Chimaira – Resurrection (2007 CD) Review | A Fierce Groove-Metal Rebirth

⛤ Groove Metal, Nu-Metal, Metalcore | 5.00 € (Near Mint)
⛤ Pulse Rating: 8.5 / 10

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Chimaira’s Resurrection is the sound of a band clawing their way back with teeth bared and riffs sharpened. This era shows them leaning harder into their thrash and groove metal roots while still embracing the metalcore chaos that shaped their early identity — but this time it hits with more maturity, more fury, and more conviction.

From the opening seconds of the title track, the band feels recharged. The riffs bite harder, the breakdowns hit with precision instead of excess, and Mark Hunter’s vocals sound absolutely unhinged. It's the kind of comeback album that doesn’t beg to be noticed — it kicks the damn door in.

Tracks like Six stretch Chimaira into atmospheric territory without losing their trademark aggression, while songs like The Flame and Worthless combine emotional intensity with thrash-driven hostility. The flow feels deliberate — a rise-and-crash momentum rather than a chaotic collection of riffs. For an album that’s built on pure violence, Resurrection has a surprising amount of depth and replay value.

Recorded at Audiohammer Studios by Jason Suecof, the album sounds massive: the guitars crunch with surgical tightness, the electronics sit deeper and darker in the mix, and Andols Herrick’s drumming injects a pulse that swings between relentless and tasteful. The production is polished, but not sterile — it feels alive, physical, and emotionally heavy.

Musically, this is the perfect fusion of Chimaira’s DNA: groove metal heft, metalcore rage, and thrash ferocity. Hunter’s vocal performance is one of his strongest — vicious roars, sharp cleans, and raw emotional delivery. The guitar leads have that old-school urgency, and the rhythm section crushes without overwhelming. Resurrection isn’t their heaviest record, but it might be their most balanced, cohesive, and rewarding.

With tracks like Black Heart, Empire, and the colossal Six, the album refuses to fall into repetition. It’s violent, cathartic, and full of unexpected emotional weight — the sound of a band refusing to fade away quietly and instead choosing to redefine their legacy.

Tracklist:
01. Resurrection – 4:37
02. Pleasure In Pain – 3:04
03. Worthless – 3:44
04. Six – 9:44
05. No Reason To Live – 3:44
06. Killing The Beast – 3:47
07. The Flame – 5:23
08. End It All – 4:21
09. Black Heart – 4:33
10. Needle – 3:08
11. Empire – 5:33

Credits
Mark Hunter – Vocals
Rob Arnold – Guitar
Matt DeVries – Guitar
Jim LaMarca – Bass
Andols Herrick – Drums
Chris Spicuzza – Electronics, Samples

Recorded at Audiohammer Studios
Produced by Jason Suecof
Mixed by Andy Sneap
Mastered by Ted Jensen

Links
Homepage * Bandcamp * Facebook * Instagram

🔥 For fans of: Lamb of God * DevilDriver * God Forbid * Shadows Fall * Throwdown
💀 Label: Nuclear Blast


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