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SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: VICIOUS RAIN – THE ANATOMY OF SURVIVING

Vicious Rain

VICIOUS RAIN
THE ANATOMY OF SURVIVING
ARISING EMPIRE

Vicious Rain has always had a way of creating music that is a mix of turbulence and muted pain, a sound that feels like the moment a storm breaks out-an emotional downpour overhead, as the thunderclaps and rumbles within the ribcage, eventually leaving an uneasy feeling of disquiet in the stomach after the storm has settled. Coming into their new record, The Anatomy of Surviving, such a listening experience is built on these emotionally vulnerable, sonically resonant, and existentially potent pressures. While the band has always flirted with volatility, this is the album where they seem to have committed themselves entirely to it. It’s not just an album that behaves like an emotional monsoon; it’s a listening experience that very much thinks this way lyrically, inviting listeners to sit in the eye of it and take it all in piece by piece.

What makes this album such a compelling listen is how it seems to balance its cinematic, textural, electronic, and gritty soundscapes around two seemingly incompatible instincts: The urge to destroy and the desire to heal. From start to finish, The Anatomy of Surviving fluctuates between these two distinct poles of thinking, as if in real time, the band is trying to grasp for answers. Is burning everything down a form of catharsis or simply a reckless act that masks the true pain buried deep inside?

From the beginning, the interlude “The Anatomy of Surviving” and the tracks “Gods of Glass and Wire” and “A Spotless Mind” musically open themselves up to this mental game of emotional ping pong. As the band leans into its signature heavier impulses, beyond its gnarled riffs, jagged breakdowns, and scaffold-collapsing percussive energies, Vicious Rain creates these moments where the aggression is ever-present, never letting such agitated textures become stale or boring throughout, carving a space for the melodies to seep through the cracks. Clean vocals drift like fog across instrumental chaos, never softening the blow, but reframing it, giving the heaviness an emotional contour that continues throughout the rest of the album.

“Silent Therapy,” “Trading Hearts,” and “Spitting Blood Again” continue to experiment with this thematic tension, where the production in these areas is especially noteworthy: polished enough to feel intentional, raw enough to feel real. There is a deep sense of physical closeness in these tracks, as if the band recorded them with the mic pressed firmly against their teeth, so that one could feel the impact of these emotional blows on the recording. Every breath, strain, and subtle tremor before each scream feels like one is constantly in a state of denuded anger, holding it all in until it all boils over, until it explodes and takes over the entire track. While many metalcore bands have emotionally replicated this exact emotion, Vicious Rain’s interpretation allows the wound to stay open and bleed, a mood most bands rarely fully breach and embrace as this band does.

The album closes with “Red Noise,” “IKIGAI,” and “Intertwined.” Crafting final moments that dig deeper into these themes of an identity under siege, each one approaches such an existential crisis through a deeply personal lens, where in each track one can feel the self fracture bit by bit. The stories one has told themselves no longer hold any weight to keep the truth from seeping in, and the emotional architecture one has built to keep these mental demons locked away starts to rot and fall apart from the inside. As this chaotic world of hope and grief constantly clash until the very end, what is left is unresolved, but the seductive pull of self-destruction keeps drawing them in; yet there is a hope that remains that, from such turmoil, something better might grow from this emotional wreckage.

The Anatomy of Surviving is a record that doesn’t romanticize suffering. They don’t glamorize mental spiraling; they let the listener feel it in every experience. It’s an experience that allows one to sit amid ugliness, numbness, and confusion while slowly clawing toward the faintest possibility of renewal. It’s not about triumphing over pain, and it doesn’t paint itself in such lights either. Part of the reason it succeeds on a writing level is that it puts a lot of effort into imitating survival, the awkward stillness that comes after, and the stubborn dignity one possesses in simple, ongoing existence, even when the world is crashing around them. One can’t outrun the storm, but one can learn to stand in it and survive it.



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SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: VICIOUS RAIN – THE ANATOMY OF SURVIVING

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Samantha Andujar

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album reviewalbum reviewsarising empiregods of glass & wire part iithe anatomy of survivingvicious rain
album review, album reviews, arising empire, gods of glass & wire part ii, the anatomy of surviving, vicious rain
About the Author
Samantha Andujar
Samantha Andujar is also a music journalist for Outburn Magazine and creator of Into The Void. She loves rock music, video games, wrestling, anime, and horror movies.
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