
The moment the video for "One Hundred and One" drops, the world gets a reminder of what real rock sounds like. The opening strike hits like a sledgehammer to your skull. Every second of the intro demands attention. If you think this is background noise, sit down and listen.
Riff Warfare
Nigel Broad launches the main riff with surgical precision. The notes slice through the mix like a hot blade. The pattern repeats but never feels redundant; each repeat adds a new twist. This is the kind of guitar work that makes lesser players cringe.
The tone is raw yet articulate, a perfect marriage of vintage distortion and modern clarity. Broad’s picking is relentless, never wavering. The chord voicings are unconventional, forcing the ear to adapt. No lazy power chords here, only crafted aggression.
Percussive Fury
Rush Puppie drags the tempo into a frenzy without losing control. The kick thunders like a war drum, the snare cracks with surgical accuracy. Every fill feels earned, not tacked on for hype. The rhythm section drives the song forward like a freight train.
The low‑end lock between drums and bass creates a wall of sound that swallows any hint of weakness. The groove never settles into a predictable pattern; it constantly shifts to keep the listener on edge. Puppie’s cymbal work adds a metallic sheen that matches the track’s title. This is percussion that demands respect.
Why This Track Matters
The production strips away any pretense, delivering a mix that feels live and immediate. There is no glossy veneer to hide the raw energy. The dynamics surge and recede with purpose, never yielding to complacency. This is a masterclass in balancing aggression and clarity.
While DED spends July re‑releasing old material, Release actually creates something worth hearing. The deluxe edition of "Resent" adds filler tracks that replay old ideas. "One Hundred and One" refuses to be a rehash; it carves a new path. If you crave innovation, this is the track that shows where metal should go.
The song’s structure refuses the safe verse‑chorus‑verse formula. It builds tension, releases it, then flips the script entirely. Listeners who expect a predictable hook are left scrambling for a foothold. This is a bold statement against the industry’s laziness.
In the end, "One Hundred and One" stands as a benchmark for modern rock. It forces every other act to either step up or step aside. Release has delivered a track that makes mediocrity look like a crime. If you’re still not convinced, you’re simply not listening.

