Marrowomb - Phisenomie

Angry Metal Guy

While you might not be familiar with the name Frank Lato, you may have heard some of the Chicagoan’s work. Contributing bass duties to the now defunct Polyptych in addition to the ongoing concern Headshrinker—the former was praised here in 2016 by Eldritch Elitist for Defying the Metastasis, while the latter’s Callous Indifference received a rare 4.0 from Steel in 2021—Mr. Lato has decided to slide out of the shadowy rhythm sections of his other projects to stand in the blazing light of judgment as a solo act with his new venture, Marrowomb. Alongside session drummer Kevin Paradis (ex-Benighted), who covers all the kit work, and a few friends contributing guest guitar solos, Marrowomb readies to independently release Phisenomie, a debut album nearly five years in the making. Reminiscing on many of the things I enjoyed from his previous contributions, Lato’s metal credentials excited me, but that doesn’t mean Marrowomb would get a pass. So I dove into Phisenomie with some reserved anticipation, ready to pounce if things went south.

If Benighted had gotten pregnant during some ancient Anaal Nathrakhian sex rite, the child of that ceremony would share audial DNA with Marrowomb. While at first blush this might sound intriguing, ultimately, Marrowomb lacks the histrionic technicality of Benighted and the all-out, brain-searing intensity of Anaal Nathrakh. Still, it’s blast furnace riffs scourged over machine gun blast beats (“Sickness unto Life,” “Black Gossamer”) that primarily serve as the sonic foundation for Phisenomie’s hierarchy of blackened death. Marrowomb‘s slight forays into bass-moody interludes (“Vicarious Visage”), experiments with tech-twitchy riff patterns (“Veil of Cold”) and full-on deep dives into doom pools (“Despairloom”) combine with sparse synth work to bring atmospheric variation but ultimately fall short, a result of Phisenomie‘s most significant flaws, which are its construction and the mix.

Phisenomie by Marrowomb

Like its digitally assembled cover art,1the music on Phisenomie sounds cut and pasted together. Dissonant leads come out of nowhere (“Phantasia Kataleptike”) as do awkwardly incorporated solos (“Black Gossamer,” “The Mirror”) like tin-eared tails mistakenly pinned to a riff donkey’s neck. This immature cohesion and lack of integrality enshrine Marrowomb‘s guitar performances as weak, a negative further spotlighted by the mix. Phisenomie is pretty loud, and as a result, much of the bass and guitar work is left muddied. Solo work at the beginning of “Despairloom” suffers most from this mud-bog mix as much of the interesting guitar runs garble as if played through a wet towel.

As a general liker of things,2 I’ve perhaps been overly harsh with Marrowomb, but not everything here is as dire as I’ve portrayed. A case in point is Lato’s vocal performance. I’m not sure if he ever contributed vocals on any of his other projects, but he’s got a decent ability to spit growls and rasps alike. I hear more of Dave V.I.T.R.I.O.L. Hunt’s grunts and shrieks in Lato’s delivery than I do the “Reee Reee” stylings of Julien Trouchan, but suffice to say, the man’s voice is compelling. Paradis’ kit performance, another highlight, is full of pummeling double bass bashing, frolicking fills, and enough snare abuse to remind you that, yeah, this guy played on Ekbom. These things give me hope that not everything about Marrowomb is lost.

Marrowomb‘s debut album, Phisenomie, is not what you’ve been waiting for. I enjoyed Polyptych‘s output and look forward to hearing the next Headshrinker for sure, but Marrowomb hasn’t done enough to sell me, and I can’t recommend this album as a result. I am, however, a fan of Frank Lato’s ability, which is inarguable, and I respect him for taking this project on and getting more of his work out there. With a more fleshed-out guitar vision and the chops to back it up, there could be a promising release in Marrowomb‘s future; Phisenomie just isn’t it.


Rating: 2.0/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Self-Released
Websites: Bandcamp | Facebook
Releases Worldwide: February 21, 2025

The post Marrowomb – Phisenomie Review appeared first on Angry Metal Guy.

Sun Mar 02 16:31:50 GMT 2025