Frequency Overload don’t waste time trying to impress, you feel “Trash King” before you even process it. It kicks in fast, loud, and unapologetic, like walking straight into a pit mid-song. There’s a lived-in quality here that only comes from years of playing small stages, loud rooms, and unpredictable crowds. Nothing feels forced. It’s just raw, direct, and meant to be played at full volume. The chorus lands with real force, built around a chant that feels made for the pit “Rise again, feel the rush. Stand on up, time to crush. Sword in hand, one more thing, Grab your crown you are the thrash king.” It’s the kind of moment that turns a crowd into a single unit, loud, sweaty, and completely locked in.
The guitars come in sharp and biting, with riffs that stick after the first listen. Corey Schaefer keeps things aggressive but controlled, while Kevin Daily’s drumming hits hard without overcomplicating anything. The rhythm section holds everything together in a way that feels natural, not polished to perfection but locked in where it counts. You’ll catch hints of Anthrax and Exodus in the pacing and attitude, but it comes across more as influence than imitation.

The track stays grounded in something real—the mosh pit, the people in it, and the unspoken understanding between them. Mr. Bush delivers the vocals with grit and a bit of attitude, like someone who’s actually been in that chaos, not just writing about it. The chorus lands in a way that feels meant to be shouted back, not just listened to. It’s simple, but that’s exactly why it works.
What stands out most is how honest the whole thing feels. “Trash King” isn’t trying to modernize thrash or turn it into something it’s not. It sticks to what makes the genre hit in the first place: speed, energy, and that shared moment when the music takes over the room. It’s the kind of track that makes more sense in a crowd than on headphones and that’s a good thing.
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