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$8.40The Story
In a world of announcements of announcements, Gatecreeper are firing no warning shots before dropping their new release.
âI think the social media environment has just fried our attention spans,â vocalist Chase Mason says. âTrying to hold someoneâs attention for two or three months with a typical album roll-out doesnât seem feasible with everything else currently going on in the world.â
Thatâs not the only reason An Unexpected Reality comes with no pre-release hype whatsoever. âItâs meant to be listened to as a whole, so we didnât wanna break it up or release a couple songs ahead of time as âsinglesâ or whatever,â Mason clarifies. âWe also didnât wanna treat it like itâs our next full-length. Because itâs not.â
Written, recorded and now released during the Covid-19 pandemic, An Unexpected Reality is Gatecreeper like youâve never heard them before. Exploring both ends of the tempo spectrum, the release offers two opposing sides of the bandâs musical personality.
Side one consists of seven short, sharp shocks that have a total running time of less than seven minutes. Inspired by grind, punk and hardcore, tracks like âStarved,â âRusted Goldâ and âAmputationâ are some of the fastest offerings the Arizona death metal squad has ever recorded.
Side two is the exact opposite. Consisting of a single 11-minute track entitled âEmptiness,â this is Gatecreeper at their slowest and most funereal. Think of it as an extended version of the death-doom tracks that the band closed out Sonoran Depravation and Deserted with.
âIâve had the idea to do a record like this for a while,â Mason offers. âIn 2020 we were supposed to be touring all year. Once everything got cancelled, we decided it was the perfect time to turn this idea into a reality.â
When Gatecreeper were getting into writing mode for An Unexpected Reality, Mason brought a new list of influences to the table, ranging from grindcore and Scandanavian hardcore to funeral doom and black = metal. The rip-roaring abandon of side one takes its cues from Napalm Death, TotalitĂ€r, Terrorizer and Master. The keening funeral doom of âEmptinessâ was informed by the likes of Mournful Congregation, Paradise Lost, Evoken and Katatonia.
The format of An Unexpected Reality was partly inspired by Black Flagâs My War, an album that famously polarized fans in 1984 with fast, thrashy songs on side A and three long, slow and sludgy tracks on the flipside. âWhen I was getting really into sludge and stoner metal like the Melvins and Eyehategod, they always referenced the B-side of My War,â Mason says. âHearing bands talk about not just a record but a specific side of a record, I thought that was really cool and it always stuck with me.â
Tempo and length arenât the only anomalies on An Unexpected Reality. âWe usually have a hard rule in Gatecreeper that we donât have blast beats,â Mason points out. âBut for the first side of this record we lifted that rule and ran with it.â
Given that An Unexpected Reality was created entirely during the pandemic, itâs no surprise that some of the songs bear its unmistakable mark. âSuperspreaderâ is a prime example. âThat song was written when Arizona was the number one Covid hotspot in the world,â Mason explains. âThe whole record was actually recorded during that time as well.â
âSick Of Being Soberâ hits even closer to home for Mason, whose recovery from addiction is well documented. âThe title is purposefully trying to be extreme, but itâs pretty much me fantasizing about relapsing,â he says. âI felt like I would be having a much more comfortable time being locked down and not doing anything if I had some sort of chemical buffer.â
Then thereâs âDepraved Not Deprived,â which is a deliberate nod to Gatecreeperâs 2016 full-length debut, Sonoran Depravation. âThe song title is a little bit of a jab at everyone who spelled the album title wrong,â Mason says with a laugh.
All told, An Unexpected Reality presents two new sides of Gatecreeper in a unique non-album format. âThis release was an opportunity to experiment and expand on different ideas within the Gatecreeper formula,â Mason says. âIt doesnât necessarily signify a new direction for the band, but weâll definitely have a couple new tools in our toolbox moving forward.â
Description
In a world of announcements of announcements, Gatecreeper are firing no warning shots before dropping their new release.
âI think the social media environment has just fried our attention spans,â vocalist Chase Mason says. âTrying to hold someoneâs attention for two or three months with a typical album roll-out doesnât seem feasible with everything else currently going on in the world.â
Thatâs not the only reason An Unexpected Reality comes with no pre-release hype whatsoever. âItâs meant to be listened to as a whole, so we didnât wanna break it up or release a couple songs ahead of time as âsinglesâ or whatever,â Mason clarifies. âWe also didnât wanna treat it like itâs our next full-length. Because itâs not.â
Written, recorded and now released during the Covid-19 pandemic, An Unexpected Reality is Gatecreeper like youâve never heard them before. Exploring both ends of the tempo spectrum, the release offers two opposing sides of the bandâs musical personality.
Side one consists of seven short, sharp shocks that have a total running time of less than seven minutes. Inspired by grind, punk and hardcore, tracks like âStarved,â âRusted Goldâ and âAmputationâ are some of the fastest offerings the Arizona death metal squad has ever recorded.
Side two is the exact opposite. Consisting of a single 11-minute track entitled âEmptiness,â this is Gatecreeper at their slowest and most funereal. Think of it as an extended version of the death-doom tracks that the band closed out Sonoran Depravation and Deserted with.
âIâve had the idea to do a record like this for a while,â Mason offers. âIn 2020 we were supposed to be touring all year. Once everything got cancelled, we decided it was the perfect time to turn this idea into a reality.â
When Gatecreeper were getting into writing mode for An Unexpected Reality, Mason brought a new list of influences to the table, ranging from grindcore and Scandanavian hardcore to funeral doom and black = metal. The rip-roaring abandon of side one takes its cues from Napalm Death, TotalitĂ€r, Terrorizer and Master. The keening funeral doom of âEmptinessâ was informed by the likes of Mournful Congregation, Paradise Lost, Evoken and Katatonia.
The format of An Unexpected Reality was partly inspired by Black Flagâs My War, an album that famously polarized fans in 1984 with fast, thrashy songs on side A and three long, slow and sludgy tracks on the flipside. âWhen I was getting really into sludge and stoner metal like the Melvins and Eyehategod, they always referenced the B-side of My War,â Mason says. âHearing bands talk about not just a record but a specific side of a record, I thought that was really cool and it always stuck with me.â
Tempo and length arenât the only anomalies on An Unexpected Reality. âWe usually have a hard rule in Gatecreeper that we donât have blast beats,â Mason points out. âBut for the first side of this record we lifted that rule and ran with it.â
Given that An Unexpected Reality was created entirely during the pandemic, itâs no surprise that some of the songs bear its unmistakable mark. âSuperspreaderâ is a prime example. âThat song was written when Arizona was the number one Covid hotspot in the world,â Mason explains. âThe whole record was actually recorded during that time as well.â
âSick Of Being Soberâ hits even closer to home for Mason, whose recovery from addiction is well documented. âThe title is purposefully trying to be extreme, but itâs pretty much me fantasizing about relapsing,â he says. âI felt like I would be having a much more comfortable time being locked down and not doing anything if I had some sort of chemical buffer.â
Then thereâs âDepraved Not Deprived,â which is a deliberate nod to Gatecreeperâs 2016 full-length debut, Sonoran Depravation. âThe song title is a little bit of a jab at everyone who spelled the album title wrong,â Mason says with a laugh.
All told, An Unexpected Reality presents two new sides of Gatecreeper in a unique non-album format. âThis release was an opportunity to experiment and expand on different ideas within the Gatecreeper formula,â Mason says. âIt doesnât necessarily signify a new direction for the band, but weâll definitely have a couple new tools in our toolbox moving forward.â


















