The guitar is where this album truly shines in its ability to convey atmosphere and melody in a fluid manner while being helped along by a drummer more than capable of delivering needed dynamic shifts. The listener is sped along tremolos that go for a hypnotic vibe in a tone that evokes images of the sky and space with the constant rising feeling in the melodies and slick production meant to highlight the intricacies of the composition. This really does sound like a serious take on technical death metal for the space age. Imagine if spacey melodies and bizarre tremolos were included instead of the usual breakdowns, and effects pedals gave us effects that went for an imposing and ethereal feeling rather than making pinball sound effects, plus a penchant for triumphant solos, you'd get Fallujah on The Harvest Wombs. This sounds in many ways like a far less goofy and deathcore-y version of Rings of Saturn. They have advanced into the world of progressive tech death with a heavy emphasis on clean and majestic melodies with a futuristic bent to them.
Fallujah delivers their first full length album in a completely new style compared to the blackened deathcore of Leper Colony.