Review
Grave in the Sky
Cutlery Hits China: English for the Hearing Impaired

Heart & Crossbone (2007) Bob

Grave in the Sky – Cutlery Hits China: English for the Hearing Impaired cover artwork
Grave in the Sky – Cutlery Hits China: English for the Hearing Impaired — Heart & Crossbone, 2007

Grave in the Sky is a three-piece from Israel that plays thick, but still raw doom-y music. The tempos are slow and the sound is a crawling, bleak wall of sound.

Cutlery Hits China: English for the Hearing Impaired is a super raw sounding album. Even though it does not completely sound like them, Grave in the Sky play a style of music that can easily draw some comparisons to Today is the Day, particularly the sound of the distorted vocals. The repetition of the music definitely assaults one's ears, much the way that Khanate used to punish people. Grave in the Sky names their songs after movies, "Donnie Darko" being the bleak opener to which I was just referring. The more that I listen to the record, the more that I hear likenesses to Khanate, although Grave in the Sky does not have that overwhelming fright factor that outfit had, they do set a rather discomforting mood with the tracks on this record. Cutlery Hits China: English for the Hearing Impaired is a disturbing sounding record with just about every piece of instrumentation being heavily distorted which, at times in tracks like "Straw Dogs," you can get lost in the tumult.

I'll be honest, without a lyric sheet present, there is no way that you can understand the words at all; but it makes for an effect for sure as everyone once in a while you think that you do recognize something that is being yelled or said that is usually incredibly disturbing. If that is what Grave in the Sky is going for with the vocals, then they succeed in spades. On "The Devils Rejects" the vocals are more recognizable and just grate on the ears with an almost even pace that sounds like the vocalist is reading a list or intoning a ritual of some sort (although I am pretty sure that is not what is going on here).

Being that this is the first time that I have heard Grave in the Sky, Cutlery Hits China: English for the Hearing Impaired, is a weird record with which to judge a band's work; I would play this record at a Halloween party as background music for sure. I just wish that there were some inkling as to what the band is trying to do on the record; otherwise, it kind of comes of as a novelty record. The album has rather minimal artwork and a real raw sound that could be appealing to certain people.

5.9 / 10Bob • November 26, 2007

Grave in the Sky – Cutlery Hits China: English for the Hearing Impaired cover artwork
Grave in the Sky – Cutlery Hits China: English for the Hearing Impaired — Heart & Crossbone, 2007

Advertisement

DCxPC 2025

Recently-posted album reviews

The Cure

Songs of a Lost World
Capitol, Fiction, Lost Music, Polydor/Universal (2024)

It's been sixteen years since The Cure released their last album. I don't know if anyone really knew what to expect, but it's one of the most influential bands in history so expectations were high. The Verdict? Those expectations were met. It'd be silly to say Songs of a Lost World is a "return to form" as the band and … Read more

City Mouse

So Far Out
Brassneck Records, It's Alive (2024)

There are few bands that hit with the mix of raw emotion and musical talent as a live City Mouse show. There are even fewer bands that can capture that live feeling on a record. It’s been a long 7 years since Get Right, but So Far Out keeps it moving as if no time has passed. Of course, the … Read more

Machine Girl

MG Ultra
Future Classic (2024)

Ideally, I would be a bit more interested in art. In visual art- paintings, sketches, MS Paint monstrosities- whatever. I wish I knew more about the meaning of a brush stroke or even had the desire to know more about the meaning of a brush stroke. I spend a lot of time listening to music and, subsequently, I see a … Read more