Sure, those looking for breakdowns to get mouths downturned and nostrils flared need only wait for the latter half of opening track Elegy, which suddenly goes from spacy and anthemic to sticking metal up uranus. Or Whiplash, which is so angry that it features a sample of groaning, granite-faced chef Gordon Ramsay. Or Brain Dead, which is as close a sonic approximation of having your cranium clawed at from the inside as we’ve heard in some time.
But The Sky, The Earth & All Between does more than reaffirm its creators’ status as a band with a mastery of the seismic. It’s also a reminder of all the touches and textures that have snowballed into their sound along the way – the Prodigy-esque electronics in Blackhole, which also features an old-school guitar solo; the industrial flirtations of Judgement Day – as Architects continue on their mission to push metalcore and our consciousness into greater realms. Admittedly, not everything on this part of the quest is a total success. Everything Ends feels a little too familiar, while Evil Eyes cleaves rather too close to Deftones’ sexy surge to be truly original.
Overwhelmingly, though, The Sky, The Earth & All Between is the album you want from Architects at this stage, acknowledging everything that they have been and they are now. So it’s serious, fun, deep, kneejerk, angry, and beautiful. It’s like life, then, only louder.
Verdict: 4/5
For fans of: Spiritbox, Parkway Drive, While She Sleeps
The Sky, The Earth & All Between is out now via Epitaph