"Frontman Jaben John Groome enlists a Canadian guitar virtuoso to transform nineties angst into a suffocating, physical weight."
A jagged, downtuned guitar riff carves through the opening seconds of “Many Moons” before the rhythm section hammers it into submission. JBNG frontman Jaben John Groome made a shrewd calculation recruiting Canadian guitar veteran Dave Martone for this collision of post-grunge and alternative rock. Martone built his career playing alongside instrumental technicians, and he wields his instrument with a measured aggression that grounds the entire track. The guitarist hits the listener with thick, menacing compression, avoiding any risk of dated radio-rock pastiche. Groome shapes the distortion into a claustrophobic, deliberate weapon, turning nostalgic nineties angst into a precise physical weight.
Groome barks his way through the verses with a gravelly strain that sounds exhausting and physical. He scrapes his voice against the heavy instrumentation, delivering lines about crawling on the ceiling and breaking his back with a ragged, desperate urgency. He draws from the legacy of alternative metal vocalists who trade technical perfection for raw, bleeding-throat endurance. The frontman pushes his own performance back in the mix, forcing the listener to work to catch every syllable. This mixing choice forces the vocals to fight for space against Martone’s massive riffs, mirroring the thematic focus on suffocation and losing one’s mind.









