Mosquito Control / The Red Sea
LP |04/03/2011
Before Isis became one of the defining forces in post-metal, they forged their identity through two essential early releases: Mosquito Control and The Red Sea. These records capture the band’s transformation from raw, crushing sludge into a more atmospheric and dynamic form of heaviness. Heard together, they form a compelling portrait of artistic evolution, each release expanding the band’s sonic ambition while preserving the primal intensity that first set them apart.
Mosquito Control stands as an early creative milestone, driven by an oppressive, buzzing heaviness that mirrors its thematic concept. The opening track Poison Eggs immediately introduces massive, down-tuned guitars and thick layers of distortion, supported by shifting rhythmic patterns that create a sense of mechanical dread. The track’s density feels overwhelming yet purposeful, pointing toward the atmospheric instincts the band would later refine.
Life Under the Swatter deepens this tension, moving between lumbering sludge and unexpected moments of stark spaciousness. These quieter passages show Isis experimenting with negative space, allowing moments of breath within the heaviness without diminishing the EP’s intensity. Hive Destruction brings some of the most ferocious riffs of the band’s early years, grinding forward with relentless force and highlighting their ability to maintain raw aggression while still building narrative momentum.
The EP closes with Relocation Swarm, a sprawling and dynamic piece that shifts fluidly between slow, crushing grooves and frantic bursts of chaos. It is here that Isis first begins to explore long-form structural ideas, creating movement through contrast rather than constant volume. The track’s evolving structure hints at future explorations into pacing, buildup, and release, marking Relocation Swarm as a key transitional moment in their early sound.
Across Mosquito Control, Isis demonstrates a command of weight and texture that extends beyond conventional sludge metal. The music feels abrasive and monolithic, yet flashes of emerging subtlety reveal a band already searching for new forms of expression.
Where Mosquito Control thrives on sheer force, The Red Sea introduces a deeper sense of atmosphere, restraint, and deliberate construction. The title track The Red Sea opens with a brooding blend of low-end rumble and slow-moving guitar work, creating a darker, more expansive mood. The pacing feels more patient, the dynamics more intentional, establishing an emotional landscape rather than simply pushing forward with brute power.
Smiles and Handshakes intensifies this sense of contrast by weaving harsh, abrasive sections with quieter, more introspective moments. The interplay between these extremes creates an ebb and flow that hints at the band’s impending shift toward post-metal’s layering and narrative progression. Catalyst showcases further refinement, built on repetitive, hypnotic riffs that gradually shift in texture and intensity. This measured approach signals the emergence of a new sonic identity, one rooted in atmosphere as much as aggression.
The additional early recordings often packaged with the release, including tracks such as Ochre, Lines Across Eyes, and demo versions of key songs, provide insight into the band’s process. They reveal experiments with mood, pacing, and structure, showing Isis exploring the boundaries of their sound in real time. These pieces feel raw yet thoughtful, offering a glimpse of ideas still in formation.
In The Red Sea, Isis achieves a crucial balance between heaviness and atmosphere. The music retains the grit and weight of earlier work while pushing into more nuanced emotional territory, creating a sound that feels both massive and introspective.
Together, Mosquito Control and The Red Sea chart the evolution of Isis from a force of pure, crushing sludge into a band discovering its potential for depth, dynamics, and atmosphere. Mosquito Control captures the raw energy of a young band challenging the boundaries of heaviness, while The Red Sea marks the moment where those ideas take on new shape, expanding into richer emotional spaces.
These releases form the foundation of everything Isis would go on to achieve. They stand not only as powerful statements in their own right but also as essential chapters in the story of a band redefining what heavy music could be.
