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Dum Spiro Spero (Deluxe Edition)

Dir En Grey

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Album Review

Dum Spiro Spero, the eighth full-length studio offering by Japan's Dir en Grey builds considerably on the musical frontiers established 2008's Uroboros. At this point in their career, it's simply inaccurate to call Dir en Grey a metal band, though they use plenty of it to get their unique, ambitious meld of styles across. While the pre-release singles "Different Sense" and "Lotus" offer somewhat accurate portraits of the sounds employed on Dum Spiro Spero, they're really only an aural sample of what's on offer. Likewise, the set's first two tracks are, in a sense, feints as well; with further clues to the album's totality but nowhere near a summation of its varied ambitions. The brief, melodically fragmented, piano-laden intro "Kyoukotsu Mo Nari" includes wordless vocals by Kyo, sparse guitar work by Kaoru and Die, and percussion by Shinya, while "The Blossoming Beelzebub" offers low-tuned distorted guitars and basslines, rolling tom-toms and snares, with Kyo singing — not yet shrieking (that's later) — in his highest falsetto, as the musical tension begins to build; it relents in a prog-laden interval only to return close to exploding without getting there. Dir en Grey's fury is unleashed on "Different Sense," complete with frightening growls, power riffs, and blastbeats. The back-to- back “Juuyoko” and “Shitataru Mourou” are complex sonic portraits of extreme music with gorgeous melodies, broken into pieces by furious riffing and hammering as basic death metal gives way to elongated passages of intricate lyric construction and multi-faceted harmonics. On the latter track, seamless transitions between squalling rock pyrotechnics and nearly transcendent lyricism occur on a dime. At the front of it all is Kyo, using his extended range as another instrument to showcase the band's staggering number of musical guises. Everything comes from and leads back to, his — quite literally — amazing voice (think Diamanda Galas as a young Japanese male). "Diabolos" is the album's longest track and its most theatrical; it's full of brooding melancholic, alt-rock atmospherics that build very gradually toward white-hot thrash metal and strip themselves back again. "Decayed Crow" is the closest thing to death metal here and Kyo wails like a more extreme version of Mike Patton. The acoustic guitars that introduce the power ballad "Vanitas" belie its sophisticated melody and lush use of dynamics, and underscore the album's brilliant production (handled by the band with a handful of engineers). That balladry is hinted at in the closer "Ruten No Tou," but is subverted — and expanded upon — by power metal and multi-textured pop. Dir en Grey are a band in their own genre at this point, and Dum Spiro Spero is the farthest-reaching testament to establish that as fact more than opinion. ~Thom Jurek, Rovi

Customer Reviews

Just my 2 cents

Dir en Grey is always modifying their sound which is why putting them in one single category of music isn't so simple.
Those who critique this album harshly and say that they aren't who they used to be might as well be saying the sky is blue because that's a no brainer.
They've been together making awesome music for 14 years so of course they wouldn't be the same as they were in the late 90's, but I wouldnt go as far as to say they've lost it. They've matured in their own way breaking away from visual, using heavier distortions, Shinya adding symbol after symbol to his arsenal and incorporating some nice bass slapping (which I noticed happened more and more after touring with Korn). I dont even have to talk about the vocals since anyone with ears can tell how Kyo has evolved. While so many other bands have disappointed me and gotten softer over the years I am always proud to know that Grey isn't joining them. It's made clear with every album released and this one is no exception with tracks like Juuyoku taking me back to the earlier sounds of Gauze's Schwein no Isu and Zan.
I'm not going to say I was dramatically blown away but I like this album a lot and can't stop listening to it at the moment. Being a die hard Grey fan makes me a bit biased but anything they release I need to listen to non-stop for awhile :) This album is right where I, as a fan, want them to be. I can't wait to see them in LA.

RIP / MOO

While this album may reverberate with American youth at the moment, Dir en grey has unfortunately become a hollow shell of themselves.

A band that once composed masterful and techniqued goth rock with the albums Macabre and Kisou have slowly evolved into a modern day mess. Power chords repeated ad nauseam in drop tuning and repeated to death. The singer, Kyo, no longer puts any effort into reaching his range or even composing a beautiful melody. Instead he has opted to go the death metal route, grunted and mumbling out lyrics that often ARE gibberish in both Japanese and English.

It's sad. It's disappointing. It's almost as if with each album the band is bored and trolling their audience, trying to see just how lazy and awful a composition they could pull off and actually sell to fans desperate to hear just a bit of what used to be. They used to lift riffs from 90s American bands (withering, marrow) and now with Dum Spiro they have digressed to re-using their OWN riffs and hiding it with drop tuning and guttural vocals that went out of style almost 2 decades ago. 2-string sludge. I do not see this as evolution. They have been in stagnation ever since Withering.

I will admit I am in my 30s. I used to listen to bands that sounded like Dum Spiro. And much like myself, I see these kids being ashamed of themselves for being duped later on in life. Yet, for the rest of us, we will remember the Dir en grey that was more concerned with art rather than money.

Dir en grey 1997-2003 RIP

While I breathe...

Dir en grey never does the same thing twice. The sound of the album was meant to be as a whole, to go beyond the structure of a song. It's not something you can pop into your ears and rock out too. You really have to sit and listen to it. Dum Spiro Spero is an entity of mass proportions. Every note played and sung is tailored to each other. Connecting each moment to each other, creating a true single moment that engulfs you.

Biography

Formed: 1997 in Japan

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '90s, '00s, '10s

Dir en Grey have become the top band of the post-visual kei era, especially for the Western audience — in the 2000s they were arguably the most successful metal act without English lyrics since Rammstein (though they never rivaled the popularity of the Germans). The band began as a visual kei collective, too, but gradually moved to more reserved...
Full Bio
Dum Spiro Spero (Deluxe Edition), Dir En Grey
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