Foundations
Osyron - "Foundations"
ALBUM TITLE: Foundations
GENRE: Epic/Symphonic Metal
FORMAT: Digital/CD
LABEL: SAOL
DISTRIBUTOR: Bertus/The Orchard
ARTIST: Osyron
COUNTRY: Canada
LINE-UP:
Bobby Harley - Guitar
Cody Anstey - Drums/Engineering
Krzysztof Stalmach - Guitar
Reed Alton - Vocals
Tyler Corbett - Bass/Mix/Engineering
Five highly immersive, epic songs that carry a tremendous amount of musical heritage, while waltzing straight to the point, make for an exciting Canadian history lesson with zero filler material. With the ego of the musician chilling on the backseat and the skill of the composer in front, Osyron have left the path of seeking the listener’s attention. Once their impelling, weeping riffscapes appear at the horizon, one is already drawn in until the music stops, simple as that. Because they’ve done it all before, the band can now focus on opening an elegant bridge from old-school extravaganza to contemporary heavy prog metal that just works as march music for thrashers, epic metal fans and proggers alike. Their captivating, sometimes Arabic feeling melodic arches enforce and carry a hefty narrative core and create a sensational contrast with a still present gutsy thrashiness – all woven into the open stage of a masterful production. The wide range of powerful vocal expression is spiced up with perfectly timed battle cries to bring back the desperate fierceness of Canadian troops in WW1, that somehow got treated with disregard by history classes around the world, despite their sad fate as cannon fodder for the British Commonwealth.
“Tell the story of those who have been ignored for too long” is Osyron’s message for their 2020 output Foundations, and its coherent blend of heaviness, soul and deep atmosphere explores Canada’s past and identity just as it’s meant to do. “It reflects personal and societal stigmas, opinions and preconceptions about Canadian culture and history by delving into sensitive topics such as cultural genocide, racism and segregation while also touching on more communal elements of emotion, like loss, pain, hope, and perspective of faith. And it brings to life the very foundations on which Canada as a nation was built: the bloodshed, war, and assimilation of different ethnic groups (mostly First Nations) that cultivated into what we know as Canada today.”