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Reading: “Infinity Fall I” by Watch Me Die Inside
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EPs & Albums

“Infinity Fall I” by Watch Me Die Inside

Graham
EPs & Albums

Infinity Fall I, the latest EP from Watch Me Die Inside, feels less like a debut statement and more like an arrival at a long-imagined destination. Aleph, the Cyprus-based artist behind the project, channels more than two decades of musical evolution into these three tracks, forging a sound that is as emotionally vulnerable as it is sonically extreme. From the first moments, it’s clear this is metal designed to express. Aleph’s self-coined descriptor, Deathened Melodic Electro Pop Black Metal, may initially sound audacious, but Infinity Fall I quickly justifies the ambition behind the phrase. This EP thrives on contradiction, constantly pulling the listener between intimacy and violence, serenity and collapse, light and abyss.

The title track, “Infinity Fall I,” establishes the EP’s emotional and sonic blueprint with striking clarity. It opens in near-fragility: cascading piano lines, restrained electronic pulses, and vocals that feel exposed rather than performative. There is a cinematic patience here, a sense of ascent that feels almost hopeful—until it isn’t. When the track finally erupts, it does so without warning, unleashing blackened riffs, demonic vocal textures, and a wall of sound that feels like gravity suddenly reversing. Yet what makes this moment so effective is not its heaviness alone, but how deliberately it is framed by restraint. The chaos never feels indulgent, but feels earned. The song repeatedly flirts with the edge of destruction before pulling itself back into calmer waters, creating a push-and-pull dynamic that becomes the emotional engine of the entire EP.

“Weak Tension” deepens this sense of internal conflict, presenting what may be the EP’s most compelling struggle between melody and muscle. There is a near-balladic undercurrent running beneath the track, with melodic motifs that could almost belong to a modern pop or alternative record. But these gentler elements are constantly under siege. Razor-sharp guitars slice through the mix, percussion hits with punishing force, and the overall structure feels like a tug-of-war between vulnerability and aggression. Hints of nu-metal emerge, but they are refracted through a far darker, more modern lens. Rather than nostalgia, the track radiates tension—exactly as its title suggests. It’s the sound of someone trying to hold themselves together while powerful forces threaten to tear everything apart.

The EP closes with “Something Is Wrong,” a track that fully embraces the dual extremes Aleph has been teasing throughout. It begins deceptively, allowing atmosphere and melody to take the lead, lulling the listener into a false sense of stability. But as the song progresses, the balance collapses. By the halfway point, the track is consumed by screaming, demonic vocals and a storm of doom-laden sonics that feel both catastrophic and cathartic. Dark anthemics rise from the chaos, transforming despair into something almost triumphant in its honesty. This closing piece feels like a surrender—not to darkness itself, but to the truth of inner turmoil. It’s an ending that refuses resolution, opting instead for raw acknowledgment, which makes it all the more powerful.

What truly distinguishes Infinity Fall I from mere genre experimentation is Aleph’s unwavering commitment to emotional authenticity. These tracks are not clever exercises in stylistic fusion; they are deeply felt expressions shaped by lived experience and artistic intention. The juxtaposition of deathcore brutality, electro-pop clarity, black metal bleakness, and melodic modern metal cohesion could easily become incoherent in lesser hands. Instead, Aleph identifies the emotional common ground between these seemingly opposing traditions and uses it as a foundation. The result is music that feels personal, immersive, and singular. Infinity Fall I may be brief, but it leaves a lasting impression—a short, sharp descent into a world where chaos and harmony coexist, and where the fall itself becomes a form of truth.

For more information, follow Watch Me Die Inside:
WEBSITE – SPOTIFY – YOUTUBE – INSTAGRAM – TIKTOK

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