Review
Maruta
Forward Into Regression

Willowtip (2011) Jon E.

Maruta – Forward Into Regression cover artwork
Maruta – Forward Into Regression — Willowtip, 2011

The saying goes
"the good ones always leave too soon".

When it comes to the world of music usually the reverse is applicable. Most times bands hang on way too long after their supposed peak and tend to try doing everything they can to sound modern or artistic and thereby leavi9ng whatever made them special in the wake. For either better or worse Maruta has managed to fit the quote provided earlier to a T. As they had announced last year after releasing 2 relentless full lengths and a mere demo.

Well to put it simply the band has managed to evolve. Their first LP In Narcosis played their death grind cards close to the chest. The band showed signs of being well above their peers but only a few rare glimpses really stood head and shoulders above the rest. The record we are covering here puts nearly all of their death grind peers into another lane and speeds off leaving anyone close well in the dust. While most bands of the style are willing to play fast and have the most brutal vocals and or topics Maruta doesn't solely insist on playing fast but rather, playing smart.

By the time you're half way through the record you as the listener have invested just over 16 minutes, which by grind standards is almost enough to call a full length in itself. Throughout this record the band build strong structures that don't insist of solely grinding your head in. The band remains insistently brutal without ever getting bogged into the speed game. There are topshelf straight out grinders of course such as "Plague Domain' and "Drowned In Black Matter" these songs last less than a minute and almost act as palate cleansers for the more detailed tracks that follow.

Overall Maruta has managed to go out on a very high note. The band, while gone, has most certainly left their stamp on the genre. As a result of this, I would find it hard to find any reason not to recommend this album to anyone searching for something brutal and smart.

8.5 / 10Jon E. • May 6, 2012

Maruta – Forward Into Regression cover artwork
Maruta – Forward Into Regression — Willowtip, 2011

Related news

Maruta's In Narcosis vinyl pressing

Posted in Records on May 28, 2014

Maruta updates: new record planned

Posted in Bands on May 8, 2014

Maruta joins Relapse

Posted in Labels on September 15, 2013

Recently-posted album reviews

Dauber

Falling Down
Recess (2025)

The lazy approach would be to call Dauber "ex-Screaming Females," but that barely scratches the surface. If I had to pick one band to namedrop a comparison to, it would be labelmates Night Court. They play a familiar style but with a lot of quirks that set it apart from the genre standard-bearers. It's driving and energetic -- more importantly, … Read more

Aesop Rock

Black Hole Superette
Rhymesayers (2025)

Aesop Rock has a reputation for esoteric and abstract raps. It's certainly an earned reputation, but that background makes it interesting when you peel off the layers of his latest, Black Hole Superette and realize that many of these dense songs are actually about the mundane: walking the dog, cohabitation... hell, even fishkeeping. While there's a lot of day-to-day routine … Read more

Circuit des Yeux

Halo On The Inside
Matador (2025)

Haley Fohr's artistic vehicle, Circuit des Yeux, defies categorisation. Stamping the indie folk label on her was superficial, something dispelled easily once you have experienced the lo-fi distortion of "The Girl With No Name." It might be that under the layers of sonic disfigurement, a folk ethos is present in Fohr's narrative sensibility, but it is no longer the same. … Read more