Track By Tracks: Entropist - The Vision (2026)
About the album as a whole (LYRICALLY & MUSICALLY):
A powerful and visionary progressive metal odyssey. Largely through-composed, the album explores a vast array of soundscapes and flavours of metal to tell its intertwined stories. Solomon Smith - guitar/vocals
Track by Track (LYRICALLY & MUSICALLY):
1. Intense Warmth:
This song is one of my favourites because it just keeps building up throughout the majority of the song. It begins in a relatively traditional manner with a clean guitar intro, but I think the moment the listener hears the walls of vocals come in, it’s clear they’re listening to something different. It’s got some big chords that come with a melodic bass solo before some fast double bass kicks us into the main riff of the song. The driving riff suddenly transitions into this huge breakdown before the song gradually cools off. The song is largely written from the perspective of one of the characters from the album’s concept becoming disillusioned with his world, and dreaming about the possibilities of changing it.
2. Devour Us:
This song gives the listener a moment to breathe by starting with an acoustic guitar intro with a beautiful violin solo played by a friend of ours before jumping right back into some technical metal riffing. I think this is one of the more unique main riffs, with guitars jumping between unison and harmony parts with the bass while the drums hold everything together. The song then slows down for a bridge with odd time signatures and droning guitars, while Parker and I trade off call-and-response vocals before kicking into a faster, thrashy part. Everything stops for a moment as the vocals summon the void itself before Will rips this nasty but tasteful solo for the outro. Devour Us is where the album’s concept and connection to the real world start to blur a bit, relating to themes of struggling with seclusion, mundanity, and futility
3. I Hunger:
A real crusher, this one. Meant to represent the voice of the all-consuming void, this song is arguably the heaviest on the album: a slow, sinister, and powerful wall of sound. It features heavily downtuned guitars and is largely driven by the drums and vocals. We actually wrote the lyrics for this one before everything else, writing the rest around, making it all sound as colossal as possible.
4. The Ritual:
This song comes in with an eerie vibe, with the chords and melodies all creating a slightly unsettled atmosphere, accompanied by the sounds of strange creatures calling in the dark. We then dive into a fast, techy passage with brutal screams, blast beats, the like that culminates into a heavily syncopated breakdown where Parker and I trade off vocal parts. The bridge gives the listener a chance to breathe, with the bass holding down a pensive chord progression under lush vocal harmonies featuring everyone in the band. The drums kick us into a fun little part that brings us right back into the heaviness for the outro. The lyrics are largely correlated to the concept, but explore the unease and potentially devastating consequences of being at the wrong place at the wrong time.
5. Desert of Limbo:
This song is where the album really begins to diverge from more traditional metal sounds. The structure comes in waves, starting with an evocative clean passage in a deceptively pleasant odd time signature. We decided to get pretty experimental with the vocal melodies and harmonies here, and I think it came together well with the unique rhythms and chord changes the bass holds down. The song quickly gains energy and explodes into a breakdown with fierce vocals on top before flipping into this techy part with a tapping solo over a complex chugging from the rhythm section. We bring it down a bit for a tasty drum and bass part with some really echoey screams before transitioning into some duelling guitar solos. We hand it back to the bass and drums for a fun instrumental part that leads into a heavy, slow breakdown before the song climaxes with big chords and vocal harmonies. This song is really about both losing yourself in the trials and complexities of life, but also finding yourself through the paths you take.
6. The Wandering:
The instrumental track! This one explores some of the craziest parts and time signatures and gives the rhythm section a chance to show off a bit, though we aimed to keep it as tasteful as we could throughout. It’s got tasty bass licks, fun guitar harmonies, tricky rhythms, unique chord changes and, of course, some sick solos. We love playing this one live, and it gives us an opportunity to mix things up with some improv.
7. Creation:
The beginning of the final arc of the album. Sonically and lyrically, there’s a clear contrast here, the themes related to making something new and bringing about the world you want to see. This one starts with some big and bright-sounding chords where the drums give the whole thing momentum that drives us into some proggy intro riffage. This ultimately settles into a Parker delivering a meditative verse part where Will plays this tasty guitar lick over some percussive bass and drums. We quickly build it up into this powerful driving part with a combination of chords and djenty rhythms before taking it into the second verse. The second verse leads into a huge chorus part with soaring vocals and huge chords that climax into one of the heaviest breakdowns on the album. We bring it back to the chorus chord change for this gorgeous and victorious solo from Will before closing out with some heavy rhythms and huge crowd vocals.
8. Revelation:
This song represents both the beginning and end of an era for me, to say the least. It’s about the elation of self-actualisation, the feeling of having not only overcome one’s challenges and personal failings, but bringing forward positive movement in the world. It encapsulates and concludes both the album’s concept and the story of its own realisation. It’s easily our most ambitious song, with all kinds of thematic and lyrical callbacks to the other songs on the album, the wildest riffs and rhythms, and just over a 14-minute runtime. The composition ranges from triumphant guitar lead harmonies to complex chugging rhythms, to spicy drum & bass parts, to soaring choruses. The whole thing ends in an epic and emotional passage that I think ties a perfect bow on the album.
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