In At The Deep End Records iatde027 - The Break In - Unbowed CD
Track Listing

1. Coffin Dodger
2. Iron Hammers
3. Beneath Contempt
4. Bleed For the Leaches
5. Give Them Hell
6. The Wretched
7. Against Leviathan
8. Wake The Devil
9. We Are The Plague
10. Legion

iatde027 - The Break In - Unbowed CD
Fist over fist I crawl screaming bloody but unbowed, rising to the war whilst those around me drown – After a hard start to 2005, The Break In are ready to unleash their long awaited debut album. Unbowed is ten tracks of vicious hardcore, capturing a blend of Cleveland, New York, and Syracuse influences, ranging from Ringworm to anthemic Crowbar style metal. The result of which is an intensely fierce sound which wreaks havoc on all in it’s path.

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Reviews
Terrorizer 7.5/10
Even though metalcore has intoxicated so many fledgling acts since Canterbury’s The Break In released the ‘This Ends With Us’ MCD in 2004, the quintet have, quite refreshingly, eschewed any addition of harmonised riffs, melodic choruses and beatdowns on this debut full length. Focusing instead on making each one of ‘Unbowed’s 26 minutes a rabbit-punch to the teeth. TBI offer up a direct dose of fury in the vein of Earth Crisis’ masterpiece ‘Gomorrah Season Ends’, but with more energy than a caffeine influenced guitar crunch and old school hardcore authenticity, ‘Unbowed’’s strength lies within it’s unrelenting bluntness, the forceful drive of the ten tracks pummelling any desire for musical complicatiors from the listener. that’s not to say that ‘Unbowed’ is a one dimensional work of thuggish grunting - far from it. The Break In just know that sometimes when weaponised, simplicity can be the deadliest of devices. (Leander Gloversmith)

Powerplay 9/10
The straight edge scene in Canterburyhas been burning bright for many years and whether it be in the capacity of band members, zine editors or gig promoters, members of South East troupe The Break In have been involved in the scene from the start. now united in the name of agressive noise, the band unleashes their album 'Unbowed". "Coffrin Dodger" kicks life into this feral and uncomprimising hardcore album, as if on a mission from noise itself. nothing lets up from here till the last note of the final track, "Legion". Proving there is life in the metalcore beast yet. "Iron Hammers" and "Beneath Contempt" make you want to kick out ion anger, thrash around in excitement and generally just go nuts.Compact noise is the name of the game as the album continues with its two to three minute bursts of fury. "Bleed For the Leeches", "Give Them Hell" and "We Are The Plague" all hold strong to the 'turn up, destroy, fuck off' mentality of the band. It's all just fist pumping, head banging hardcore noise from the off. Packing this much anger into 28 minutes must have been no small task. All ten tracks on the album burn with as much noise as anyone else of their regions scene at the moment and given the opportunity to cut the home strings a bit, i think the straight edge aggro hardcore of The Break In has the fury to make waves across the Uk scene. From start to finish the band rips apart the CD, and whether it's riffs, drumbeats, vocals or anything else, these guys shine loud and scream proud.

Metal Hammer 7/10
Straight edge and fuckin' proud of it.
" The Break In, at the time of recording were..." reads the lyric sheet, alluding to the personnel ructions recently experienced by the band. Any line-up weirdness, however , had made no apparent difference to the focused ferocity of this Canterbury crew's attack. The New York hardcore scene is an obvious reference point for these guys but the ire and fire they display in such toxic quantities on this follow-up to 'The Ends With Is' is British through and through. Thankfully, the desire to go all tough-guy on us is reined in and what you get is a thorough and violent pummelling delivered at speed., kind of like being hit by a runaway juggernaut. And where most bands' lyrics labour under the usual themes of pride, identity and loyalty to the scene, the requisite us-against-the-world fury on offer is refreshingly articulate. (Essi Berelian)

Kerrang KKKK
Clean-living Canterbury folk unleash hardcore hell.
At its worst, the hardcore scene has a tendency to be a bit humourless, so given the added bonus of ludly proclaimed straight edge lifestyles, The Break In promise to be uniquely laugh free and twitchy-eyed. It comes as a great relief, then, that ‘Unbowed’ is largely free of moralising chuff and sounds very mearly brutal and precise as the much missed Earth Crisis did on their classic ‘Gomorrah’s Season Ends’ album. Foul, scything metal riffs, throat-bursting screams and countless punishing beatdowns: if this is what they sound like after a glass of water and a quick sprint round the block, imagine how scary they’d be after a few pints...
For Fans Of: Earth Crisis, Hatebreed.

Mass Movement / Subba Cultura
To be honest with you people out there you can't really go wrong with any disc that comes from In At The Deep End Records and if you like hardcore music then the Canterbury scene have bred some belters (xCANAANx and November Coming Fire for awesome examples) and here, ladies and gentlemen is the next superb offering from one of the UKHC scenes heavyweights. I have heard a few tracks by these before from previous releases such as No Fate But What We Make 7" on Burial Records and the MCD on Dead And Gone entitled This Ends With Us and have enjoyed them but never took that much notice until now. This sees The Break In mature and hone their sound to a head turning masterpiece that grabbed my attention from the opener Coffin Dodger to the intrumental closings of Legion. This is basically a no frills brand of hardcore that requires no gimmicks or flashy musical parts to help sell it (no offence but by no flashy musical parts I mean no widdly metal guitar sections that some hardcore bands feel they have to splatter their tunes with to sell copies). This to me sounded like a blend of Terror, Donnybrook to compare to the straight ahead feel of them and surely when you listen to tracks Coffin Dodger, Beneath Contempt, Give Them Hell and Leviathan for perfect examples (but all the tacks are as good as one another) you can invision nothing but a brutal and blood filled mosh going off at every show these guys play with a chanting crowd joining in with every word of these songs as they belt out. It's raw, basic and straight forward hardcore with gutural and gruff barking vocals over the top that every hardcore boy or girl should be listening to.

Up Magazine (Holland)
Up Magazine (Holland)

Aardschok Magazine (Holland)
Aardschok Magazine (Holland)

Die Shellsuit Die Zine 5/5
I associate Strait Edge Hardcore with a form of backward rebellion. Where as most kids would rebel by drinking, smoking, taking drugs and having underage/casual sex, this is something that is cast out by SxE 'doctrine'. Abstinence from all 4 of the previous, often combined with veganism and/or Christianity, make it the sort of peer group that your parents, should they know, would wholeheartedly encourage you to embrace. It's no surprise then that this album contains a commentary on modern society and moral values. The Break In are a block of pure steel, formed from the foundry that is the Canterbury Hardcore Scene, starting with a more basic sound and progressing through their previous releases (“No Fate But What We Make” 7 inch/Burial Records, ”This Ends With Us” MCD/Dead and Gone Records) they have undoubtedly worked their backsides off, in an uncompromised effort to create what is 26 minutes of pure aggression. Spearheaded by “Coffin Dodger”, a brutal high speed assault that questions the obsession with prolonging life in old age (observing that many who live in retirement homes and their own are isolated from society, with the abode they reside in seeming like a dumping ground or prison), the charge is reprised through “Iron Hammers” and “Beneath Contempt”, two songs championing independence and tenacity. The message carries on through “Bleed for Leeches” which slows the charge down to a march. Instead of coming at you like a psychotic Viking it becomes a well-oiled machine, ready to chew you up and spit you out, with its pummeling unrepentant assault. This is repeated in much the same way through the follow-up track “Give Them Hell”. If the first four tracks are the opening exchange and the main battle then “The Wretched”, an attack on the use of our soldiers in modern conflict, and “Against Leviathan”, which is arguably about rediscovering yourself, are the pursuit of a broken army leading into a full scale invasion. I've only covered the first half of this album, but in both is lyrical and instrumental accomplishment I find plenty of reason to recommend it. Both it's social and political leanings, whilst being critical, have an undoubtedly positive outlook screaming 'you can do it if you try', being backed by skull crunching, spine shattering riffs that make you feel like a child with a whole pile of gifts. It's a must have.

Montagpress
The more you listen to the harder it is to be moved, especially when everything that once moved you sounds uncannily like everything else. When it comes to music, too much education is a terrible thing. However for the rule there is always an exception... The Break In, or ThexBreakxIn if your memory is long enough, delivered a serious snap-kick to the stomach with their debut MCD (we won't count the 7" - we're not that pretentious) ‘This Ends With Us'. The boat rocked a little with frontman xDugganx buggering off to join a screamy gothic metalcore outfit with one of his xCANAANx buddies and both bands signing to In At The Deep End. So at least we can probably assume they're all friends.It's not a massive departure but ‘Unbowed' takes a few side-steps away from the tough-guy mosh of previous albums, strips it down from the unflinching chest-thumping of their Hatebreed-esque beginnings and layers it with metallic death even going so far as to conjure up with their artwork the stomach-churning nihilism of metallic hardcore pioneers like Intregrity and Ringworm, whilst packing the thoughtful moralising of Earth Crisis and some good old fashioned gang vocals into one massive late-90s haymaker.The Break In have always been vicious, they've always been pummelling and they've always been true - to claim that ‘Unbowed' is something truly revolutionary for them is probably hyperbole. It's exactly what The Break In should be only a hell of a lot faster and a lot dirtier; if ‘This Ends With Us' cut through the crap to expose the beating heart of UK hardcore then ‘Unbowed' rips it from the body and holds it aloft. 5/5

Metalrage (Holland)
In South-East England there appears to be a formidable and influential straight-edge hardcore scene, according to the biography of this band. Now personally I think straight edge is utter nonsense, but it doesn’t mean that the music sucks as well. On the contrary, this band is one of the better hardcore bands I’ve heard in a while. Hardcore has never been a real original genre in my opinion. So the trick for me is to find something in those bands that makes them stand out, and this one certainly does. They’ve found a way to combine the old-skool hardcore formula with the newer stuff you hear today, without the exaggerated clichés. The music consists as I said of old and new hardcore, which results in lots of nice bassdrum salvo’s, beatdown riffs and anti-society lyrics. The recording quality is very comfortable to listen to which makes this an even better album for me. Another plus is the vocals, not too punk like, and certainly not too metal like. He has exactly captured that protest sounding vocal touch to his lyrics, which suits this music perfectly. He does remind me of a singer in a different hardcore band I’ve heard, but I don’t seem to able to recall which one it was. Perhaps turning straight edge isn’t such a bad idea at all… I can’t really find anything bad to say about this ten-track album (with the last track being instrumental), which means to me that they did a splendid job in creating this record. It’s probably gonna get a lot of spins in my cd-player I suspect.

Last Hours
It doesn't seem like that long ago that This Ends With Us came out on Dead and Gone, but it was almost a year ago now, and everything seems to have changed since then, with Duggan (the old vocalist) leaving the band to be replaced by Dan Burrows who moved from guitar duties, who was replaced by Frye, who was the bass player. The long and the short of it is that pretty much everything in The Break In world has changed in the past few months and its reflected on the album. Previous songs (on the D&G MCD and Burial 7”) were short mosh hungry affairs with crunchy guitars and Duggan's passionate, slightly high pitched, vocal style. Unsurprisingly the vocals sound totally different now, they're slightly less desperate, with less scream and more growl; the lyrics have changed too, missives about personal experience or feelings have been replaced with slightly more abstract lyrics. The music too is slightly less mosh heavy, taking on a slightly more straightforward feel. Its strange, it doesn't really feel anything like “The Break In” that's on the previous two recordings. All of that aside the record is still a pretty amazing hardcore album, with awesome artwork too, and I hope the band manage to regain the momentum they had eighteen months ago!

Disconnect, Disconnect
Hailing from Canterbury, The Break In play straight edge hardcore with a metal touch. Their new release ‘Unbowed’ is not only packed with fast in your face heavy hardcore, two step, breakdowns and enraged vocals, but also offers diversity in the face of a solo and an instrumental.
This, their first release on In At The Deep End records, shows a solid performance, capable of following the footsteps of previous Canterbury heavyweights xCANAANx and November Coming Fire. Lyrics such as ‘the kids that came from nothing are still giving everything’ make this a true hardcore record, shouting about the everyday fight and the importance of standing up for yourself.

Communion
A couple of years ago I considered The Break In to be an overrated straight-edge band, who got more attention than they deserved simply because they were from Canterbury. Things have improved somewhat.With some great, distinctly unnerving, artwork and a solid-yet-raw production courtesy of CCR Studios in Belgium, The Break In have laid some admirable foundations for their pissed-off, modern hardcore. There are no metallic frills here, just straight-forward pummelling complemented by some vicious drumming, no-nonsense riffs and some of the most angry vocals you have heard in a long-time.Comparisons lacking in much thought could be drawn to such bands as Donnybrook, Terror and American Nightmare amongst others at points, and to the uninitiated this could sound somewhat samey. But at just over 20 minutes, and with a closing instrumental to top things off, there is no chance of this album every becoming boring.Along with Raise The Dead, Taking Names, the forthcoming full-length from November Coming Fire and a bunch of others, this album is setting 2006 up to be a very good year for British hardcore. 8/10

AsIce
Apparently the speed with which The Break In was storming through finally became too much for them, because the debut album of the guys from Canterbury wasn’t finished until recently, a year after they originally planned it to be released. This has to do with line up changes and a label switch. But like the title already says, The Break In did not bow for this hardship but only worked harder to achieve their goals. Their MCD “This Ends With Us” reminded me of Throwdown very much, but this time it’s Terror and Blacklisted that swirl around in my head while listening to “Unbowed”. Only then imagine a singer with a very raw, almost barking voice and some more melodic guitar parts. Of course this doesn’t go for the instrumental closing track “Legion”, which you wouldn’t expect from a hardcore band actually. The groove, the power and the rough straight edge lyrics all complement each other fluently and combine into a very nice release. It’s pretty different from what I expected based on their debut, but I must say I quite like it. So everyone who likes some good heavy stuff with melody can check out this English band.

Europunk
Sounding like a beast brought forth from the bowels of hell Canterbury’s xThe Break Inx will blow your mind. This is feral, brutal and aggressive (but not clichéd) straight edge hardcore at its best. If the book of Revelation were enacted opening track ‘Coffin Dodger’ would break the seals for they sound like Death and Hades (Rev 7:8, 13-15) ‘They were given the power…to kill men with sword and famine and plague…the sun turned black, the full moon turned like blood, [and] the stars of the sky dropped to earth’. Such is the awesome power and impact of xThe Break Inx.
This record is full of vitriol and malice, a call to arms for the downtrodden: ‘Back from the dead my vengeance born again…Give them hell...Rebuild yourself and refuse to be broken…’ Every song a winner; truth, pride, integrity all shine through.Musically heavy, vocally guttural, and lyrically pure genius; ‘Unbowed’ is an immense full length debut.A stand out track is difficult to choose, because they are all that good! ‘Leviathan’ though is a personal favourite. It is unbelievably catchy: ‘this is exorcism; this is resurrection, against the world, against Leviathan’ a call to arms if ever I heard one, and almost as good as xThe Break Inx’s straight edge anthem ‘Beneath Contempt’.
Also ‘Give Them Hell’, ‘We Are The Plague’ and the instrumental outro ‘Legion’ have all embedded themselves firmly into my memory and reappear at the most apt times. With these songs xThe Break Inx have shown their straight edge pride, and created a masterpiece along the way. They are sounding the seven trumpets, with music of passion, of anger, and of purpose. For they ‘…are vengeance born on locust wings…[who’ve] come to scour the sins of man…’ and ‘not while the ink still stains these fists’ will they relent.
Pick up this record, go to a show and fill your heart with honour. These boys are the revolution.

.44 Caliber Zine
Unless you're a cathedral enthusiast, the sleepy town of Canterbury in Kent must be a pretty lame place to live, especially if you're young, angry and hooked on the straight-edge hardcore scene pioneered by bands like Minor Threat in the States. Or so you'd think. As it happens, Canterbury has quickly established itself as the centre of the UK hardcore explosion, throwing forth such homegrown luminaries as xCANAANx and November Coming Fire to mass critical acclaim. And after a couple of promising titbits including the excellent 'No Fate But What We Make' 7", The Break In have just added themselves to the list of Canterbury boys done good. 'Unbowed' is a strong, genre-defining record that doesn't so much holds its own with releases by better-funded US bands as blow them right out of the water, their take on the fundamental element of aggression proving much rawer (and subsequently much more genuine) than the over-produced, underwhelming output of scene darlings like Most Precious Blood, Norma Jean and Bleeding Through. In fact, The Break In are the perfect antidote to the current crop of shamelessly superficial bands watering down hardcore to enhance its commercial potential, and better still, they take less than half an hour to confirm this fact. At just ten tracks and twenty six minutes long, 'Unbowed' is over and done with in the time it takes most bands to tune up, but such brevity denotes a lack of bluster rather than a lack of ideas. Every track is short, sharp and to the point, the pick of the bunch being opener 'Coffin Dodger', a slab of fury so intense it all but sucks the fillings from your teeth. 'Give Them Hell' is also immense, and I defy anybody not to shit their pants as 'The Wretched' makes its considerable presence felt. An exhausting experience both live and on disc, this lot are fucking special.

Blood To Shed Zine
If it weren’t for the unmistakeably British vocals, you’d be fooled into thinking that THE xBREAKx IN were from the American east coast scene. After losing their original vocalist Duggan to LOVE THAT KILLS, TxBxI needed to step up with this first release on In At The Deep End.
With Nate (ex on thin ice) on vox duties, they don’t just step up. They step up and raise the bar a million miles above their contemporaries. On Unbowed, stand out tracks there are not, as the whole album hits you like a fucking steamroller and leaves you salivating for more.

Raw Nerve
Striking (if not a little cluttered) artwork adorns this CD from The Break In, who I've seen quite a few times and only really liked once, but this recording is a different story in my eyes. Not totally convinced by the tone and style of the vocals, but musically is pretty much bang on for those into their straight up hardcore thrashings and it makes sense to see that this UK 5 piece had this CD recorded over in Belgium, as it has totally captured the correct atmosphere and dynamics needed to make it feel really alive. The gang vocals work really well also, and the playing is tighter than when I've seen them. 'Beneath contempt' sees them throw in some quite unexpected, welcome and quality riffs that show good thought in what they are doing. Still can't get into the vocal snarls though I'm afraid. Just not to my taste. They may be to yours, so check it out as at least musically (for me) this kicks it!

Blastwave
The Break In Aren’t doing anything new. They’re not following trends either. They’re a Hardcore band, but they don’t have stupid haircuts or follow fashion. Where am I going with this review, I hear you ask. Well, The Break In are a straight forward, no thrills, no bullshit Hardcore band. They’re the musical equivalent to a supermarkets own brand – no bullshit packaging, just a simple good quality product. That’s right kids, bands like this still exist. Don’t believe me? Give ‘Unbowed’ a listen. ‘Coffin Dodger’ makes the perfect opening track. The riffs are simplistic and abrasive, the vocals are harsh but still very much understandable and the structure of the song is vintage Hardcore. The music is flowing throughout, and The Break In don’t really experiment with their sound at all, so there aren’t any songs that particularly stand out. That said, I did just praise them for being straight forward Hardcore. If you were to listen to the tracks on their own, ‘The Wretched’ is the possibly best track on the album; they throw in a solo and some awesome Hardcore chugging to mosh around in your bedroom too. I suspect a lot of these songs were written for the live environment as they’re so relentlessly fast, filled with shouty sing-a-long parts and plentiful heavy Hardcore moments. ‘Unbowed’ is over with pretty quickly, lasting around 26 minutes. It’s short, sharp and to the point, a lot like this review, which incidentally is now over. MOSH!