Review
The Vows
The Vows

Indecision (2006) Bob

The Vows – The Vows cover artwork
The Vows – The Vows — Indecision, 2006

The Vows is the latest hardcore "super-group" to include Rob Moran of Unbroken. After his departure from the impressive Some Girls, he moved to Seattle, Washington and began this band. In the sparse liner notes, the band thanks old Seattle hardcore band Brotherhood and another older group, Amenity, for bringing them together; this is a good indication of the musical style and overall sound that they are trying to produce. I must say that this is a much more straightforward outfit than Some Girls. The Vows also has John Pettibone, recently of the metal band Himsa and formerly of the hardcore group Undertow, on vocals, Ryan Murphy, who also played in Undertow, Ensign, and Ten Yard Fight, and Aram Arslanian of Champion and Betrayed.

As far as the actual content of the EP, the band sounds like the sum of the hardcore elements of the members' collective experiences. It is straight-up, fast-paced, hardcore punk that blows you by almost as quickly as it starts. This isn't a bad trait. Right off the bat, "Fucked and Fired" comes at you with an urgent sound. I like that it doesn't sound like hardcore bands today that concentrate more on the breakdown than the actual song. "Back from the Deads" is my favorite song on the EP. It has a two-step sounding part at the top of the track that rolls into a faster style song. I especially like the Embrace - the old D.C. punk band, not the modern day one - quote "Whatever happened to the value of life." "Fall in Their Lines" is very frantic sounding. It starts out very fast and then slows down to a more mid-paced tempo. "Speak to Truths" has a little more variety in the guitar sound. It's a good change of pace. Lyrically, it seems to be a commentary on the modern hardcore/ punk scene with lines like "Compromise the meaning / Apathy for industry." Thankfully, it does not sound like a bunch of old hats pointing an accusatory finger at the rest of the community.

This is a fast record being that it is over and done in a quick 8:18. It's pretty good. I like to throw it on for real short trips. It is cool that the record was written in one day and then recorded the next; I think that it gives it that raw sound. The Vows made a fun record.

6.2 / 10Bob • September 4, 2006

The Vows – The Vows cover artwork
The Vows – The Vows — Indecision, 2006

Related news

The Vows Post Song Online

Posted in MP3s on April 17, 2006

Recently-posted album reviews

The Cascadian Divide

To the Sky
Independent (2026)

The Cascadian Divide is a Washington state based melodic skate punk band that formed during the infamous COVID lockdown. Although it started as an experiment, it soon became a passion project for the band members. The band has seen its share of line up changes over the years, but the commitment to maintaining the sound and integrity of the band … Read more

Jungle Rot

Cruel Face Of War
Unique Leader (2026)

Twelve albums and more than three decades into their career, Jungle Rot remains one of death metal's most reliable institutions. While countless bands have spent years chasing technical excess, progressive experimentation, or whatever trend happens to be dominating the underground now, the Kenosha veterans have remained committed to a simpler mission. Writing memorable riffs, locking into crushing grooves, and leaving … Read more

Overcalc

Fruits of the Decision Tree
Sleeping Giant Glossolalia (2024)

Some instrumental records create atmosphere while others create movement. Fruits of the Decision Tree feels like it creates an entire environment. It’s unstable, mechanical, strangely beautiful, and constantly in motion. The solo project of Nick Skrobisz (Multicult, The Wayward), Overcalc exists somewhere between electronic experimentation, prog-level guitar precision, ambient drift, and full on sci-fi hallucination. Trying to pin it cleanly … Read more