Release Context
Enrage arrives as one of the defining statements from Vermilion Eclipse, the 2022 full-length by Brazilian metal collective Semblant. Issued on April 15 via Frontiers Music Srl, the track encapsulates the album’s sharpened focus and expanded dynamics, distilling the band’s dual-vocal firepower, melodic sensibility, and darker gothic undertow into a fierce, tightly constructed single. Composed and lyrically penned by guitarist Juliano Ribeiro, Enrage positions Semblant at the intersection of melodic death metal, modern gothic drama, and hook-forward songwriting.
What Enrage Sounds Like
Semblant lean into a sleek, heavy production that privileges clarity without sacrificing weight. Guitars carve out a dense wall of low-end power, then pivot into bright, melodic figures that edge the song toward anthemic territory. The rhythm section locks into precise double-kick patterns and tactile bass movement, giving each transition a sense of inevitability. Keyboards widen the frame with atmospheric pads and discreet orchestral shades, enhancing the harmonic color rather than overwhelming it.
The song draws its tension from contrast. Serrated riffing and palm-muted churn meet open-chord surges, while the arrangement alternates between clenched, almost claustrophobic verses and a chorus that blows the room wide open. It is a study in compression and release, where aggression and melody are not opposites but interdependent forces.
Dual Voices, One Confrontation
Semblant’s trademark two-singer architecture is central to Enrage. Sergio Mazul’s harsher delivery underlines the song’s visceral core, embodying the threat and volatility of the lyric’s address. In counterpoint, Mizuho Lin supplies the track’s spectral lift, her lines cutting through the mix with clarity and intent. The exchange is not simply aesthetic contrast. It functions as a narrative device, dramatizing the internal and external conflict at the heart of the song.
Key refrains turn into rallying points. Short lines like “Say my name once again” become incantatory, a trigger that pulls the chorus into focus. The repeated “Never mind the sun” drives the song’s will to sever ties with comfort and illusion, while the titular “Enrage” lands as a stark command. The interplay of the two voices gives these phrases weight and memory, the hook returning like a warning flare.
Lyrical Focus and Emotional Terrain
Ribeiro’s lyric circles themes of wrath, reckoning, and the urgency of last chances. The text frames rage as both a threat and a kind of catalyst. Images of disintegration and ash imply an ending already in motion, yet the song does not surrender to nihilism. Its insistence on naming, remembering, and finally embracing the feeling suggests transformation through confrontation. The apocalypse invoked is personal as much as planetary, a breaking point that either erases or remakes.
Repetition is used deliberately. By cycling key phrases, the lyric mirrors the feedback loop of anger, then forces a choice: indulge it blindly or wield it with intent. Enrage takes the latter route, presenting fury as a tool to sever toxic bonds and reclaim agency.
Guitars, Rhythm, and the Machinery of Impact
Ribeiro’s guitar writing balances brute force with melodic articulation. Riffs favor tight, percussive phrasing in the verses, creating the compressed space where the lyric’s tension lives. Lead figures and harmonized lines slide in at strategic moments to color the harmony and heighten drama. The arrangement resists overexposure, keeping motifs lean and returning to them with more pressure each time.
Drummer Thor Sikora drives the song with strict tempo control and bursts of double-kick that underline structural pivots. He accents vocal entrances and riff changes with cymbal work that feels purposeful rather than ornamental. Bassist Johann Piper stitches the low end to the guitars, often shadowing root movement but stepping out to deepen transitions, especially as the chorus opens up. The result is cohesion that reads as muscular, not rigid.
Keys, Texture, and Atmosphere
Keyboardist J. Augusto broadens Enrage with restrained but essential layers. Subtle synth beds, choral pads, and light orchestral touches enlarge the song’s footprint and lend a cinematic afterglow to the heaviest moments. These textures serve the narrative arc, amplifying the shift from internal pressure to outward eruption without softening the attack.
The Visual Companion: Official Video
The official video for Enrage matches the song’s volatility with a performance-forward aesthetic and stylized motion design. Directed by Alceste Ribas in collaboration with Black Flame Pictures, the clip emphasizes the band’s physical presence while folding in LED-driven visual effects to mirror the lyric’s sense of rupture and renewal. The emphasis on lighting and motion turns the performance space into an active character, a shifting environment that refracts the song’s escalating stakes.
The production team leans on tactile craft as much as digital sheen. With motion and LED VFX by Ciriato Brambilla, the imagery pulses in step with rhythmic accents, making visual rhythm part of the arrangement. Careful attention to set and light design intensifies the contrasts already built into the music, pushing the chorus into a larger-than-life register without losing the grit of the band’s onstage energy.
Credits and Personnel
Song
- Music and lyrics by Juliano Ribeiro
Semblant
- Mizuho Lin – female vocal
- Sergio Mazul – male vocal
- Juliano Ribeiro – guitar
- Johann Piper – bass
- Thor Sikora – drums
- J. Augusto – keyboards
Official Video
- Directed by: Alceste Ribas & Black Flame Pictures
- Motion/LED VFX: Ciriato Brambilla
- Executive Producer: Sergio Mazul
- Cast Director: César Ricardo
- Set Producer: Angelica Elisa
- Makeup: Sarah Rachel
- Light Tech: Luciano Fernandes
- LED Tech: Marcos Zelma
- Set Security: Gerson Junior
- Location: Pedro Ferreira
Why It Lands
Enrage succeeds because it condenses Semblant’s defining elements into a compact, repeatable surge. The hook is immediate, the heaviness measured and effective, the atmosphere thick without turning ornamental. The dual vocals feel purposeful, advancing the narrative rather than simply decorating it. As a preview of what Vermilion Eclipse offers in full, it makes a persuasive case for the band’s continued evolution, sharpening their melodic edge while doubling down on impact.
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