Brodequin, hailing from Tennessee, really know how to make their albums brutal and Methods of Execution is no exception. From the time when the first song hits you, the brutality will not stop, and it will drag you violently along with it. The first noticeable thing about this album is the production. It is absolutely abysmal. It sounds like the demos from Devourment. It is very raw and grinding. Beneath the production are the instruments, which are all singularly focused on brutality. The vocals are of the guttural inhale variety and do not stray from this pattern anywhere on the album. The guitarist Mike Bailey (owner of Unmatched Brutality Records and brother of vocalist/bassist Jamie Bailey), puts out a wall of sound, but builds that wall with riffs. Although the guitars are pounding and brutal, riffs can be heard and enjoyed. The drums are comprised of skillfully played blastbeats and double bassing.