His four categories were laughable. Orchestrated Symphonic Dark Metal? :/

  4. Because hearing a cookie monster growl and lavish the world with wishes of destruction is super, duper serious business.

    Piss poor argument is piss poor.

  5. I don’t know if I could ever take them seriously since I heard those “barks”…To each their own.

  6. Im not a fan of Disturbed really, but this new album is excellent. Each song rocks very hard, catchy too, and really gets you going…

  7. I’ll put this the best way I can.

    There are a lot of great unsigned metal bands in almost every country (save for maybe the Middle East or the Arctic Circle), but when it comes to radio-friendly modern rock, not many are heavier than Disturbed, Slipknot, Ozzy Osbourne, etc.

    Again, I stress RADIO-FRIENDLY.

    Personally, if anyone asks - my favorite modern metal band is either DevilDriver, Hemlock, or possibly Ankla.

  8. I agree with Buck.

  9. AS far as that genre goes it could be worse.

  10. gross…

  11. I know Disturbed is all popular etc but I dont know, they don’t do it for me.

  12. [...] Honorable Mentions: Coldplay - Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends; Disturbed - Indestructible [...]

  13. [...] per mentioned in my recent review of Disturbed’s Indestructible, I am a child of the 90s.  So, with that being said, my guilty [...]

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