Hum of Hurt is a significant record in Converge’s career — one that holds onto their aggression while pushing further into emotional territory. It doesn’t reinvent the band, but it doesn’t need to. The rawness here feels earned.
The album connects naturally to their earlier work, but there’s a steadiness to it that wasn’t always present before. It sounds like a band that knows exactly what it wants to say and how to say it.
Production-wise, the record is sharp without being sterile. Most tracks are short and hit hard — two minutes, sometimes less — and that pace keeps things relentless from start to finish. Repeated listens reveal more than the first pass suggests.
The album lands well in the current metalcore landscape, where a lot of records blur together. Converge avoids that. The mix of heavy, direct riffing and more unpredictable moments gives Hum of Hurt a distinct character that holds up over time.
This is a band still operating at a high level, and the record reflects that. It’s not a reinvention — it’s a refinement. For anyone paying attention to where metalcore can still go, this is worth the time.
