• Record Label: Epitaph
  • Release Date: Jul 1, 2014
User Score
6.2

Generally favorable reviews- based on 52 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 31 out of 52
  2. Negative: 16 out of 52
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  1. Nov 27, 2015
    10
    The guys of ETID reach their highest musical point. This album is great, full of memorable riffs, an excelent work in the voices by Keith Buckley, is simply, the best rock album of 2014.
  2. Jul 2, 2014
    9
    One name: Kurt Ballou. He accentuates the punk/hardcore in everything he touches, and ETID have those two sounds in spades. This album kicks ass like a Converge album, with all the tasty little bits of cock-rocky **** that these guys have perfected on past albums. Bottom line: this is a real ripper.
  3. Sep 15, 2014
    9
    I've been a fan of ETID since the first spin of Hot Damn!, and I have to say that this is my favorite album of theirs to date. It is easily the heaviest, yet most memorable album of their discography. While I enjoy all of their previous albums, none of them really stick out in my head as truly memorable. From the opening blast of "Blow your $%^&ing brains out!" in the first track, toI've been a fan of ETID since the first spin of Hot Damn!, and I have to say that this is my favorite album of theirs to date. It is easily the heaviest, yet most memorable album of their discography. While I enjoy all of their previous albums, none of them really stick out in my head as truly memorable. From the opening blast of "Blow your $%^&ing brains out!" in the first track, to the guest vocals of Sean Ingram (of Coalesce) and Brian Fallon (of Gaslight Anthem), to the cock rock of "Decayin with the Boys", every note screams aggression and truly sticks out. Buy this album if you enjoy good solid melodic hardcore. Expand
  4. Nov 15, 2014
    10
    Every Time I Die are seasoned veterans in the metal scene with a career spanning over fifteen years and seven albums. Even with a long career that leaves many of their first fans in their late twenties and thirties, Every Time I Die just keeps improving. The boys are serious about making an impact with From Parts Unknown and grabthe legendary Kurt Ballou to create something that isEvery Time I Die are seasoned veterans in the metal scene with a career spanning over fifteen years and seven albums. Even with a long career that leaves many of their first fans in their late twenties and thirties, Every Time I Die just keeps improving. The boys are serious about making an impact with From Parts Unknown and grabthe legendary Kurt Ballou to create something that is nothing short of a masterpiece.

    Every track will get the listeners blood pumping as Keith Buckley sounds more hectic and erratic than ever before. The opening song, The Great Secret, Legs' drumming demands respect and Andy and Jordan's riffs will fill the listener up with rage and excitement upon first listen. Before even finishing the album, I found myself daydreaming about seeing these songs live. Moor frames a very personal story about Keith's wife getting mugged while on tour. With some of his best lyrics yet, there is never a moment where Keith's storytelling and writing falls short.

    The boys have always been able to build on their previous work but From Parts Unknown takes the best parts of their previous six albums and sends the listener to hell and back and then back to hell. This album is a sure crowd-ripper for years to come.
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  5. Dec 12, 2014
    7
    Remember Lost in the Sounds of Separation? Yeah I kinda do, and this album reminds me of it- lots of noise. It's decent, but there is nothing special about the vocals- they're not particularly heavy or melodic. The composition is generic- The drums aren't crazy, the guitar doesn't shine, bass is eh yeah I can't really hear it that well. Basically this album isn't anything we didn't alreadyRemember Lost in the Sounds of Separation? Yeah I kinda do, and this album reminds me of it- lots of noise. It's decent, but there is nothing special about the vocals- they're not particularly heavy or melodic. The composition is generic- The drums aren't crazy, the guitar doesn't shine, bass is eh yeah I can't really hear it that well. Basically this album isn't anything we didn't already hear back in the 2000s with Underoath or DDG, and there isn't any one special feature to redeem it. Expand
  6. Jul 12, 2018
    8
    This is arguably the band's best album, the greatest and most ambitious thing they've done thus far. The songs are short, brutal, barn burning and most certainly do not overstay their welcome. Taking a page from Converge (getting Kurt Ballou to handle production and making visceral, short and bittersweet songs) really helped to keep ETID's sound more focused and ultimately influence whatThis is arguably the band's best album, the greatest and most ambitious thing they've done thus far. The songs are short, brutal, barn burning and most certainly do not overstay their welcome. Taking a page from Converge (getting Kurt Ballou to handle production and making visceral, short and bittersweet songs) really helped to keep ETID's sound more focused and ultimately influence what they would do on Low Teens. Expand
Metascore
92

Universal acclaim - based on 6 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 6 out of 6
  2. Mixed: 0 out of 6
  3. Negative: 0 out of 6
  1. Kerrang!
    Jul 23, 2014
    100
    Every Time I Die have just released one of the most essential records of 2014. [5 Jul 2014, p.52]
  2. With From Parts Unknown, Every Time I Die have hit the Ultimate Splash on its competition, absolutely cementing its legacy as one of the greatest heavy bands of our generation.
  3. Jun 30, 2014
    82
    Change is what led them to write the album they needed to, and in turn, left us listeners with the album we needed to hear. Change reminds us that we didn’t know Every Time I Die like we thought we did--but they sure read us to a tee with From Parts Unknown.