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8.0

  • Genre:

    Rock

  • Label:

    Mothland

  • Reviewed:

    March 10, 2025

The Montreal-via-Alberta punks solder together noise rock, sludge metal, bluegrass, and post-hardcore for a forceful—and moving—rejection of stereotypes of their prairie homeland.

How much of our self-worth is tied to outward perception? And what’s lost when national identity speaks on behalf of individuals? When you grow up in the open prairies of Western Canada like singer-poet Karsyn Henderson did, giving in to the draw of a bustling city population and its promise of fame almost feels sinful. But when trading rural Alberta for the cosmopolitan Montréal to give Truck Violence a fighting chance, he and his bandmates refused to sever their roots. Instead, they proudly tether themselves to the oft-misunderstood province while admitting their racing thoughts thrived in the city’s fast-paced environment. The avant-garde punk quartet’s debut album, Violence, soundtracks this bridging of opposites by soldering jarring music genres together—noise rock, bluegrass, sludge metal, experimental post-hardcore—like towering brutalist sculptures welded from rusty steel beams.

Released last summer on Mothland and now getting a vinyl rerelease courtesy of Southern Lord, the metal label home to Sunn O))) and Power Trip, Violence is ballsy and weird in ways that Truck Violence convince you are normal. They open the album with pummeling blast beats straight out of death metal and toss them into a slosh of shoegaze guitars, sobering dropouts, and a new-wave bass line. “Lecture” clears away the sludge with syncopated drumming and an isolated guitar riff that creeps closer with each measure until its mounting anxiety latches onto the listener and the whole band barges back into frame to crack your skull open with lashing noise rock. Truck Violence repeatedly hurl themselves around with this reckless abandon, but find ways to catch themselves before they hit the cement floor, too. Metalcore and drone dominate “The gash” until guitarist Paul Lecours strolls in with plucky banjo—a move so left-field yet self-assured, it’s like high school students clearing a circle around the quiet kid for his interpretive dance moves at prom. Despite a classic combination of heavy and quiet, Violence is never predictable or formulaic; its music is more akin to the artful, experimental metal typically courted by San Francisco label The Flenser, like Chat Pile’s God’s Country or Elizabeth Colour Wheel’s Nocebo.

Much of Violence concerns itself with desire and the guilt of coveting attention. As Henderson begs for compliments—“I’ll never be interesting enough to have a collection of prose/written about me, and/Ultimately that’s my goal/to be written about,” he howls on “Undressed you layn’t before”—what appears to be a personal pursuit doubles as a stand-in for covertly craving peer recognition amidst social divides. Other provinces paint Alberta as “the Texas of Canada,” meant to insinuate the province is ripe with farmers, oil reserves, and addicts. But Truck Violence embrace that rural culture at their shows by dressing in camo and trapper caps, spray painting a rifle on their bed sheet banner, and dragging generators outdoors to play under bridges and in the woods. On the thrashing “Drunk to death,” Henderson tells the story of a loner with nothing to his name but apathy and alcohol, surrounded by farmland. “Is it so much that I feel this intensely?” he screams, a rewording of the human right to dream. Who’s to say this guy is less interesting than a wealthy Toronto painter, especially as the song’s protagonist describes the brown and yellow hues of tilled fields as an inverted ceiling of brambly coffers?

Hence why the homespun banjo and even-keeled folk interludes in Truck Violence’s songs are essential to their message. While percussionist Ryley Klima and bassist Chris Clegg extract tendrils of toxic sludge and blistered beats, Lecours seeks out textural extremities that speak to the hope and humility of the heartland—mirroring the brain’s logic and the heart’s emotion, respectively. Truck Violence value the provincial twang of everyone from Darius Rucker to Frog, so when they commit fully to that sound on a song like “I bore you now bear for me,” the rhythmic strums of banjo turn extra tender. Violence is a stomach-turning exercise in pushing past discomfort to achieve total honesty, and Henderson purges himself over sparse folk and blistering noise alike. His voice sounds exhausted when strained, alternating from a gurgling scream to a hoarse whine. When given the space to push his throat to its maximum capacity on closer “Along the ditch till town” while his bandmates thunder through experimental post-hardcore riffs and vigorous metal drumming, it feels like the musical equivalent of spotting thick tree trunks and thorny vines piercing a chain-link fence, determined to grow upwards, even if it means partially consuming obstacles in the way.

Though Violence was born from a desire to push back on modern stereotypes of Western Canada, its lyrics stretch farther than regional representation or cultural misconceptions. Two weeks before the album’s scheduled release, Truck Violence’s house caught on fire. While the musicians sifted through the remnants of a life turned to ashes, picking singed guitar necks from beneath blackened drywall, their songs about yearning for clarity and squirming with shame took on a sobering realism. Questions that draped over them like heavy shadows months earlier now regenerated as affirmations: “Is anything ever enough?,” “Is anything ever truly going to be good?,” “Is there a point where I’ll have security in my art and in my abilities?” With a wider application, Henderson’s lyrics speak to anyone who’s experienced a breakdown or submits to self-doubt. Truck Violence’s enigmatic, large-scale grappling with these ideas through tortured music, and their ability to incorporate aggression and sensitivity in this pursuit simultaneously, is the band’s reprieve. With wallops of tortured barks and atonal swells of guitar noise, Violence is a weighted blanket to soothe the spiraling.

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Truck Violence: Violence