Opener "Extruder-Destroyer" sets the template and runs with it — clipped, metronomic synth stabs colliding with guitars sanded down to a single distorted edge. It's blunt-force songwriting, the sonic equivalent of a perfectly timed haymaker, and it lands because the band refuse to let up for even a second. "Mind Control Techniques" follows with a vocal performance flattened and processed into something closer to a transmission than a song, a barked command from behind the gas mask that suits the material perfectly, while "Rocket Launcher" — title aside — emerges as the record's most disciplined cut, all clenched-jaw groove and zero wasted motion.
What's most admirable is how committed the whole project is to its own mythology. The militia aesthetic, the riot gear, the press notes about "transcontinental declarations of war" — this is theatre played dead straight, and Leather Laces never once flinch from the bit. "Deployed to Hell" and "Marching In The Fog" lean fully into that self-seriousness, letting the industrial clatter do the emotional heavy lifting, and "Heavy Machine Gun" pushes the bravado right to the edge of self-parody with a wink that never quite breaks the mask.
The album's finest stretch comes through texture rather than theme. "Massive Dark Raid" layers its synthesizers with real patience, building a genuine sense of dread that the lyric sheet only needs to hint at, while "Midnight Extraction Point" strips things back just enough to let the production breathe — a smart, confident moment of restraint that shows Devisal Studios know exactly when to pull back as well as when to detonate. By the closing "Unit Goes Home," the bombast settles into something unexpectedly tender, a weary, atmospheric come-down after eight tracks of relentless intensity, and it's the moment the record reveals there's real feeling underneath all that armour.
Musically, Leather Laces sit in good company — somewhere between Rammstein's theatrical stomp and the colder mechanics of early Front 242 — and they bring a sharp, modern production sheen to that lineage. The masks and the militia framing aren't just gimmick; they give the whole record a sense of purpose and spectacle that plenty of bands in this genre never bother reaching for.
This is a band with a genuinely excellent ear for a synth hook and a clear, confident vision of exactly the kind of noise they want to make. *Intercontinental Ballistic Music* is ambitious, theatrical and consistently entertaining, a record that commits fully to its concept and mostly earns every minute of the run time. A transcontinental declaration of war it may call itself, but really it's something better: a hugely confident, full-throttle statement of intent.
