Sepultura has "enjoyed" a very spotty reputation among fans since the late 1990s when founding vocalist
Max Cavalera left and was replaced by
Derrick Green. After all, their first six albums -- especially the trilogy that began with
Schizophrenia and ended with 1991's
Chaos A.D. -- are universally regarded as definitive thrash metal offerings. Later outings were saturated in groove metal or so experimental listeners had a tough time hanging on. But
Sepultura issued some fine records during the
Green era including
The Mediator Between Head and Hands Must be the Heart (2013) and
Machine Messiah (2017), which are both fine records in their own rights.
Quadra is a concept album that, like its 2017 predecessor, expresses the delineated nature of society and the power of money. The album is so titled because its 12 songs are divided into four groups of three songs each. Each grouping showcases a different aspect of the band's musical persona. Exquisitely produced by
Jens Bogren, its first section offers the band at its most aggressive in a short set of thrash metal. The main riff in "Isolation" is derived from the pervasive influence of their song "Arise." "Means to an End" is even heavier with its louder-than-god mix and stop-start bass and guitar vamps, urged into ever more furious terrain thanks to the force of drummer
Eloy Casagrande. "Last Time," with its spiky guitar intros and slamming punch and roll rhythms, is almost an anthem. The second quarter of
Quadra hearkens back to more rhythmic, groove-metal-oriented albums such as 1996's
Roots. Check the rumbling, Brazilian percussion that introduces the roaring "Capital Enslavement," and the chugging grooves of "Raging Void"; they are both excellent examples.
Andreas Kisser's nylon-string guitar playing introduces "Guardians of the Earth," before a layered choir begins chanting in the backdrop as a precursor to the first verse. This is
Sepultura at their most experimental and progressive, born out by the knotty scalar inventions on "The Pentagram" and the detuned roil and burn power riffs on "Autem." Introduced by the brief interlude of a title track, the final section pursues more melodic, less aggressive prog metal. It features gorgeously layered acoustic and electric guitars, ghostly female vocals, and even elements of symphonic metal. Check the interplay between
Kisser and
Casagrande up front with
Green -- who sings clean -- on "Agony of Defeat." Choirs, synth strings, and jazz syncopation all follow him in. Closer "Fear, Pain, Chaos, Suffering" offers a richly atmospheric finale, including wonderful vocal assistance from
Emmily Barreto, from Brazil's
Far from Alaska.
Quadra is
Sepultura's first album to actually stand on equal qualitative footing with their classic trilogy. It offers a series of tough, meaty, adventurous songs, that abundantly indulge raw power and emotion.
Bogren's production and
Sepultura's execution are in perfect balance. Further,
Green delivers a career-defining performance here. It is the first
Sepultura album in decades to measure favorably alongside the band's classic output. ~ Thom Jurek