Formed in Berlin, Germany in December of 2012 by vocalist Minas Marston and bassist James Smith, EDGE OF EVER is a Greek/German metal band that consists of members of various origins. With differing languages, ages and experience, it makes for a unique combination of progressive elements, melody and breakdowns. The music itself is hard to put into a single box, but all in all it is a combination of old and new school heavy metal with an emphasis on prog and at times metalcore. Their debut album, "Global Ignition" received excellent reviews from various rock and metal magazines and the band has played a score of concerts in Germany and abroad since. The two disc epic, "We Came with the Flood" opens with "A Distant Thunder," predictably with the sounds of rain, thunder and ominous drones, foreshadowing the impending "flood" of deeply emotional music about to come. Right away, in comes the title track, with a slow, gut-wrenching solo, wasting no time to introduce the talented Minas Marston with a vocal style one is used to in the progressive metal genre. We are shown right off the bat that guitar solos are going to be an ever-present aspect of the album. "Pitch Black Destiny" starts off showing off their clear love for metalcore, with some tremolo picking and fleshes out some catchy grooves and hardcore riffage, an aspect of this group that I cannot get enough of and "Je Suis Anglogergreekrustican" shows this love even further, starting with a tasty breakdown. "Slavephone," an obvious commentary on society's obsession with cellphones starts with samples of various ringtones and goes into one of the most angsty songs on the album, skank beats, shouted vocals, dissonant chords and tremolo picking and it leaves me wishing it was longer than two minutes. The first half of this two-disc emotional roller-coaster ends with a slow-burning, sentimental ballad that leaves the faint of heart teary eyed. Heavy emphasis on synth and vocals with raw emotion with a dash of synthesized violin, it's a fitting end to the first leg of album.