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Converge's "Hum of Hurt": A Lean, Sinewy Descent into Heaviness Inspired by Tinnitus and Human Suffering

By

Alex Robert Ross

10d ago· 3 min readenReview

Summary

A review of Converge's album "Hum of Hurt," their second release this year. The album is named after a mysterious low-frequency ambient drone phenomenon that lead vocalist Jacob Bannon discovered while researching his own tinnitus, reimagining it as a culmination of all human pain and suffering. The review describes the album as potentially the heaviest Converge have made — lean, sinewy, direct, and stripped of embellishments.

Source

PitchforkConverge's "Hum of Hurt": A Lean, Sinewy Descent into Heaviness Inspired by Tinnitus and Human Sufferingpitchfork.com

Key quotes

· 3 pulled
Hum of Hurt may be the heaviest album Converge have made: lean and sinewy, direct and intentional, stripped of any embellishments.
Lead vocalist Jacob Bannon came across the phenomenon when researching his own tinnitus and reimagined it as a culmination of all the pain and suffering in human existence.
The second album this year from metalcore pioneers Converge is named for a mysterious, pulsing, low-frequency ambient drone, likened by those who hear it to a diesel engine, an idling airplane, or a kind of inescapable torture.
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