Review
The Korea
Колесницы Богов

Independent (2012) Sarah

The Korea – Колесницы Богов cover artwork
The Korea – Колесницы Богов — Independent, 2012

What do you expect a Russian band called 'The Korea' to sound like? I would've bet something like kitschy indy alt rock; I certainly wasn't expecting groovy technical death metal, let alone it being actually good. So allow me to share with you the unexpected delight that is The Korea's Колесницы Богов. (For everyone who is not Russian, like me, Google says this translates to Chariots of the Gods.)

What immediately strikes me about this album is how much there is going on, even within individual songs. Some songs switch back and forth between intense melodicism to unforgivingly dense chugging without giving you a chance to catch your breath. The vocals are even more diverse. Many songs feature the expected traditional death metal growling alongside melodic clean vocals, and a few songs like go from Demilich-style frog-belch expectoration to hardcore-esque lighter screaming. There's also a fair amount of world-music influence; it's easy to hear artists like Senmuth on some tracks (and in the artwork, come to think of it).

What's most odd about this album, however, is that it sounds eerily similar to Vildhjarta's EP Omnislash. The mixture of acoustic guitars with electric, clean vocals with growling, melodic lines with straight-up chugging, and rhythmic complexity with straightforward songwriting all sound incredibly familiar not merely in theory, but in execution. I mean, one song is basically as close to ripping them off as you can get without actually, er, ripping them off. Keep in mind this is far from a criticism--I am a huge fan of that sound, and Vildhjarta left it incredibly undeveloped when they released their first album proper.

Everything else about Колесницы Богов aside, what draws me most to it is that it is undeniably "cool"-sounding while still utilizing the complexity and interesting rhythmic fuckery that few in the genre take advantage of. Several tracks here are absolutely perfect examples of balancing complexity of arrangement with accessibility of melody. The album is flooring with its power, but it still packs in a lot of variety.

It's a rare release for djent, being musically interesting without sacrificing aural enjoyability. It's also free to download from the band's website, so even if you only have a passing interest in technical death metal or djent, you have to give this album a listen.

8.0 / 10Sarah • May 7, 2012

The Korea – Колесницы Богов cover artwork
The Korea – Колесницы Богов — Independent, 2012

Related news

The Korea offer latest album for free

Posted in Bands on January 15, 2012

Recently-posted album reviews

Nicole Alexis

Mirrors & Smoke
Independent (2026)

There’s a fine line between stripped down music and so stripped back that is sounds empty. On Mirrors and Smoke, Nicole Alexis lands comfortably on the right side of that line, delivering a debut EP that leans into simplicity without losing its emotional weight. Built around acoustic arrangements and minimal production, the EP feels intentionally close. It feels like these … Read more

The Remote Controls

Too Tough
Fail Harmonic Records, Mom’s Basement Records (2025)

There’s a certain kind of punk band that doesn’t overthink things. No reinvention, no genre-bending manifesto, just fast songs, big hooks, and enough attitude to carry it all. Indianapolis’ The Remote Controls lean hard into that tradition on Too Tough, a record that feels less like a statement and more like a well-earned victory lap. Built on a steady diet … Read more

Sahan Jayasuriya

Don’t Say Please: The Oral History of Die Kreuzen
Feral House (2026)

For those of us who spent the mid-to-late 1980s navigating basement community halls, churches, and loveable, armpit-smelling dive bars, the name Die Kreuzen was a permanent fixture on the punk rock radar. They were the sound of the Midwest underground --too fast for the goths to do their spooky Bela Lugosi "shoo the bats away" interpretive dance, too technical for … Read more