Much of What Is Really Underneath? puts beats, electronics and an intentionally machine-like feel right up front. Underneath has become Drowning In It, a cold, hard pulse of twisted industrial with Jami Morgan's mocking vocals over the top, making you realise you should have had the sense to wonder a bit more about what Code Orange do. The crawling, Slipknot-ish Cold.Metal.Place. from the original album is now Club.Cold.Metal., a perfectly descriptive title for something that now sounds like what the Wachowskis should have picked for the bar scene at the start of The Matrix. As it goes on, there are countless shades that frequently go to places you wouldn't have thought, raising both eyebrows and pulses and it twists around itself.
Taken as a companion to the original, a distorted view from the back of a mirror, What Is Really Underneath? is a triumph that picks at threads you probably didn't notice and weaves something new from them. But taken on its own, without such context, it shows just how much imagination, creativity and dangerous character Code Orange have.
What Is Really Underneath? It's a question with an answer apparently too vast to properly be given. All you need to know is: when Code Orange give you something, you'd be a fool to think you've got them all figured out.
Verdict: 4/5
For fans of: Nine Inch Nails, Ministry, Candy
What Is Really Underneath? is out now via Blue Grape
Read this: Code Orange: “Listen to what we do, look at what we do – we don’t fit in anywhere”