
Motionless in White, the goth-metal group from Scranton, Pennsylvania recently released their latest album Disguise and as much as I wanted to enjoy it, I just could not bring myself to get into it despite the really good parts that try to shine through. The band has been regarded as a heavy-hitter in the genre as they have seen a transition from smaller venues that are a staple of the genre to the stadium-style tours they have shared with bands like Slipknot and Korn. However, there is still something lacking from the band that seems to have been on the cusp of greatness for the last decade, but just can’t push themselves over the edge.
Disguise opens with its title track and it almost sounds like if the theme from the Bela Lugosi Dracula were played on a Jack-in-the-Box. As the song progresses, we are given the overarching theme of the album-introspective looks at all the disguises that we hide behind but through the lens of NU-metal with some alt-rock sprinkled in. Headache comes up next and sounds like Jonathon Davis is going to chime in at any moment( Spoiler alert: He doesn’t). As much as I absolutely love the driving bass work, courtesy of almost all of the members due to the band not having a bassist during recording, I just can’t get past the scratches. Maybe now that they added Justin Morrow, previously of Ice Nine Kills, they will find a more consistent sound. </c0de> does a better job than its predecessor of fusing the NU-metal influences with the staple Motionless in White poppy chorus. It almost sounds like a harder version of a Linkin Park song that would have been dropped from Transformers movie which is not a bad thing in this case. Thoughts & Prayers gets us back to a Motionless in White we all can admit to falling in love with as the blast beats get your chest thumping. This one is definitely for the pit and I really enjoy the parallels to their song Immaculate Misconception off of their 2010 debut album Creatures. The snarls surrounded by layers of frenzied guitars, heavy drums, and surging electronics is where the band seem to thrive, but always stray away from with the bulk of their work. Legacy, arguably the worst song on the album, features the trembling voice of Chris Motionless thrown on top of isolated drums that blend into a simple riff that takes you into a chorus that just doesn’t connect like it should. Instead of the Manson vibe they constantly chase, it’s more of a Christian rock band chorus. However, right after that comes the best song of the album- Undead Ahead 2: The Tale of the Midnight Ride. This right here is exactly the type of cinematic track that the band rose to prominence with. A direct follow-up to the original Undead Ahead from Creatures, this song gives you all you ask for from the band and that is Chris’s incredible screams that launch into a catchy-as-hell chorus dipped in a Halloween atmosphere until it knocks you to the ground with a massive breakdown. Holding on to Smoke interestingly enough appealed to me but mainly because it sounded exactly like a Breaking Benjamin song. The rest of the album travels the same path that the rest of the album, and the previous 2 albums, have gone down. The only other flash of creativity was on Broadcasting from Beyond the Grave because it showed a sign of the band that has been missing for a while-the idea that they don’t give care about what you think. Brand New Numb and Catharsis are not bad songs, but they aren’t reaching the potential that they could if the band could just decide on which direction they wanted to take the band. For a band that has been relevant for so long, it is a bit concerning that they have not done anything new or progressed in any specific direction. With no clear path forward it’s going to be difficult for this band to continue to stay relevant, despite the big name tours they are finding themselves on, unless they stop hiding behind a disguise.








