Sulaco

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Middle Man 00:00 Tools
Pointing Out The Obvious 00:00 Tools
Summon The Hammer 00:00 Tools
An Eye In Every Window 00:00 Tools
Brunt of the Joke 00:00 Tools
Sticks In My Craw 00:00 Tools
Model of Inefficiency 00:00 Tools
The Lone Chime 00:00 Tools
Winning the Race 00:00 Tools
Bupkus 00:00 Tools
Full of Holes 00:00 Tools
On The Fence 00:00 Tools
Dingy Metropolis 00:00 Tools
Build & Burn 00:00 Tools
Corridor 00:00 Tools
Follow the Cloud 00:00 Tools
Make A Move 00:00 Tools
The Approach 00:00 Tools
Cry Me a River 00:00 Tools
It's Over Johnny 00:00 Tools
Disguise 00:00 Tools
Patience Worn Thin 00:00 Tools
Motion In the Grid 00:00 Tools
The Road 00:00 Tools
The Bridge 00:00 Tools
Untitled Bonus Track 00:00 Tools
Chosen 00:00 Tools
So Be It 00:00 Tools
Rivers & Heart 00:00 Tools
Magee 00:00 Tools
Hidden Agenda 00:00 Tools
minds eye (original mix) 00:00 Tools
Untitled Bonus Track #2 00:00 Tools
Untitled Bonus Track #1 00:00 Tools
Expectations (Original Mix) 00:00 Tools
Minds Eye 00:00 Tools
Untitled 00:00 Tools
Fragments (Original Mix) 00:00 Tools
Realm of Infinity (Original Mix) 00:00 Tools
Do It 00:00 Tools
fragments original mix 00:00 Tools
untitled 01 00:00 Tools
untitled 02 00:00 Tools
Minds Eye - Original Mix 00:00 Tools
Hidden agenda (bonus track) 00:00 Tools
Magee (bonus track) 00:00 Tools
realm of infinity original mix 00:00 Tools
Rock 00:00 Tools
Embryo (Original Mix) 00:00 Tools
Mnemonica (Original Mix) 00:00 Tools
Expectations 00:00 Tools
Realm Of Infinity 00:00 Tools
Eye in Every Window 00:00 Tools
Embryo 00:00 Tools
Bupkins 00:00 Tools
Cry me river 00:00 Tools
Patience worm thin 00:00 Tools
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There are 2 Sulacos. (1) Sulaco can be seen as an evolution from guitarist Erik Burke's previous band, Lethargy, who played a seminal role in shaping the musical climate of Rochester's underground metal scene. Lethargy was legendary in the Rochester area during the mid 90s for crafting an often imitated but never duplicated style of ridiculously intricate carnival-esque metal that showcased cross-eyed guitar antics and blistering jazz-fusion rhythms over 10 years before it became popular in the underground. With three demos, an album (It's Hard To Write With A Little Hand, 1996) and their final EP (Discography, 1999) recorded, 1999 marked the demise of Lethargy with drummer Brann Dailor and guitarist Bill Kelliher moving on to enlist in Today Is The Day and later form Mastodon. Wasting no time to regroup, the multi-talented Erik Burke assumed drumming duties in Kalibas until 2002, when he parted ways with Kalibas and recruited Golding and Hackett to form Sulaco. Like Lethargy, Sulaco's musical base takes its most significant cues from bands north of the Mason-Dixon line, citing Ripping Corpse, Damonacy, Breadwinner and Human Remains as a few of their key influences. However, Sulaco improves upon Lethargy's haphazard sense of structure and instead integrates the mesmerizing quirkiness into a devious songwriting regimen that is as spasmodically progressive as it is abrasively visceral. Sulaco's ability to seamlessly employ an explosively direct approach to such technical material is rare when most bands of this nature would rather noodle indiscriminately, consequently sacrificing memorable songwriting for aimless masturbation. Such intrinsic fluidity defines Sulaco as a shining example of world-class forward thinking metal. Their debut self titled EP was released in 2003 by Relapse Records. Featuring ex-members of Lethargy and Kalibas, Sulaco's debut mini-CD unveils a fluid fusion of futuristic, tech-metal chops, articulate song craft, and refined aggression. This high-impact debut is certain to turn heads, fry minds and introduce another progenitor in the 21st century metal lexicon. - Relapse Their debut full length album, Tearing Through The Roots, was released in August 2006 by Willowtip Records. Collectively accounting for over 30 years of experience playing in Rochester, NY's underground music scene, the three members of Sulaco have perfected a uniquely schizoid vision of how music should be played with their Willowtip debut, Tearing Through the Roots. Fronted by guitarist Erik Burke, one of the true godfathers of technical metal and mastermind behind zany carnival-grinders Lethargy, Sulaco fuels its fractured, inverted rhythms with a twittering riffing style that squirms and tinkles like an orchestra of deranged dolphins in heat, squealing and writhing rabidly between volcanic bass thrusts and runaway blast-beat crescendos. Inspired by the likes of Breadwinner and Human Remains, Tearing Through the Roots is an emblem for creative, bonecrushing complexity that refuses to sacrifice the groove or become declawed like so many in the post-Dillinger tech metal landscape.- Drew Johnston (2) Second Sulaco is Trance/Progressive producer from Sheffield, UK whose real name is Phil Stringer. He has released 1 EP under Crystal Clouds Recordings and 4 remixes. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.