Album Review – Atan’s “Ugly Monster”

Atan, Ugly Monster, 2022
Tracks: Clenching Teeth (4:04), Abducted (5:30), Faces (4:33), Ugly Monster (3:36), Origami Doll (2:37), Protected (5:45), Words (5:30), Sorrow (5:41), The Mind (4:51), Second Fig (4:43), Absentee (Bonus Track featuring Derek Sherinian) (6:28)
Players: Claudia Moscoso (vocals), Andrzej Czaplewski (guitars, samples and synths), Jerry Sadowski (drums), Marcin Palider (bass)

While Atan recently released a new EP, here at Progarchy I seem to be stuck living in the past (I am an historian, after all). Last year’s Ugly Monster was the band’s debut, and it stands tall for a debut record. Featuring a blend of heavy progressive metal subgenres led by female vocals, Ugly Monster has offered a lot to enjoy on repeated listens.

Just as comfortable exploring a spaced out metal zone a la Tool as they are a smash-mouth djent riff, Atan easily and interestingly bend metal subgenres throughout the course of the album. The only song where it doesn’t work for me is “Origami Doll,” where the track takes on a Japanese-influenced style of metal. That likely appeals to some (like it or not, Babymetal is popular for a reason), but it isn’t my cup of tea. Thankfully that’s the shortest song on the album. Musically the song is fine, but the vocal lines do nothing for me.

Atan is at their best when they blend both ends of the metal spectrum – moving seamlessly in and out of heavy, gritty bass-driven djent riffs with passages of minor-key spacey metal brilliance. In many ways “Protected” sounds like it could have come off Meshuggah’s last album, which featured a healthy dose of quiet but densely brooding tracks. Atan also tries their hand at a wall of sound approach to metal with “Words.” A slower track, the guitars seem to create a wall in the midst of the mix. The result reminds me somewhat of Chevelle with a mix of Devin Townsend. Or Tool. That’s probably a better comparison. “The Mind” has a touch of Rush with the bombastic drums and towering guitars punctuated by higher end vocals.

The bonus track features some synthy noodling by Derek Sherinian, who often does keys for hire for bands looking to add a little something to their songs. I’m often skeptical when bigger name musicians do this, but it really does add a lot to this track and to Atan’s sound. I hope they add more keyboards to their sound in the future.

Atan really took me by surprise with this polished and mature record. It contains plenty of variety in terms of styles of metal without feeling disjointed. The album isn’t overly heavy or djenty, despite displaying those influences. As such, progressive rock fans more skeptical of the heavier end of the genre should still find much to appreciate on Ugly Monster. It holds its interest, and I think the band have a solid base to build upon in future releases.

http://www.atanband.com/index.php
https://www.facebook.com/ATAN.2020/
https://atan2020.bandcamp.com/album/ugly-monster-2

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