
Toronto-based Weight Belly .3-9 comes in hot and unsettling with “White Rabbit – Weight Belly .3-9,” a January 4, 2026, release that warns while humming through broken wires. Rooted in nu-metal but warped through electronic textures, the track nods to the raw intensity of Deftones’ Adrenaline era while carving out a colder, more industrial headspace of its own.
From the jump, “White Rabbit – Weight Belly .3-9” builds an uneasy atmosphere. Metallic rustles scrape across an intimidating, slow, droning soundscape, jittery and off-balance, like machinery breathing in the dark. Crunchy electric guitar riffs grind against wobbling basslines, while the beat pulses with a steady, predatory patience. Nothing rushes, and that restraint only makes the tension worse — in the best way.
Vocally, Weight Belly .3-9 sings in a slow, serrated cadence, sharp and unnervingly calm, as if spoken through clenched teeth and a half-smile. There’s something menacing in the delivery, especially when phrases like “listen to the earth, it’s speaking” and “white rabbit is peaking” repeat like coded messages. The “white rabbit” becomes a symbol — nature pushed too far, animals and ecosystems snapping back, reality glitching under pressure. Lines about empty trees and leaking landscapes land heavy, turning environmental anxiety into something visceral and personal.
Midway through, the track sinks deeper into its groove, flexing its electronic-metal fusion with thick bass hits and distorted textures that feel almost physical. The production thrives on contrast: clean, crisp vocal edges against filthy low-end weight, order fighting chaos.
“White Rabbit – Weight Belly .3-9” thrives on vibe, message, and menace. It’s edgy, industrial, and confrontational — a nu-metal mutation for a restless future, where the earth isn’t whispering anymore. It’s speaking loud.
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Review by: Naomi Joan
