‘Amer’ — Ten years on, still as raw, urgent, and uncompromising as the day it was forged.
Originally dropped in 2015, when it hit like a blunt weapon to the chest, ‘Amer’ delivered eleven tracks of metallic hardcore fury from French quartet The Prestige — all teeth, no compromise. A decade on, Banshies Records (CELESTE, Heaven In Her Arms, Lost In Kiev…) cracks the seal for a digital reissue, and the impact hasn’t dulled one bit.
This is ‘Amer’: razor-edged French lyrics, neck-snapping riffs, and a feral energy colliding head‑on with Converge, Every Time I Die, Norma Jean, The Chariot, and Will Haven. It grinds, slams, and tears through the air with surgical force — from the thirty‑five‑second pressure chamber of “Bête Noire” to the haunting fracture of “Petite mort,” before closing with the bloodstained final swing of “Cri de cœur.”
The album’s spirit is mirrored in the band’s 2014 Cuba tour documentary ‘Dark Was the Night, Cold Was the Ground’ produced by RSTLSS radio & network — a raw and unfiltered portrait of life, resilience, and confrontation that gives deeper context to the music’s rage and urgency.
Backed by production – by Amaury Sauvé from The Apiary Studio (As We Draw, Birds In Row, Lost In Kiev, THOT…) – that makes every riff, roar, and breakdown hit like shrapnel, Amer remains a testament to The Prestige’s craft, vision, and refusal to pull a single punch.
A decade later, it continues to inspire, provoke, and devastate — an uncompromising work that has lost none of its bite. So, rediscover the album via remastered version of the initial review published 10 years ago.