Infinity Fall I is a tightly focused EP that introduces Watch Me Die Inside as more than just another genre experiment. It feels deliberate, emotional, and oddly personal, even beneath layers of distortion and synthetic textures. Aleph doesn’t just blend styles here—he lets them collide, overlap, and sometimes sit uncomfortably together, which gives the record its edge.

The opening track, “Infinity Fall I,” sets the tone immediately. It moves with a sense of slow descent, balancing heavy riffs with melodic passages that feel reflective rather than triumphant. The electronic elements don’t soften the track; instead, they add a detached, almost cold atmosphere that contrasts sharply with the weight of the guitars. It feels like an introduction to a larger emotional space rather than a standalone song. “Weak Tension” sharpens the EP’s intensity. This track leans harder into the deathcore side of Aleph’s sound, with tighter rhythms and more aggressive pacing. What stands out is how controlled it feels—nothing is overplayed. The melodies surface briefly, then pull back, creating a constant push-and-pull that mirrors the title. It’s tense without being chaotic, heavy without losing structure.
The closing track, “Something Is Wrong,” is where the EP becomes most unsettling. There’s an underlying unease throughout the song, driven by sparse moments, eerie ambience, and a sense that the track is deliberately holding back. It feels introspective and slightly broken, ending the EP on a note that lingers rather than resolves. Overall, Infinity Fall I feels like a snapshot of an artist refining his own language. Aleph isn’t chasing trends or easy hooks—he’s building a world, piece by piece, and inviting listeners to sit with its weight.
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