Since their inception, REZN have mined the stark monochromatic depths of underground metal and fused them with the kaleidoscopic delights of psychedelia, prog rock, and shoegaze.
With their latest album Burden, they plumb the deepest, bleakest trenches of their sound while retaining a lifeline into the cosmos. Staking a claim at the crossroads of the hazy dimensions of modern psych acts like Black Angels, the cavernous gloom and reverb-drenched guitar of bands like Spectral Voice, and the lurching low-end meditations of artists like OM, REZN have created n album of immense amp-worshipping weight and intoxicating instrumentation.
Burden was recorded simultaneously with their previous album Solace back in July 2021, but rather than release a double album, REZN divided the material into two separate records, each with its own distinct emotional timbre. Musically, Burden favors riffs over atmosphere, percussion over ether, dissonance over beauty, but there is still an undeniable cohesion between it and its predecessor.
The marriage of brute force and sublime textures has always been a key tactic in REZN's approach-a duality that may explain their touring history with fellow synesthesia-inducing metallurgists Elder and Russian Circles-but the spectrum of the band's mercurial temperaments has never felt as clearly defined and fully explored as it does on Burden.
Even Burden's most reserved moments feel like the calm before the storm, a gathering of momentum before the punishing closer and lead single "Chasm," a megalithic weedian crusher further bolstered by a scorching guitar solo courtesy of Russian Circles' Mike Sullivan.