Quantcast
Channel: Musipedia Of Metal
Viewing all 4388 articles
Browse latest View live

Reviews: Avatar, Buffalo Summer, Mother Feather

$
0
0
Avatar: Feathers & Flesh (Entertainment One)

Avatar have steadily upped their game on every release, with 2012's Black Waltz announcing them to the world at large only to be improved upon greatly by 2014's Hail The Apocalypse, this is where the band varied their scope bringing together a mix of groove, death, black and even some progressive and power metal influences fusing them together to produce a unique sound, their sixth album sees them once again improving their game and expanding their sound. Feathers & Flesh is a concept record that frontman Johannes Eckerström explains: "It's about this owl who goes to war against the world to prevent the sun from rising. It's a fable inspired by the work of the famous French fable writer Jean de La Fontaine so the creatures in the fable represent a side of the human psyche or different behaviors" so a high concept piece but one that is delivered with some of Avatar's most ambitious but accessible music they've produced.

The album kicks off with the sorrowful Regret that introduces the protagonist Owl and what will become the overarching theme of the record, then we are taken back when the Owl is at the top of his game on the pure metal House Of Eternal Hunt which is rampaging power metal-like track laced with classical acoustics and insane two-hand tapping solos showing the skill of Jonas "Kungen" Jarlsby and Tim Öhrström who really impress throughout the record with their guitar skill giving the record it's modern but classic sound, House... moves into the commanding stomp of The Eagle Has Landed which has the vaudeville call of "Ladies & Gentlemen" on which Johannes Eckerström shows off his dual personality vocal and his ringleader caricature welcoming us to the rest of the album backed by a rhythmic groove-laden stomp.

Eckerström's vocals are at their very best on this record dividing their time between a sonorous, insistent clean vocal before unleashing his harsher side. New Land is one of the better tracks to show this off as it is almost choral in places with the occasional foray into screams, New Land also is driven by the progressive drumming of John Alfredsson who along with bassist Henrik Sandelin is key to the stripped back verses in heavy creeping surf rock influenced Tooth, Beak And Claw which has nearly all snarled vocals a counterpoint to the more upbeat musical backing, the rhythm section are also used to their fullest on Pray The Sun Away (do I detect cowbell?)

Feathers & Flesh is certainly the bands most progressive output so far, I'd say it has mix of Von Hertzen Brothers, Lamb Of God and Rob Zombie all meshed together but it makes for an interesting listen, because of the wide variety of styles on offer most people will be able to find something that will tickle their fancy, but at 14 songs it could be a little too complicated for those of the thrash disposition (joke) however stick with the record as you'll be rewarded by some interesting, intricate, impressive and downright heavy metal with artistic flourishes.

Tracks such as the ballad Fiddler's Farewell, the county-fied heaviness of Black Waters (very Sons Of Anarchy) along with the anthemic folky Night Never Ending all add balance to the record meaning that nothing ever grows stale over it's length right up to the gurgling, orchestral final track Sky Burial. This record is absolutely excellent and if nothing else it ensures my presence at their mainstage opening performance on the Saturday at Download, luckily it does more than that and is an album that I and hopefully you will revisit numerous time this year. 9/10    

Buffalo Summer: Second Sun (UDR)

I went to the launch night of Buffalo Summer's sophomore record the day before it's official release, I heard most of the record live meaning that I sort of knew what to expect when I heard it however from the first listen the band sound a lot more accomplished their songwriting has improved significantly, although they were no slouches on their debut, their is also more a professional edge to this recording, it sounds like a major label record, possibly due to the influence of producer Barrett Martin (Screaming Trees) who also adds the percussion, hammond organ and vibraphone. As you can probably tell from that list of instruments the Neath quartet have also added more varied flavours to this second effort adding to the hard rocking their debut was packed with, although that is still there on stomping opening twosome of Money and the groovy Heartbreakin' Floorshakin'and the direct Into Your Head.

The funk comes on strong with Little Charles, there is a definite blues base to Priscilla, while High As The Pines has a stoner focus, Levitate and Water To Wine bring a country twang and they even try their hand at a ballad with Light Of The Sun which is done well avoiding smaltz and adding a touch of muscle. Still the racket is made by Gareth's powerful drumming, Darren's rhythmic grooving bass, Jonny's soaring, flowing guitars and Andrew's hollering vocals all of which lock together perfectly on the songs meaning that this record has an organic feel to it. Second Sun is a classy hard rock record that shows the band have learnt a lot from the high profile tours; it's a slickly produced, expertly played and full of accomplished songcraft. This second album that will see the band on a steep upward trajectory, do yourself a favour and pick up Second Sun as it proves Gene Simmons wrong, rock n roll is very much alive and kicking. 8/10  

Mother Feather: Mother Feather (Metal Blade)

New York band Mother Feather were formed by frontwoman Ann Courtney after growing disillusioned with the scene at large, at the same time she found her kindred spirit in Elizabeth Carena or Lizzie and with one small Freudian slip while trying to swear Mother Feather's name was born. The band style themselves as pro-feminist pop cock rock and their album is glitter bomb of garage rock wrapped in a glam rock bacofoil cape and covered in face paint and ostentatious make-up.

Think The Stooges, New York Dolls or The MC5 with pop sensibilities, a distinct alt-rock edge and girl power lyrical content with a dominant, defiant purr by Courtney and her partner in crime Carena. It's the duality of the vocals that gives this record it's decided edge, the pop sensibilities of the record are heightened by the dual vocals working in tandem meaning that there are 50's doo-wop/rock n roll call and response elements as well as some more 60's style harmonizing, all of the tracks are driven by the rhythm section of Gunnar Olsen and Matt Basile who push the thumping stomps of the glam rock on the title track allowing Chris Foley to add some staccato, fuzzy guitar riffs and shimmering lead breaks while Carena handles the keys and organs that make a lot of the songs on this record have an innate danceability to them, especially the funky, filthy Trampoline with its' superb innuendo laced smile raising chorus.

Mother Feather's debut has all the hallmarks of a genre straddling classic that will appeal to wide audience as there is enough pop for those that love to shake their booty but enough grunting rock for the long hairs' listening, Mother Feather have balanced both sounds very well on their debut showing a lot of the male dominant bands what it really means to have balls! 8/10  

A View From The Back Of The Room: Haken

$
0
0
Haken, Special Providence & Arkentype, The Fleece Bristol

The last few gigs I've been too have been a bit of a mix style wise, from Magnum's melodic pomp, too a stripped back Virginmarys set, through hard rock of Buffalo Summer and Blind Guardian's power metal majesty, what's been missing is prog. Thankfully Haken have got that covered with their triumphant return to Bristol's The Fleece for the first show of their Affinity tour in support of their fourth full length album.

Heading to the gig post work, I dived in The Seven Stars next door for swift pint of Coffee and Vanilla Porter (which was unique but very nice indeed), however due to the allure of beer I unfortunately missed openers Arkentype but from what I heard through the walls, they seemed to be djent based band with palm muted heavy guitars and soaring vocals. I came into the venue just as they had finished their set to an applause. Due to this it would be unfair to score them so I won't, I'd say just listen to them and make up your own mind.

Special Providence

Next up we had Special Providence from Budapest, they are a totally instrumental progressive jazz band, that played four or five jazz fusion numbers that while technically impressive, were just a little dull for my taste. This maybe due to the lack of vocals but there is only so many times you can hear a fleet fingered 5-string bass and drum combo matched with jazzy keys and complex 7-string guitar playing before it all gets a bit dull. That's not to say it was bad or indeed repetitive the songs were all different but they did sort of blend into one another meaning it was a bit like one long instrumental and because Haken have so many facets to their music the band preceding them just didn't get the place as excited as they should have as the music was little too laid back for many and a bit too virtuoso for the others, still they were received by those that liked their instrumental jazz fusion style however for me there just something lacking. 6/10

Haken

Thankfully Haken's debut show of their AffiniTour v1.0 (yes folks more retro computer referencing) tour in support of their most recent album Affinity was anything but dull as affinity.exe played over the PA as an intro tape, the six piece band took to the stage and kicked off the set with rocky album opener Initiate which had the band and the crowd rocking from the word go, although the band couldn't do much rocking due to the cramped conditions on stage relegating bassist Connor Green to the back of the stage and almost invisible due to the stage lighting. Much of the stage was taken up by Diego Tejeida's massive keyboard set up, but it's him that is the key to much of Haken's sound, as shown by the synth heavy 1985 which is the most Yes song not written by Yes as it features electronic drums and even an amazing keytar solo by Diego.

Breaking these two debuting songs was a classic Haken number Eternal Rain which will be in the set eternally as it is a song that sums up much of the band's past and present very well. In the back corner of the stage was Raymond Hearne who controlled the pace with his immense percussion skills knowing when to ease off and when to apply gas to the heavier tracks, bolstered by the intricate bass playing of Green who despite not being seen could be heard anchoring the more complicated harsh and melodic tones of Richard Henshall and Charles Griffiths guitars that fire off riffs aplenty, along with the occasional lighter more deft touch and a heaving tonne of intense soloing.

The band were clearly reveling in playing the new stuff live but happily for old school Haken fans like myself they didn't forget about their early albums with debut Aquarius represented by Eternal Rain and Visions by Deathless. The rest of the set saw them drawing mainly from Affinity and The Mountain, the first song from which was the eleven minute plus, emotional epic of Falling Back To Earth which served as the first showcase for Ross Jennings incredible vocals that are all at once powerful yet fragile, he always reminds me of Yes' Jon Anderson as he has a similar style and pitch, although Jennings has a wider range.

The band's performance was enhanced greatly by the amazing light show distracted you from the semi-static performance, I say semi static as Jennings has enough energy for two full bands, considering the nature of the music he was adamant about people dancing. How you can dance to The Mountain's Cockroach King is beyond me but there was some Dad style shuffling of feet to the glorious Earthrise. Cockroach King is a real tribute to the bands talent as any band can play a long multi layered song but this song is so complicated vocally and also musically that it could go horribly wrong but manages to be one of the band's most accessible songs.

Now the previous sentence is not to say Haken haven't got longer songs, oh no sir the debuting The Architect clocks in at 15 minutes plus but takes you along for the ride, meaning you are fully invested in the song from start to finish. In a similar vein after the set closer of The Endless Knot it was time for the normal encore, with the rapturous cheers subsiding, the opening chords said it all, another cheer as the 19 minute epic Crystallized was the solitary encore piece but what an encore it was once again moving between sounds and styles balancing light and shade and generally just bewitching those that had stayed late (the show was running later that it should have been). Haken proved on their last tour that they are capable of headlining their own shows, on this one they showed that they are not only capable they are made for being top of the bill! 9/10         

Reviews: Frost*, Lacuna Coil, No Sinner

$
0
0
Frost*: Falling Satellites (InsideOut)

Excuse while I get  abit nerdy at the beginning of this review. Frost* is the brainchild of Jem Godfrey who in a previous life wrote songs for Blue, Atomic Kitten, Holly Valance and Shayne Ward (that bloke from X Factor) however thankfully he stepped away from the forces of evil and embrace the good by following his heart and forming Frost* in 2004. Their debut record Milliontown in my opinion is one of the best examples of post-millennial progressive rock there has ever been and pips their second record Experiments In Mass Appeal to the accolade just because it was the debut. However things never ran smoothly in the frost* camp and the band broke up just after Experiments...only to reform several times for live tours but no actual studio albums.

Around 2012 however Godfrey confirmed that their would be a new Frost* album and in true to the bands way of doing things this has finally been released in 2016. So what if anything has changed? Well I'd say this could be the best Frost* album yet, it's just as ambitious and intensely musical as it's predecessors but these songs sound like they have had time spent on them, they've been able to mature over the album's long gestation period. What has stayed the same is the talent of those involved, Jem Godfrey is still the band and be default the albums Commander-In-Chief with his melodic Gilmour-like vocal style, the beautiful production work and the swathes of keys, piano and synths that drive this album forward and make up the bulk of the bands sound, happily the keys work in perfect synchronicity with the impressive guitar work (and vocals) of Godfrey's long term collaborator John Mitchell (It Bites, Arena, Lonely Robot) the two match each other throughout riff for riff, solo for solo which means that they are the focus of the record. For the first time Mitchell has collaborated on the songwriting with Godfrey meaning that both men can add their own mark to the record.

Now with the excellent lead instrumentation leading what can be quite technical pieces you need an engine room that can cope and luckily Godfrey has one in the shape of Craig Blundell (Steven Wilson) who is no stranger to the prog sphere and adds a powerful but deft touch to the record behind the kit, aided by the son of possibly one of the best bassists in the world Level 42's Mark King, Nathan King has all the talent of his father as he fleshes out the songs with his virtuoso plucking. So with four of the best musicians in Britain together on a record (and a guest spot by one Mr Satriani) the album has to be good, luckily Falling Satellites is better than good, it's phenomenal, split into two parts from track six, the synth heavy Heartstrings until track 11 the reflective Last Day you get a 6 song suite that moves between instrumentals and vocal tracks with ease defining it as one long piece that sees Mitchell and Godfrey duelling with keys and guitars and on the pulsing electro pop of Closer To The Sun sees Joe Satriani rip one of his trademark solos which is matched by Jem.

Away from the suite which also features the rocky The Raging Against The Dying Of The Light Blues In 7/8 (showcasing that excellent basswork), the euphoric Hyperventilate and as I've already said climaxes with the haunting Last Day, we come on to the stand alone tracks, First Day serves as an intro, albeit one that harks to David Gilmour's solo work, to Numbers which has distinct Marillion flavour, this is before they go darker and more angular with the sample heavy, twitchy, industrially sparse Towerblock that builds up to dubstep drop with the synths rattling the speakers, some might call this a misstep but personally I like the experimental factor of the song it is totally different to the rest of the album and is better because of it as it shows the band are in a place where they aren't afraid to take risks. With the darkness abated Signs has a Muse-like quality full of twisting electronics, but not as much as on the synth pop of Lights Out which sees Godfrey duet with Tori Beaumont adding a new dynamic to the song and bearing witness to Godfrey's pop career as this track could be on any modern chart.

Falling Satellites is the culmination of Frost*'s immense talent a triumph of progressive but accessible music, even the CD only bonus tracks are well above many bands best shots, Lantern is a folky romantic simple but effective song while British Wintertime encompasses all the melancholia of what that title brings and finishes Falling Satellites perfectly. I'm so glad I've got a ticket to see this band live at the end of July as one I get to see them perform tracks from the genre beating first two albums but also their equally as fantastic new record, my advice is to play this album often as each time it reveals more of itself meaning you fall in love a little more. 10/10                      

Lacuna Coil: Delirium (Centrury Media)

Lacuna Coil have always played with their Gothic Metal tag adding industrial and even some pop touches to records but never straying far from their normal style, they have always been a safe bet for New Rock sporting, eyeliner wearing Gothic rockers the world over. Well no more after long term drummer Cristiano "Criz" Mozzati along with guitarist Cristiano "Pizza" Migliore left the band on February last year, followed by guitarist Marco "Maus" Biazzi, the band have found their inner brutality.

As the House Of Shame starts off the thrash/groove metal battery is laid down by new drummer Ryan Blake Folden which means that founding frontman Andrea Ferro now screams and growls with haunting vocals of Cristina Scabbia acting as the perfect counterpoint. Ferro's vocals have always been hit and miss for me but I think he has found his niche with the screams as he is a very good harsh vocalist leaving the cleaner stuff to Christina's sublime soaring pipes. This change of style also means that the album features many guitar solos from various guitarists the most high profile being Myles Kennedy on the majestic sounding Downfall with the rest of the musical backing supplied by bassist Marco Colti Zelati who plays bass, guitar, keys and also produces and is the album's renewed creative spark.

This sounds like the album Lacuna Coil have wanted to make for a while, there last couple of records have been darker but this one is their darkest and heaviest, only the title track and Take Me Home both with their bouncing electronic influenced bass driven style harks back to their early years meaning that the sound change is more pronounced on tracks like Blood, Tears, Dust and Broken Things ramping up the more modern metal style with a tip of the hat to Lamb of God or Machine Head with touches of the In This Moment driving industrial metalcore on You Love Me Cause I Hate You. Lacuna Coil have taken a big step in their evolution this album seems more deliberately targeted at turning the band into a more powerful aggressive beast and it's all the better for it. Delirium is the band's best album in a while, let's hope they stick with the newer style as it has reinvigorated Lacuna Coil. 8/10

No Sinner: Old Habits Die Hard (Mascot)

Coleen Rennison the vocalist of Canadian blues rockers No Sinner has a few habits that she can't break, luckily she has an album full of blues rock to tell the world about it. No Sinner burst on to the scene a few years ago with a debut album that centred around driving blues rock riffs and Coleen's impressive vocal performance somewhere between Janis Joplin and Robert Plant with the attitude and passion of those two and many besides. As she explains on the opener All Woman she is indeed that but this album slinks it's way in and out of several stories with sultry and sometime explosive style every song recounted by the powerful, husky pipes of their frontwoman. This second record builds upon the first by adding some more blues influences see the parping mouth harp infecting the stomp of Leadfoot, working through the Southern harmony of Tryin (very Susan Tedeschi) the bayou march of Mandy Lyn and the strutting Fading Away.

The whole album sounds a bit more worked at with the band adding more flavours to their work, this is no 'difficult second album' no it's as good as if not better than their debut and has a greater amount of influences throughout all driven by some top-class musicianship and and Rennison's stunning vocals. When The Bell Rings adds a Zep-style rock out, whereas the homesick Lines On The Highway and barroom ballad Hollow slow things down and allow the powerhouse voice to croon a bit, the percussive filthy One More Time has the hip-shaking groove of The Stones while we go right back with duck walking Chuck Berry Rock N Roll on Saturday Night and the new protocol of soul Vintage Trouble loom large on bonus track Wait.

No Sinner have once again produced a sterling effort putting Rennison up there with some of the best blues rock vocalists in the business her sass and supreme talent are this bands main focal point but with a great backing band bolstering her performance and giving the tracks one hell of a licking as they mesh together with power and passion. If you love your blues rock filthy, flirty and full of excellent talent then pick up Old Habits, Die Hard and get your boogie on. 8/10           

Reviews: Whispered, Spell, Black Magic Fools

$
0
0
Whispered: Metsutan - Songs Of The Void (Inverse Records)

Finland has a bit of a history with progressive, symphonic folk, melodic death metal bands with Wintersun, Ensiferum, Finntroll as well as Insomnium, Children Of Bodom and Norther. Whispered are the latest in line of bands that follow this style and they are somewhere between Wintersun and Children Of Bodom with razor sharp almost power metal riffs, played in progressive music that takes a lot influence from Japanese culture and music, they call it "Samurai Metal" and it's hard to argue otherwise. Opener Strike! gets you going sounding like the soundtrack to a Samurai film played by Bodom, the balstbeats are lightning fast, no way has drummer Jussi just got four limbs, while bassist Kai gets to show off his talent in the middle of the track building up to the epic solos that are shared between Mikko and Jussi, with Jussi also adding the harsh vocals, that are thankfully intelligible meaning that personally I was more drawn to the band than I am normally to melo-death.

The pace stays similar to a bullet train on second track Exile Of The Flooding World which once again has inhuman drumming and a heroic chorus choir before it slips into the middle section of solos and circuses. The lyrics and themes revolve around Samurai, Bushido and Japanese Mythology and this is audible in the music at every turn with some traditional Japanese instruments present throughout, yes it is a bit gimmicky but the band play so well it can be forgiven. Much like compatriots Wintersun the songs are complicated intense pieces that take you on a journey for their duration with the shorter numbers coming in between the album's longer more progressive tales.

I just have to mention the drumming again as it is continually astounding just how good it is but doesn't detract from the stellar performances of the rest of the band, it seems to me that while Japan does have a lot of power metal bands there doesn't seem to be an abundance of bands that deal with countries rich mythology meaning that Whispered have sort of taken the initiative and all the better for it, they also have contributed a theme to the newest Megaman video game which for a band that are not Japanese is kudos indeed.

Why be stuck with Babymetal and Karate when you can have Whispered bringing fire, honour and Katana to songs such as Kensei and Our Voice Shall Be Heard? They merge complexity with atmosphere providing a very strong set of ten songs that climax with the immense eleven minute final cut Bloodred Shores Of Enoshima which like the tales of Yūrei from Japanese legend rise from auspicious beginnings to evoke you with their power. Metsutan - Songs Of The Void is yet another superb album from the Finnish band (their third) and by rights it should get them the plaudits they deserve, or at least onto the Bloodstock bill, in the meantime you'll just have to play this record to death as it is brilliant! 9/10 

Spell: For None And All (Bad Omen Records)

Spell hail from Vancouver British Columbia and along with what seems to be a  new band every week they are firmly part of the NWOTHM that seems to be coming from the country, obviously the leaders of traditional Canadian metal scene are the unkillable Anvil but more recently bands like Cauldron and Striker have taken the spiked gauntlet and made the music their own. Up until 2013 Spell were called Stryker but probably due to the recognition of the other band with a similar name and the number of bands with the same name, their debut was released and 2014 and now 2 years later they have followed it up with For None And All.

By the negative tone of the title you can tell this is not going to be a tongue-in-cheek metal record with occult, dark references in the lyrics the band sound a lot like Cauldron due to their three piece bass heavy set up, the songs are proto-metal with nods to doom and psychedelia, however with music like this it is difficult not to be repetitive and unfortunately Spell do fall into that trap as a number of the songs on this record do sound very similar, yes there are some keys employed on Whipping Sigils and Seance and the band really tackle the stoner doom with River Of Sleep but tracks like Madame Psychosis and The Veil just have almost identical riffs and they are not the only songs that do this. For None And All is not a bad album but it is just a little too lacking in progression and scope to make much of mark. 5/10

Black Magic Fools: Soul Collector (Self Released)

Folk metal seems to be the genre that will never day, right the way back Skyclad in the 90's the mix of crunching guitars and folk instruments seems to stir something in even the most hardened metal fan, meaning that usually the gigs end in much jigging, dancing and of course ale quaffing. Black Magic Fools hail from Sweden and play what is essentially medieval folk with the metallic backline so expect powerful drumming, guitar riffs and solos mixed with the bands dual violin/fiddles from Ida and Katja as well as bagpipes, flutes and jew harps from frontman Pontus.

One look at the press release and you can see the band go all out dressing the part and blending the two genres together especially on Lies which has modern metal breakdowns and the dual violins doing their work in an almost shanty style song. There is almost a Pirates Of The Caribbeanesque sound to many of the tracks, due to the mix of traditional and electric instruments, with Black Jig a morbid tale of torture and death, infact this is a theme that goes through the album especially on the title track.

Unlike Whispered the songs on this record are shorter and more direct similar to Korpiklaani or indeed a folkier Breed 77 as Black Magic Fools have a similar modern groove metal sound setting the rhythm for the folk instruments to built upon, they even dabble with acoustic guitars on A Jester's Confession. Soul Collector is BMF's debut full length and it has enough on it to appeal to folk metal fans, it's let down a little by the muffled production but it's a jolly good start moving away from the happy clappy nature of normal folk metal and adding a touch of darkness to proceedings. 7/10      

Reviews: Hatebreed, Sixx A.M, Messenger (Review By Paul)

$
0
0
Hatebreed: The Concrete Confessional (Nuclear Blast)

Let's be fair. You either love Hatebreed or they do fuck all for you. The Concrete Confessional isn’t going to change that opinion. This is full on in your face aggression and it really hits the buttons. A.D. Opens proceedings, Jamie Jasta’s emotional outpourings right at the fore, riffs galore and a total assault on the senses. Plentiful riffs cascade through every track, urgency the name of the game. Looking Down the Barrel Of Today is the metal equivalent of blitzkrieg, no place to hide as all gauges are set to destroy. And so it continues; Seven Enemies, In The Walls and From Grace We’ve Fallen all follow the same formula. 

It's pit stomping stuff, crashing and rampaging all over the place. From Grace We've Fallen contains a Testament style chorus which moves slightly away from the usual ‘Breed style but otherwise this is a continuation of the Hatebreed onslaught. It's brutal, unforgiving and ideal for venting that anger following a hard day in your mundane existence. Anthems Of Oppression and Rebellion, born from a million frustrations with the state of the world manifest in the themes that run through this release. Us Against Them, Something’s Off (which departures from the usual fare in no uncertain terms) and Dissonance all shout rebellion and to be fair, who can argue. It may not contain the immediacy of their earlier anthems but The Concrete Confessional still kicks your arse from start to finish. Sure, it may not grab you in the same way that Destroy Everything or Become The Fuse did, but by my white beater (a vest no UK folks) is it heavy. Get your arse in the pit and enjoy. 8/10

Sixx A.M: Prayers For The Damned (Eleven Seven Music)
Sixx A.M is the side turned full-time project of Motley Crue’s Nikki Sixx and it is probably the most accessible of the band’s three releases. With the first album a companion to The Heroin Diaries, Sixx’s cathartic account of his descent into heroin addiction, and their second release a mixture of more radio friendly tunes, Prayers For The Damned moves the band fully into the ‘real’ status. It is pretty standard radio friendly fare but it ticks all the boxes if you like this type of routine polished rock. Opener Rise and You Have Come To The Right Place both have Planet Rock airtime stamped on the underside, whilst I'm Sick maintains the pomp stomp. 

The title track threatens to unleash an epic, a heartfelt emotive rocker with a large dose of catchy hooks to attract those in need of a good dose of short catchy anthems. Musically it's pretty generic. The likes of Better Man steal riffs from a billion other tunes; Can't Stop maintains the simplicity, enhanced by some heavier chords, singalong chorus and synthesiser layers to pad it out. Of course, there is the obligatory power ballad, this time When We We Gods which is average at best. Belly Of The Beast was clearly intended to be a brooding, smouldering monster and whilst it has an edge to it the final effect falls short. As the album reaches its conclusion the fare remains pretty average although Everything Went To Hell is one of the better tracks. It's listenable middle of the road hard rock. It just doesn't grab you by the lapels and scream “Listen to me!!” I'll be interested to see if the band can hold my attention for their full set at Download. Somehow I doubt it. 6/10
Messenger: Thredonies (InsideOut)

The London outfit’s first album Illusory Blues was one of the albums of the year when it was released in 2014 and a stunning live support slot for Hevy Devy’s Casualties Of Cool at the Union Chapel in London demonstrated that promise could be delivered in the live setting. Follow up Thredonies has been long anticipated at MOM towers. Clocking in at just shy of 50 minutes for eight tracks, Thredonies demands attention and commitment. Allocating your time to listen to this beautiful album is well worth it. Thredonies contains a kaleidoscope of intricate and delicious tunes which cascade and immerse the listener in an ethereal musical journey from beginning to end. 

Opener Calyx is light and complex with shades of Muse springing to mind. Messenger flex their muscles on the eight minute epic Oracles Of War, which contains some delicious riffs and a harder edge than many of their other tracks. Musically Messenger are on stunning form and this track demonstrates their progression, full of stomp and swagger and an indie edge many of that genre would die for. It also illustrates exactly why the band were such a perfect fit for the Von Hertzen Brothers on their March tour. Balearic Blue cements the band firmly into their progressive sound, layered guitars and keyboards merging with the frantic drum beat and James Leach’s rolling bass lines. The guitars and vocals of Khaled Lowe and Barnaby Maddick are just stunning with the Floyd and Opeth fusion of sound incredibly appealing. 

Indeed, throughout the album snippets of the Swedes complex sound regularly catch the attention. This is breathtaking in both composition and performance. Celestial Spheres continues the complexity with a large dose of funk and some chunky Hammond organ riffs transporting you not only back to Opeth but to the 1970s, albeit with a fresh and modern sound. In fact, I’ll stop listing the tracks and invite you to head onto the band’s website and pick up a copy immediately. Thredonies is a superior release to Illusory Blues and a more ambitious one too. However, it is also more accessible; check out Nocturne; instant, simple yet beautifully intricate. I can’t praise this album enough. Khaled Lowe, Barnaby Maddick, Jamie Gomez Arellano Daniel Knight and James Leach take a bow. One of the releases of 2016. 9/10



Reviews: Mudcrutch, Band Of Skulls, Staticland

$
0
0
Mudcrutch: 2 (Reprise)

Eight years between records is a long time for most bands, however when you take into consideration that Mudcrutch was formed in 1970 and didn't release their debut album until 2008 it puts everything into perspective. This is due to the fact that Mudcrutch was formed by Tom Leadon and Tom Petty, the band released a few singles and then went their separate ways with Petty going on to form the more recognisable and successful Heartbreakers and band he still fronts to this day. In 2008 he reconnected with Leadon so long with him drummer Randall Marsh and fellow Heartbreakers Benmont Tench and Mike Campbell on keys and guitars respectively. 

Mudcrutch had their renaissance, so after more Heartbreakers records the men have reconvened again for the second record some eight years later. Yes with Petty and two of his Heartbreakers part of the band there is a distinctly Heartbreakers vibe to the songs see opener Trailer and the propulsive Beautiful World (which was one of the few tracks not written by Petty) mainly due to Petty's unmistakable drawl but Mudcrutch are a a Southern rock band at heart drawing from bands such as The Eagles, The Allman's and the much missed Quicksilver Messenger Service. The Eagles link is the biggest one to influence the songs as Petty, Tench and Leadon all share vocals between the track Beautiful World is the best example of this and Beautiful Blue which could easily be a Henley crooned ballad. 

Mudcrutch are traditional southern music by a band that are old hats at the genre, I Forgive It All is stripped back number that sounds like Mark Knopfler at his most introspective but it is quickly washed away by the banjo/slide guitar led on The Other Side Of The Mountain which has a railroad shuffle to it. 2 picks up where Mudcrutch left off with the kind of mature Southern rock you'd expect from a band made up of veterans of the American music scene, the dual channeled guitars, analogue feel and direct songwriting are all retained from the debut, with Eagles now over (I should think) it's good to see that Petty, Leadon and their  assorted "Crutchbreakers" are their to carry the country rock torch. 8/10

Band Of Skulls: By Default (BMG)

Here's a band that are a bit of an enigma when it comes to rock music, they seem to be too indie for many rockers and to heavy for a lot of indie kids, despite this they play sold out concerts and are regularly featured in TV shows and Ads as well as getting playback on Radio 1. Personally I've always really enjoyed their heavyweight modern blues rock that straddles stoner and garage rock. The Southampton trio have toured relentlessly for the five years preceding this their fourth album, frontman/guitarist  Russell Marsden declared that By Default is a "new beginning" and that he believes that the first three records were "part of one trilogy" so with the trilogy now complete have Band Of Skulls massively reinvented themselves? Well the answer is no if anything Band Of Skulls are more focussed than they have been doing away with the more progressive touches to their music that were present on their last record Himalayan

For this record the band took up residence in a Baptist church and the freedom of this venue along with no looming tour means that despite the songs being shorter and more direct they are more considered with the band supposedly having written over 100 songs for the record before being able to knock it down to the 12 tracks on this record. Opener Black Magic starts with a snappy snare from Matthew Hayward before it's funk meets Zep groove kicks in with Emma Richardsons bass driving it letting Marsden uses some quiet-loud dynamics with his guitars ramping up at the end, Black Magic gives way to the surf rock of Back Of Beyond which is an up tempo cut with Killer ramping things up again with a lot of bass rhythms and shuddering riffs and huge hook to the chorus. 

The theatrical Tropical Disease sees things get darker and is followed by the funk-rock of So Good which is Emma Richardson's first vocal performance on the record. By Default sees Band Of Skulls expand their remit incorporating cinematic themes later on the album and streamlining their approach making this the most direct album to date. 7/10    

Jeff Angell's Staticland: Staticland (UDR)

 Jeff Angell is formerly of The Missionary Positionbut is probably more well known as part of The Walking Papers supergroup that featured Screaming Tree's Barrett Martin and G'N'R bassist Duff McKagan. Angell was the vocalist and guitarist of the band and his live presence, his soulful vocals and intricate but savage guitar playing all won me over when I saw the band supporting Alice In Chains. The band are now on hiatus (perhaps indefinitely due to McKagan returning to G'N'R) meaning that Angell has formed a new project along with two of his main contributors. This project is Staticland and the album of the same name is their debut effort, once again Angell takes the vocals and guitars with long term writing/performing partner Benjamin Anderson on keys and bass and drummer Joshua Faunt who was in Angell's Post Stardom Depression (the band Angell formed before The Missionary Position).

The album is packed with modern blues rock, with post punk edge and an alternative bent, think any of Jack White's bands fronted by the strutting snarl of Scott Weiland and you'd be pretty close. The Staticland record slips and slides with a slinky blues rock sound, with cutting, melodic guitars, churning organs, some interesting drum patterns and some honest autobiographical lyrics. One listen to direct opener Everything Is Wrong along with Never Look Back and you'll get the picture pretty soon, the song builds and builds into a stylish solo at it's climax, it's followed by Band-Aid On A Bullet Hole which is built upon a repetitive drum and bass riff, the organ sitting in the background making for a disconcerting track with an element of hopelessness to it. 

The band are their core a blues rock band but they try to avoid the normal cliches relying more on sonic impact than the 12 bar although The World Is Gonna Win could have easily pass as Springsteen at his darkest. The lyrics are mainly introspective and drawn from real-life but they are not a miserable band using the realism to their advantage adding a bit of gravitas to the rockier tracks when they need to; Phantom Limb has distorted punky riff at it's heart that echoes in feedback at the songs end, Nola is a more traditional blues track that's backed with a song with yet more Springsteen. Staticland is a great album of impressive modern blues rock, with no sign of The Walking Papers any time soon Staticland will satisfy that part that needs slinky, soulful, alternative blues rock. 8/10      

Reviews: Primitai, Wings Of Destiny, Scarblade

$
0
0
Primitai: Night Brings Insanity (Self Released)

Well they're back folks, the Sandhurst based classic metal warriors Primitai return with their fourth full length album. Night Brings Insanity was released in conjunction with PledgeMusic and saw the band smash their target within a very short period of time. Night Brings Insanity brings together all that's come before it running the gamut of 80's metal with a joyous celebration of that era's most influential bands and sounds. From the NWOBHM, through the sleaze of the Sunset Strip, to Bay Area thrash fury everything is catered for on the bands most ambitious and accomplished record yet. The dual guitar assault of Srdjan Bilic and Tom Draper is in full effect throughout with riffs galore infecting each an every moment with flashes of brilliance, the widdling on Night Hunter would make Dokken gawk at it's neon fluorescence, while My Last Escape has more heavyweight groove managing to sound like Pantera but with huge hook of a chorus.

This last element has always been one of Primitai's major plus points, they know how to write a shout along chorus that always go down a treat on the stage, much of this is due to the brawny gruff vocal delivery of Guy Miller who has a voice similar to Avenged's M Shadows but is a far stronger prospect; giving the music some muscle is the rhythm section of Chris Chilcott and Jamie Lordcastle who are the devastating boiler room. The music featured here is grin inducing, denim clad opulence full of razor sharp metal riffage and fist-in-the-air anthems but the band do slow the pace with Conclusion Forgone which is a massive metal ballad that shows Guy's more emotive side and features a thrilling guitar solo from Srdjan that was surely played atop of mountain (i.e November Rain) such is it's pomp. With touches of Priest, Maiden, Guns N Roses and a decided modern influence too Night Brings Insanity is the album Primitai have been threatening to make since their debut. Where they go from now is in their hands as Night Brings Insanity is the perfect album to capitalise on demonstrating what Primitai do when they are at their very best. 9/10       

Wings Of Destiny: Kings Of Terror (Power Prog)

Wings Of Destiny started their career as Destiny and released their debut album Time in 2014, since then they have adopted the moniker Wings Of Destiny and re-released the debut album in 2015, now they have moved onto their second record that is more of the same the band are a proper power metal band taking their cues from Angra, Stratovarius and Helloween so expect blast beat drumming, speedy guitar playing, sing along choruses and solos galore. With all these influences and the particular style they play in you'd expect WOD to hail from Germany but no the band are from the sunnier climes of Costa Rica but they definitely have a Teutonic sound mixed with fellow South Americans Angra mainly due to Anton Darusso having a vocal similar to Andre Matos going from a rougher lower range to a soaring higher range. The album has two heavyweight metal songs to start it off but they add some synth laced symphonic metal on Kings Of Terror which has some popping keys behind it the symphonic style continues through the dramatic Eye Of The Storm and the operatic Siren's Song which has a female soprano adding to the dramatic song. WOD don't add anything new to the overcrowded power metal genre but if you are big power metal fan then Kings Of Terror is worth picking up as it has elements of all the bands mentioned as well as touches of Savatage meaning that for genre heads it will more than satisfy your appetite, however there are a lot of bands doing this kind of thing better. 6/10 

Scarblade: The Cosmic Wrath (No Remorse)

Scarblade once again are a band that began their career with another name, they were called Ruthless Steel in Athens Greece after just one EP and two compilation appearances frontwoman Aliki and bassist Nikos relocated to Gothenburg Sweden and shed the rest of the band members, however they then recruited Kalle on drums, Jonatan on guitar on Stefan on keys and changed the bands name to Scarblade. The Cosmic Wrath is their debut record and is honest true metal with nods to speed metal and classic bands such as Judas Priest, opener Die In The Night does sound an awful lot like Electric Eye as well as bands such as Firewind, Mystic Prophecy and Silent Force who add the keys and synths to their classic metal sound. What Scarblade have that these bands don't is a female vocalist in the shape of Aliki who snarls and screams on the tracks, showing that not every single female vocalist has to be a classically trained, however maybe some training would be good as Aliki does have a tendency to go a bit flat, quite a lot actually. Point Of No Return is a glaring example and this does detract a little from the albums overall impact. There is really not much more I can say about Scarblade, they are a good band but it's just I wish the vocals could be a bit better as it would just enhance the album that little bit more. 4/10  

Reviews: Volbeat, Death Angel, Tarja

$
0
0
Volbeat: Seal The Deal & Let's Boogie (Universal)

Elvis metal is back folks! Three years since the album that saw them take off to the wider metal world and has made them bonafide headliners Danish metal n roll band Volbeat have come back with their new album that moves them away from the outlaw country influence that was present on their previous release and deals with voodoo, the spirit world and darker subjects but still done in the bands trademark Metallica, meets rockabilly sound. This is the second album with former Anthrax axe slinger Rob Caggiano on lead guitar and the first record without founding bassist Anders Kjølholm (who has subsequently been replaced by Kaspar Boye Larsen but doesn't appear on this record. So the record what does it sound like, well Volbeat, such is the bands unique style, they have successfully bookended the record with heavier moments starting with the riff tastic The Devil's Bleeding Crown that is a heavyweight call to arms and closing it with The Loa's Crossroad which sounds a lot like Lars & Co (no bad thing for a band aiming for arenas), with Seal The Deal just snuck in for some rapid thrash action.

 In the bulk of the record there is snotty tongue in cheek punk Rebound (a Teenage Bottlerocket cover) some tough lovelorn ballads like the Goodbye Forever which marries acoustic verses with an almost neo-classical leads from Caggiano, For Evgit which sung in English by frontman Michael Poulsen and in Danish by Johan Olsen (from Dutch band Magtens Korridorer) and the percussive Let It Burn which has a huge chorus holding it all together. Once again Poulsen's rhythms are the driving force for the songs like Iced Earth's John Schaffer everything is built around his riffs but Caggiano's leads give the band more scope to do things like the harmonic Gates Of Babylon that has a Egyptian/Persian sound theme to it but the band are still at their best with the heavy riffing songs such as Black Rose which has their metal meets doo-wop style choruses and features some gutsy co-lead vocals from Danko Jones along with backing ooh's.

I know The Devils... and For Evgit are the albums first to singles but Mary Jane Kelly has to be it's everything Volbeat do best in one song and my favourite on the record, with a swaggering riff and massive hook it's just excellent all round. Seal The Deal & Let's Boogie is the culmination of Volbeat's history so far and is the sort of album a festival headliner should release, hell even the Georgia Satellites cover is delivered with class. With this album and indeed a strong back catalogue in tow I'm waiting for a tour as soon as possible so yes sir I can boogie. 9/10

Death Angel: The Evil Divide (Nuclear Blast) [Review By Paul]

I’ve been lucky enough to catch the Bay Area legends brilliant live shows a number of times in the last few years and their last release, the excellent The Dream Calls For Blood certainly reminded the metal community that Death Angel remain a vital cog in the thrash machine. Follow up The Evil Divide picks up where The Dream... left off. Galloping along at the obligatory 150mph, The Evil Divide takes no prisoners. Openers The Moth and Cause For Alarm really maintain the bar with the technical riffage of Rob Cavenstany and Ted Aquilar leaving no prisoners. Lost moves to a different beat with the vocal performance of Mark Osegueda particularly impressive. If you want a contender for thrasher of the year, get involved with Hell To Pay. Crushing riffs, superb vocals, driving bass and the most aggressive drumming; it’s all here and it feels good. Hatred United, United Hate maintains the crushing assault with some of the band’s trademark slicing vicious guitar work top class. In fact, there is nothing bad about this release at all. It’s aggressive, its tight and it’s damn fine. Miss it at your peril. 9/10

Tarja: The Brightest Void (earMUSIC)

The Brightest Void is former Nightwish vocalists sixth album of rock music and serves as a precursor to her new album The Shadow Self. Turunen herself says that the album as "an idea for a big surprise and gift to her fans containing material recorded but not being included on the main album". For most this would be an EP but what we get is a sort of pick n mix of new songs, remixes and covers along with some guests helping out. First I'll deal with re/alternative mixes, these are the single/videoclip mix for new song No Bitter End which is a shorter edited version of the song that will appear on The Shadow Self but doesn't lose anything because of it as it's still a heavy rocking opening salvo filled with guitars galore.

The second remix is an alternative version of Paradise (What About Us) which originally featured on the last Within Temptation album Hydra which is a more orchestral version than the original. In terms of new songs An Empty Dream and Witch Hunt are bubbling electronica with Tarja reigning in the higher register for a darker sound although the best song on the record is Your Heaven And Your Hell which features Michael Monroe duetting on the albums heaviest fastest song, for the most part it borders on power metal except for the middle section that shows Monroe's saxophone playing that means the track takes a Pink Floyd meets Beverly Hills Cop turn. Covers wise they are interesting with House Of Wax originally by Paul McCartney, taken into a heavyweight menacing metal song that has all three of Tarja's octaves casting a spell over the metallised version of the McCartney song.

Following it is Goldfinger yes the Bond theme made famous by Wales' own Shirley Bassey, now as a proud Welshman I have to by law say it's not as good as Shirley's but it's a very good effort not overly different to the original but more operatic and with heavier riff. As somewhat of a stopgap release this is pretty good actually, with a nice mix of fan pleasing mixes and covers and hint to the heavy new record, The Brightest Void is almost essential as the next Tarja record coming later this year. 7/10   

Reviews: Planet Of Zeus, Chris Ouesy, Lonewolf

$
0
0
Planet Of Zeus: Loyal To The Pack (ihaveadrum)

Greek metal has a bit of an obsession with the stoner scene, some of the country's biggest bands appeal to the beer drinking, bong hitting, beard wearing members of the metal audience. Planet Of Zeus have been doing their thing for 16 years sharing the stage with Hermano and Brant Bjork, Monster Magnet, Karma To Burn, Eyehategod, Church Of Misery and more recently Clutch on their European tour. The band have a hardcore following in their native country and with luck this will extend outside of Greece, due to the high profile support and indeed their own headline UK tour at the end of the year and of course it will be bolstered by this their fourth album, Loyal To The Pack which once again is heavy slice of Southern Stoner rock but one that sees the band shake things up a bit, the record sounds more complete than previous efforts adding some melody to the oppressive riff assault the band usually favour.

Much of this more melodic sound is driven by frontman Babis focusing more on his cleaner delivery rather than the growls he has used in the past although these still crop up on the rallying cry of Scum Alive. This new dynamic sound means that Loyal To The Pack is the bands best and most varied album so far. Opening up with the title track that grabs you around the collar with the immediacy of the riffs and the off-kilter southern sound, it's a strong first song that is followed by the Clutch-like Devil Calls My Name which has the sound Neil Fallon and Co have made their own. Babis' vocals are very good his roar is still powerful but it's his clean vocal that's a revelation, he has and American tinge to it that helps on the Southern rocking Them Nights and the atmospheric Retreat and the attitude filled Makes Me Want To Hurt Myself which also has nod to Volbeat with Babis and Stellios cranking out riff after riff. Then the lighter side of returns on Sea Bastards and is blown away by White Shroud which has one of the records best swaggering riff. As I said Loyal To The Pack is Planet Of Zeus' most accomplished record to date and I'm a little annoyed I've got to wait until November to see them kill it live! 8/10    

Chris Ousey: Dream Machine (Escape Music)

Chris Ousey is probably best known as the the vocalist of Heartland and Snakecharmer, his smooth hard rock vocals have always been perfect for the melodic rock spectrum his soulful and passionate vocal delivery is one of the best in the UK. Dream Machine is his newest solo album and he has teamed up AOR guitarist supreme Tommy Denander who has famous played with numerous AOR projects since the 1980's. He and Ousey write all of the songs on this record and you can hear the quality in the song-writing this is hard rocking melodic music with Ousey's perfect rock voice matching in synchronicity with the fleet fingered virtuoso guitar playing of Deander, who also adds keys and plays all the rhythm guitar tracks allowing Chris Green show his six string prowess.

The opening three songs on the record set the tone for the rest of it, from the harder edged This Is The Life has very Deep Purple vibe to it due to the driving riff and the heavy organs from Snakecharmer bandmate Adam Wakeman, Another Runaway is more melodic number bringing the Journey style repeating synth and a big sing along chorus, a theme that carries on for the next few. Gone Long Gone has Whitesnake sound to it with a big chorus that Coverdale would be proud of, this surely is Ousey's application for when David retires next year and it's followed by the driving Better Time To Come which ramps the album back up again leading into the swaggering Eager To Please a track that you can practically feel the leather trousers and lust.

Dream Machine is a melodic rock album with more of an emphasis on the rock, so if you always felt the AOR scene was a little lightweight & laughable then this album will be right up your street it's wedged right in the 80's glory days with double tapped guitar solos, songs about ladies, cars (the title track) and rocking out it's a fabulous celebration of rock music from the first moment. Yes there is oodles of cheese on the record, that's a given, but the songs speak for themselves every single one is prime quality melodic rock. Filled with catchy hook filled writing, impressive musicianship and Ousey's spectacular vocals, demonstrating why they quite rightly give him the nickname "The Man With The Golden Voice". If you love classy, melodic tinged hard rock sung with passion then Dream Machine will be for you, it's quite frankly one of the best melodic rock releases of the year! 9/10      

Lonewolf: The Heathen Dawn (Napalm)

I really wanted to like the latest album by speed/heavy metallers Lonewolf and musically I do, it's galloping, chest beating metal that reminds me of Manowar with the toughness of Amon Amarth added to it, the drums rampage at full speed with Bubu Brunner  doing what he does best on Rise To Victory while the guitars slice and dice with lightspeed riffs and intricate widdly leads and solos, this is proper power metal that usually would get my engine running however there is a problem with the French metal troop. I just don't like the singer's voice it's too reminiscent of Grave Digger's Chris Boltendahl for my liking, I'm always ready to welcome grizzled vocals with power metal as I know it's not all high shrieks and glass shattering but I can't warm to the vocals at all, songs like When The Angels Fall are the best evidence for this as when he tries to go into a higher register it falls painfully flat, he's not a bad vocalist and fans of Grave Digger or Grim Reaper will love them but personally they don't do anything for me at all. Still musically the band are a competent experienced prospect and they do write powerful trad metal but I just can't past the vocals. 5/10

Reviews: Dan Reed Network, Nervosa, Big Big Train

$
0
0
Dan Reed Network: Fight Another Day (Frontiers Records)

Back in the 80's Dan Reed Network were going to be megastars, fronted by the eponymous front man, whose impressive voice was only matched by his fabulous hair. Their multi-cultural brand of 80's funk rock set the template for Extreme, The Electric Boys and others, but by 1991 the party was all but over the band never really had the press or management they needed in America and the band went on hiatus. Reed continued to tour as a solo artist collaborating with many notable musicians, however as theses things seem to go and with lots of water under the bridge the Network reformed in 2013 and Fight Another Day is the newest creative effort of this reunion.

What is instantly noticeable as you play the record is that Reed's voice is still sublime, silky, soulful and guaranteed to hook you in, but the band have strayed from their old funk rock roots a little with only the damning statement of Infected having the bass driven funk of their early years but with a more grown up feel to it, it seems that this album is a sort of catharsis for the band as many of the tracks carry a message political, spiritual or otherwise and it gives the album a introspective sound sort of what would happed if King's X had Steven Wilson fronting them a trick that's repeated on Sharp Turn which has Mr Wilson all over it.

Following on from Melvin Brannon II's bass led Infected is Champion which is synth driven ballad (kudos to Rob Daiker for the unsettling synths) that does sound a little like Phil Collins after a divorce although with some guitar solos from Brion James slicing through the malaise. There is a mix of sounds on this record, this is much of DRN's charm and their management's frustration, they are very hard to pigeonhole as opener has Sambora-like talkback on the guitars, Give It Love is a fist pumping song aimed at the live stage, but is set up by the percussive Ignition that borders on world music, B There With U is the album's obvious ballad moment, wrapped in velour it's smooth as smooth can be, all that puts me off is the title.

As I've said Reed's vocals are still excellent he relies on his lower register for the most part but when it's that good it doesn't really matter. At 13 tracks Fight Another Day is a value for money release for all those that have waited since 1991 for a new DRN album there are some tracks that do sit as filler (Heaven is my pick) but those that are meaningful such as Reunite, they can still can give the same feeling that the Network gave the rock world back in 1986, welcome back. 7/10         

Nervosa: Agony (Napalm)

Brazil does two types of metal very well. First they are great at complex power metal such as Angra but what they are probably more known for is face ripping, throat shredding, pit inciting thrash aggression, possibly due to the country's tendency for unrest caused mainly by rebellion, thrash's main selling point. Thrash metal has always been the music for the oppressed, it's deliberately violent, uncompromising and brutal. The country's most famous thrash metal export are Sepultura so any thrash band coming from Brazil has a lot to live up to, it's fortunate then that Nervosa's debut album was welcomed with open arms and critical acclaim giving the trio a step in the right direction, the debut married furious thrash metal, with groove-laden breakdowns and hostile lyrics spat with venom by frontwoman and bassist Fernanda Lira.

Their follow up effort Agony still does all of these things but it's all been fine tuned with a lot more finesse although it doesn't compromise the brutality of the record. Take a track like Deception which is technical piece condensed into a three minute song showcasing Pitchu Ferraz's virtuoso drumming in a more complex environment but then on the next track Intolerance Means War she beats the listener down with the unstoppable double kick drums. Completing the triumvirate is guitarist Prika Amral, she has most definitely studied at the altar of Hanneman, Ian and Cavalera as her solos are perfect blasts of lightning speed melody it's the rhythms that shine through on the record she synchronises with Lira's bass to attack you with every stab of the six strings.

Tracks like Guerra Santa are flashes of punk influenced thrash, Hypocrisy and Failed System both have a Slayer sound and opener Arrogance takes the Cavalera stomp style while Hostages once again amping up the technicality and ferocity (which rarely dips if I'm honest). Agony re-establishes Nervosa as one of the top young thrash bands out there, with such a wealthy history of talent from their home country it's nice to see that Nervosa rip you to shreds from moment one. 8/10    

Big Big Train: Folklore (English Electric)

Big Big Train were formed in 1990 by two multi instrumentalists Andy Poole (guitar, bass, keys) and Greg Spawton (bass, guitars, keys), the band have always had a collaborative nature to them with the eight person unit working together in melodic harmony. Big Big Train have always been stereo-typically and defiantly English with heady mix of joy and melancholia sometimes both at the same time having affect on all of their music, there eighth studio album is no different drawing it's influence from English folklore (thus the title) it's a trip through the tales and storytelling that has formed part of the national culture.

As is usual the album is full of amazing lyrics and musicianship from all concerned. The opening title track is a suitably folky number built around a funk guitar riff and some burbling organs, mandolin as an electronic undertone permeates throughout. This builds the bulk of the song as David Longdon sings for his supper, vocally he sounds an awful lot like ex-Marillion man Fish as he carries the folkier tunes, Folklore then takes a medieval turn with the violin of Rachel Hall showing itself in the middle working in conjunction with Longdon's flutes, before the track winds up in an impressive guitar solo. The band have three guitarists present on the record and this shows with Andy Poole aided by (Beardfish frontman) Rikard Sjöblom and Dave Gregory (ex-XTC) to create a huge sound punctuated by Danny Manners keys.

Second track London Plane is more introspective, opening as a vocal and acoustic piece with organ and flutes sneaking in, there are jazz sections throughout the as it flows like the river it's about. Despite it's rather industrial lyric the song itself is steeped in the pastoral story telling tradition with all of the vocalists in unison for the last third and a searing solo outro finishing it properly. with so much music in just two tracks it can all be a bit too much to take in but BBT have canny knack of making the music very accessible, take Along The Ridgeway which has a more soulful brass driven sound that also features electric piano and quality fiddle playing. The three proceeding songs are in direct opposition to The Sailsbury Giant which is an ominous mostly instrumental song that conjures images of the titular giant such is the marching tempo the soundtrack.

It's here that I have to give particular kudos to drummer Nick D'Virgilio (ex-Spock's Beard). The inventiveness continues for the latter half of the record as The Transit Of Venus Across The Sun which is a cinematic entry with a haunting horn motif worthy of the Salvation Army Band throughout, Wassail is a sort of Celtic folk meets Pink Floyd selection while Winkie has a Marillion-esque keyboard heavy rocker with clever vocal lines and a huge hook which at it's climax leads into Brooklands which is more traditional progger but at 11 minutes its the albums most musically intense songs especially when compared to the hazy last track Telling The Bees. Big Big Train are masters of the British progressive rock sound and Folklore is yet another album that backs this claim up with gusto. 9/10

Reviews: Attica Rage, Bull Riff Stampede, Eternity's End

$
0
0
Attica Rage: Warheads Ltd (Off Yer Rocka)

Scottish rocker Attica Rage have been carving out a niche for themselves over the years with a fanatical following that is similar to the patched in members of the Black Label Society, the band have had many successful tours with regular appearances at Hammerfest and venues all over the country. This road dog attitude is present in the band's blue collar heavy rock anthems and much like BLS they have never been afraid to shed their heavyweight sound for a tender ballad. Their fourth album is no different with two showstopping moments on the record the first Lost In Memory is a traditional fist-in-the-air chorus ballad but it's the final song Haunted that is possibly the bands most over-blown effort yet with orchestral layers engulfing the emotive track on which frontman Johnny Parr croons well, you can see this going down well in the live arena sung back by the heavy drinking crowd at the shows climax. As for the rest of Warheads Ltd it's long gestation period has meant that it's probably the most diverse offering the band have produced with songs that range from ballsy heavy metal on Beyond The 45, groovy hard rock (first single Falling Down), doom-like hammering on El Chupacabra even and an instrumental; Into The Ether which features bassist Matthew Ward leading the song Burton-style. With such an eclectic mix of tracks on this album it's good to see that a band like Attica Rage are willing to take a few risks that on the whole pay dividends. 7/10

Bull Riff Stampede: Enraging The Beast (Self Released)

Yet another band utilising the PledgeMusic site to fund their record metal thrashing mad Brizzle four piece Bull Riff Stampede return with their eagerly awaited second album, their debut was released in 2012 so there has been a sizable wait, but has it been worth it? Well the title track builds from it's intro before Dave Garnett and Jay Walsh shred like their lives depend on it and from here there's no way to escape the all out assault that is BRS, the long touring schedule has paid off big style as the band seem to have more focus to their violence, like a lazer guided missile they take aim and don't lose sight of the target once. Garnett and Walsh continue the fleet fingered fun through Mindless Heresy, Dawn Of Disease and beyond all while Rod Boston lays down frantic rhythm with the four strings making the songs heavier than necessary as they boom through the speakers (which is also a testament to Gabriele Ravaglia who co-produced the album with the band) particular props go to sticksman James Perry who is a machine behind the kit, so much so that had I not seen him live I'd have thought it was a click track. The four men together create powerful thrash metal that takes it's cues from the early death metal bands due to Garnett's shouted Schuldinger-summoning vocals and the sheer ferocity of the songs. Despite their furious nature, they also have the ability to slow down and grind with the best of them on 4125 in fact this second record adds little nuances to their established sound and generally lifts them to a higher level than before, with an already face melting live show they band now have another excellent set of songs to add to their repertoire, on the album though it's one to turn up! 8/10

Eternity's End: The Fire Within (Power Prog Records)

Eternity's End is the new project from guitarist Christian Münzner who has spent much of his time in crushingly heavy technical death metal bands but with his new Eternity's End project he has changed his approach and indulged in some neo-classical metal favoured by (early) Symphony X, Rhapsody (Of Fire), Magic Kingdom and of course Mr Malmsteen. With rampaging drumming, galloping bassline, classical ethereal keys, guitar virtuosity and high powered vocals it's the traditional neoclassical approach but done very well. This is due to the musicians Münzner has picked for the record, all of them bar vocalist Ian Parry have been in Münzner's solo band meaning that you can hear how well he and Jimmy Pitts' keys duel throughout with every song stuffed full of melodic technically impressive solos from both as the rhythm section dutifully blast away underneath. Songs like Demonblade display the rhythmic ferocity of Linus Klausenitzer and Hannes Grossmann both from the same death metal background as the band leader and show it on heavier tracks like The Hourglass which sounds like modern Symphony X. Vocally too is where this style of metal can rise or fall but with the recruitment of Ian Parry, Münzner has done well mostly known for his Consortium Projects his melodic, powerful but not ott vocal delivery fits the album's tone brilliantly, his voice is great but ultimately it's Münzner's record as he peels off solo after sublime solo, although this is by no means wanton a record full of guitar wankery, the songs are very strong with the band all meshing together to create harmonious accessible songs that don't sacrifice songwriting for technicality. With a debut album as strong as this it will be a pleasure to see the band progress and as a fan of power/neoclassical metal The Fire Within ticks all the right boxes. 8/10      

  

Reviews: Lucifer Rising, Withem, Dissector

$
0
0
Lucifer Rising: Beyond The Ninth Gate (Broken Bricks)

If you name yourself after a Candlemass album (as well as a cult 1984 movie) then you can only really settle with one kind of music and that is occultist doom rock with Sabbath/Candlemass riffs galore and songs about Satan and all his works, all the good stuff then. Lucifer Rising are an occult doom laden rock band with touches of psychedelic meandering and a hefty blues base. The band hail from Kiev in the Ukraine and is the brainchild of guitarist Valeriy Vitomskyi and drummer Max Tovstyi who after numerous line up changes have settled with Max Savitskyi on bass and Ira Avdiyenko on vocals meaning that the band have a sound akin to Swedes The Blues Pills and Lucifer as well as Blood Ceremony and other female fronted 'occult' bands. Lucifer Rising are not just copyists though they add their own mark to the genre laying on some clean stoner infused licks underneath Avdiyenko's, beguiling gruff vocals conjuring a black mass atop of the fuzz below. The band are not as heavy as some of their compatriots they are very much rock with melodic guitar lines the majority, although My Devil Was Blind has crunch to die for. With tracks such as the slinky Ninth Choice, the tribal drum driven Pain and the jazzy Chaser all showing the bands groovy psychedelic Sabbath-like sound with which has bluesy undercurrent beneath it. Yes the spirit of Candlemass is ominously present on Beyond The Ninth Gate however with psych touches and slab of retro-ism it is an impressive debut album from the Ukraine band that is the perfect soundtrack to a late night session with your favourite 'plant' and a copy of Crowley. 8/10

Withem: The Unforgiving Road (Frontiers)

The Unforgiving Road is Norwegian progressive power metal band Withem's second record and it is a musical tour-de-force, Exit opens up after the Intro with some heavy guitars, cutting fuzz filled electronic synths and a technically progressive power metal sound filled with melody that's very similar to fellow Norwegians Pagan's Mind and Circus Maximus, much of this is due to the dual guitar/keyboard riffage the frontman's soaring vocals and a keen ear for a more melodic almost AOR sound on tracks such as the anthemic In The Hands Of A God (check out the underlying bass on this track) and Riven which is cheese-tastic in its 80's glory a massive chorus and synths abound. Withem are a powerful band, queue the impressive drumming and guitar playing on the glorious The Eye In The Sky and they play intensely technical metal music that has a radio friendly sound that they share with their countrymen mentioned earlier. If you're a fan of progressive melodic metal you are going to find a lot to love about Withem as they seem to have the knack of mixing complex instrumentation with accessible songwriting, take a track like Arrhythmia which gets the heart racing (maybe that's the point) while Unaffected Love has sound akin to Dream Theater or Brit's Haken. The Unforgiving Road is a progressive near masterpiece and with the major label backing of Frontiers hopefully it will see Withem progress an make many take notice. 8/10          

Dissector: Planetary Cancer (Mazzar Records)

Dissector are a melodic death metal from St Petersburg, the three piece ply their trade with thrashy death metal of Vader, Kreator and Destruction. From moment one of the record they devastate their instruments with double kick drums galore, rumbling bass ferocity and rapid guitar riffs, in fact rhythm is big part of Dissector's sound as many of the solos on this record comes from guest guitarists meaning the core trio concentrate on just thrashing the hell out of their instruments on the title track and Rebuild On Better Days. Despite the band having a majorly thrash taste to their sound, it does change throughout the record; Perfect Smile has synths running through giving an industrial style Fear Factory edge, First To Burn meanwhile has big breakdowns throughout, The Shape Of Things To Come is more in the classic thrash as The Hate Inside and Exit Humanity brings the speed back in droves. The final track Invisible Lives is probably the most different as it's a female fronted ballad that shows the bans slower more tender side with no speed or fury just power and passion ending the album on strong but unusual given whats come before. Still Planetary Cancer is a very good album from the Russian three piece if you're a fan of melodic death metal that doesn't doggedly stick to it's boundaries then it'll be for you. 7/10     

Reviews: Monument, A Devil's Din, Sleep Of Monsters

$
0
0
Monument: Hair Of The Dog (Rock Of Angels)

British NWOBHM revivalists Monument return with the follow up to their 2014 debut with sophomore record Hair Of The Dog (not a tribute to Nazareth sadly, but related to the bands Bulldog mascot) the title track is about all you need to know about the band that was formed in the ashes of White Wizzard still the vocals of Peter Ellis are part Halford, part Dickinson with a air raid siren style delivery on top of the galloping, dual axe swinging, shamelessly retro metal assault that has put the band once again in the revival category. However what is endearing about Monument is that they are not po-faced about it, they wear their influences on their sleeve and inject a bit of Britishness into their songs about myths, legends, fantasy and the like in a similar way to Saxon. Hair Of The Dog wouldn't have sounded out of place with likes of Denim & LeatherPoint Of Entry and Killers.

The sound of Maiden's second album is spread thickly over the punky Streets Of Rage so much so that its sounds like early-Maiden in full flight. Behind Ellis' very English delivery is the top flight band of noted trad metal drummer Giovanni Durst (White Wizzard, Omicida etc) pairing with ex-Absolva/ex-Blaze Bayley bassist Dan Bate who supply the galloping rhythms to the album for Lewis Stephens and Dan Baune to shred like bastards over with a dual riff assault. One thing is evident about Monument is that they have studied the source material closely with two epic tracks coming in the shape of Imhotep (The High Priest) surely a lost cut from Powerslave (it even has the bass driven mid-section breakdown) and the massive ballad break on Heart Of Stone both ramping up the drama as Lionheart serves as a chest beating final song channelling the flag waving Patriotism of Biff and the boys.

There are so many retro loving NWOTHM bands around but Monument just stand out due to their inherent plucky Britishness that made the original NWOBHM very much a phenomenon, all of the trademarks are here the powerful bass, the twin axe licks heck they've even got an instrumental called Olympus that comes near the end of the record as Maiden have always been fond of. Monument are the ultimate if it ain't broke don't fix it band, with enough youthful exuberance to give the trad-revival a shot in the arm and much like Grand Magus, Enforcer and Cauldron Monument sit in the Pantheon of retro styled Gods that draw from one of the most recognisable sounds in heavy metal history. 8/10

A Devil's Din: Skylight (Island Dive Records)

According to their bio "A Devil’s Din is made up of 3 musicians born in the Old World who traveled across the ocean to find each other in Montreal, drawn together by a mutual love of melodic, innovative, inventive and daring rock music." This pretty much sums up A Devil's Din sound imagine classic 60's psychedelic sounds fused with thundering stoner/doom rock that evokes the tie-dye freakiness of Syd Barrett, The Beatles (Sgt Pepper's era) but also riffs of Sabbath along with more modern nostalgic acts such as Purson, Big Elf or Ulysses. Skylight is the bands second record and Canada residing three piece have managed to perfectly encapsulate an entire period in music history.

The band was formed by David Lines who handles guitars, keys and vocals along with Thomas Challet who provides the Rickenbacker voodoo, guitar and vocals and Dominique Salameh (born in Abu Dhabi) provides the Moon-like wild drumming. With swathes of analogue keys and organs, jangling effects filled guitars, Arabic/Asian influences, vocal harmonies and huge mind expanding soundscapes that are dead ringers for the psychedelic trips of Syd's solo stuff and early Pink Floyd right down to the vocals and esoteric lyrics that conjure kaleidoscopic images in the mind's eye. The band have a heavy streak to them on Nature Of The Beast that sounds like Sabbath when it kicks in and it is the antithesis to For A While which is progressive jazzy number followed by Eye's Pie which brings to mind Yes at their most eccentric. In fact there's progressive, jazz, folk, pop and rock all over this record meaning that Skylight is the erstwhile treat for those that love their music trippy, funky and decked out in an Afghan coat and John Lennon sunglasses. 7/10

Sleep Of Monsters: II - Poison Garden (Svart Records)

Finns Sleep Of Monsters come from a long tradition of Gothic rock bands from their home country, something about the frozen tundra seems to inspire morose lyrics and melodic, atmospheric rock music. Bands such as HIM, The 69 Eyes, Sentenced all do misery well and Sleep Of Monsters are the next band to throw their black top hat into the ring and pile on the eyeliner ready to stand awkwardly in the corner and pout. II Poison Garden is unsurprisingly their second album and it builds on their debut with a bigger soundscape than the debut. A track such as Golden Bough features a string section and a female vocal duetting with frontman Ike Vil on a song that is Sisters Of Mercy do James Bond, while Foreign Armies East is a swaying brass backed folk number and Land Of Nod is instilled with classical guitars. For the most part the band are classic Gothic rock with fuzzy guitars, extensive uses of keys and of course Vil's chanting baritone vocals who maybe familiar to some as the frontman of Babylon Whores. The addition of three backing singers called Furies adds another extra dimension to the Goth rocking. As I've said II Poison Garden is an album that sounds just excellent all the elements come together heavy riffs, dark lyrics and the occasional cathartic murder ballad such as Our Dark Mother. I said at the beginning that the Finns do Goth the best and Sleep Of Monsters are yet another band to add to that list of Finnish Goth rockers and they are one that adds a myriad of flavours to the pot. 7/10              

Reviews: Rival Sons, Dead Label, Devil Electric

$
0
0
Rival Sons: Hollow Bones (Earache)

There has been a lot of talk about the future of rock music recently, mainly about who will take the place of Maiden, Metallica, AC/DC etc as the headliners of festivals to come. In these conversations I usually just shout the words Rival Sons as loudly as possible and invariably I win the argument, the band are everything you need in a headliner, a glut of anthemic songs over four albums, a firebrand stage presence, virtuoso musicianship and a heady mix of modernism and nostalgia for a wide appeal. What the Californian band have over the many other bands vying for the title of future headliner is that they have managed to secure some huge support slots with some of rocks biggest acts, most recently they have been the opening act on all of Black Sabbath's The End tour.

This experience and outright passion for what they do is the major driving force behind what, why and how the band do what they do best. With a steady stream of albums building their set list the bands newest Hollow Bones is their fifth release and yet again it is a modern take on an old school theme packed to the brim with swaggering blues rock riffs, a thundering rhythm section and wild, wide-eyed vocals that see the band delivering their Zeppelin meets The Doors sound with same explosive power once again bolstered by Dave Cobb's shimmering production (he is to Rival Sons what George Martin was to The Beatles, even co-writing two of the tracks). The album is book-ended by the two part title track with part one kicking off the record with Scott Holiday's now trademark fuzz-laden guitar and the hollering echoed vocals of Jay Buchanan shouting the chorus with his natural power, while the second half is longer and more expansive.

The record once again has 9 blues anthems that show Rival Sons have a wealth of material that stands up against the classics of the past and a 37 minutes it leaves you wanting another hit, songs such as the bluesy, foot tapper Tied Up, the 60's inspired Pretty Face and Thundering Voices which is driven by an impressive rhythmic coda all have an almost primal nature to them with Dave Beste and Michael Miley hammering away with the groove as well as the added flesh from Todd E Ogren-Brooks and his keys/organs (Fade Out). Rival Sons yet again deliver like they always do, this is the future folks embrace it with your souls. 9/10              

Dead Label: Throne Of Bones (Nuerra Records)

Imagine if you will that Machine Head and Gojira had a baby that came from Ireland and was a three piece, this is pretty much what Dead Label are in a nutshell. The trio of bassist/vocalist Dan O'Grady, drummer Claire Percival and guitarist Danny Hall have been making tremendous waves in the metal scene with a huge show at BOA and high profile supports of Fear Factory and Gojira the band have been playing their breed of aggressive, oppressive modern metal throughout Europe and have managed to level many venues on the back of their debut. Thankfully they now return with their second full length that from the opening chords beats you senseless with Claire's blastbeats, the down-tuned riffs and guttural growls from the frontman.

Stylised as a metalcore band, the band do have the breakdowns and heavy groove metalcore brought to the table especially on The Birth Of Suffering but much like that genre has died a bit of a death and the bands have all fleshed out their sound over the years Dead Label too are not rigidly stuck in the formula, as the Birth Of Suffering has an impressive dynamic sound and really technical guitar playing throughout. Ominous sounds a lot like Fear Factory in their prime, The Cleansing is an instrumental break from the heaviness with a clean guitar sound and laid back drum beat that screams Santana doing as the songs says an cleaning you off any aggression.

That is until Exhume The Venom hits you like sledgehammer with a hint of tourmates Gojira in the wall of noise riffage, the album ends with the epic djent inspired The Gates Of Hell which is an 8 minute finale with a piano cutting through the heaviness, as a very progressive track it shows possibly where Dead Label can go from here making it one of the most interesting and enjoyable songs on the record for me. It's actually surprising how heavy the three piece can be you can feel Claire's drumming and Dan's bass in your kidney's as Danny's guitars ring in your ears, Throne Of Bones is an accomplished, aggressive and most of all heavy as all hell release and one that will be used to increase the bands standing further in the future. 8/10  

Devil Electric: The Gods Below

Doom from the sunnier climes of Australia will always be a bit of an odd one. How can a band that comes from one of the sunniest places in the world play songs about darkness, doom, gloom and ritualistically hailing Satan? The Devil Electric have challenged my opinion somewhat with a four track EP that has the droning distorted power of Iommi and co with massive riffage from Christos Athanasias (Guitar) Tom Hulse (Bass) Mark Van De Beek (Drums) that creeps on Devils Bells, and gets heads nodding on Confusion Of Mind. As the three men supply the doom, frontwoman Pierina O'Brien gathers the masses to the masses (to paraphrase Sabbath) with her bewitching vocals. There is not much else I can say about this EP four songs it gives a glimpse of what Devil Electric are capable of and it does seem to be very promising indeed. 7/10

Reviews: Scorpion Child, Paradox, Bright Curse

$
0
0
Scorpion Child: Acid Roulette (Nuclear Blast)

The Texan masters of hard boogie rock are back with their long awaited much anticipated second album, since their debut the band have lost a rhythm guitarist and replaced him with a full time organ/keyboardist and their original drummer has left and returned, due to this addition of a full time organ player the band have branched out from their riff heavy Zep-alike sound to add more elements of Purple as well as a lot more spiralling psych and krautrock sounds. 'The Child' as they are known have gone all out on this second record to try and improve on their excellent debut album, not difficult second album syndrome here Acid Roulette does everything the debut did and more.

The huge guitar and organ riffs working side by side with a funky hip shaking back beat and frontman Aryn Jonathan Black's crazed shamanic vocals on the heavy opening salvo She Sings, I Kill which does have a lot of Zep around it with the massive riff to start the record, things speed up on Reaper's Danse which has  a proto-metal sound similar to fellow Texans The Sword, the repetitive riff from Christopher Jay Cowart the songs main hook while Jon Rice blasts away on his snare. Scorpion Child have always treaded the path between modern heavy metal and classic rock and Acid Roulette continues this Woman In Black is a true classic hard rock song with a superb solo and cocky swagger of a riff Whitesnake would be proud of, Twilight Forest has more modern sheen to it, everything gets a bit spacey on the title track that sees Aaron John Vincent's organs the main building block in this expansive song that to my mind sounds a lot like Robert Plant's more abstract exotic solo stuff, especially when it it breaks down into an organ bass driven coda halfway through adding the psych elements.

The curveball to the record is Survives which is an arena bothering, lighter waving ballad that has to be pinched from the Nikki Sixx songbook due to it's grandiose nature, it stands out from the rest of the album as a piece written especially as a live song but it's a pleasent suprise that will inevitably get some detractors but on an album that is chocked full of 12 other hard rocking it sits in the middle of the pack as break from the power of Scorpion Child's riffs. In my recent Rival Sons review I said that they would be one of the future headliners, well Scorpion Child too are in this bracket, yes they are only two albums into their career but the quality of their songwriting is a little bit scary, this is a band that know how to write a song and they are comfortable in their sound, much like Rival Sons favour the bluesier sounds of Humble Pie, Free and The Doors, Scorpion Child have Purple, ELP, Whitesnake and Zeppelin knocking on their back door. Acid Roulette is a worthy follow up to the band's self titled debut it's both old and new with enough of both to satisfy everyone, Acid Roulette sets Scorpion Child up as the future of hard rock, come worship at their altar! 9/10           

Paradox: Pangea (AFM)

Paradox have been around since 1986 and since then they have been blazing a trail for thrash driven power metal since then, Pangea is the bands seventh album and their first since 2012. This album has been a long time in preparation due to setbacks, caused by several health impairments and private issues in the years since 2012. However with Greek guitarist Gus Drax (Black Fate/Sunburst), Greek drummer Kostas Milonas (Outloud/Sunburst) and Slovenian bassist Tilen Hudrap (Vicious Rumours) founding member vocalist/guitarist Charly Steinhauer has yet again acquired an accomplished band to play his intense speed driven musical style, this time the record has a bit of theme surrounding it as Pangea is notably the last supercontinent and a symbol for the beginning of the end of life on earth. The several scenarios that may cause the end of the world (e.g. war, comet, plague, cataclysm, alien invasion, etc.) are dealt with on the album.

So the normal metal fodder but built around Paradox's sound that is Gamma Ray meets Megadeth with excellent guitar playing from Drax and Steinhauer driving the songs along with speed metal riffs and slicing solos while Steinhauer's vocals are excellent he's got a wide range to his and on tracks such as the chugging The Raging Planet and the lightning quick The Ballot Or The Bullet which is a politically charged song and one of the album's best, while the guitar skills are shown on the melodic twisting middle track Manhunt (not a Wolfsbane cover). With a mix of styles on this record but the majority sticking to the heavy power metal sound of bands such as Iced Earth Pangea is yet another worthy addition to Paradox's discography, a great way to celebrate their 30th anniversary and an album that is very much worth the wait.  8/10  

Bright Curse: Before The Shore (Hevisike)

Hailing from London Bright Curse are a wickedly dark, heavy rock band with a lot of psych elements giving them a sound that draws from Sleep, Tool and Kyuss with appearances from Desertfest, Up In Smoke Fest and many other hazy, chemically induced music festivals and you can see why as the band have a hypnotic sound that merges doom and stoner rock with album chock full of fuzz filled riffs, walking basslines and expressive drumming, on songs such as Cheating Pain they slow things down and the bass line of Max Ternebring is king before the loudness returns in the choruses, there is even a spoken word part in the middle of the song adds to the journey. The trio are great musicians and it shows with a wide vocal range from Romain Daut who also plays a mean guitar displaying his chops with the jazzy Walking In A Graveyard which adds another dimension to Bright Curse's sound as Daut plays like Gilmour letting one note do more than one hundred while Zacharie Mizzi builds into a drumming frenzy at the end of the track. The songs on this record are somewhere between Southern Rock jams (Candles And Flowers cowbell driven nature) and space rock freak outs with huge organ riffs on Northern Sky. Before The Shore is one hell of an album it's a real psych rock masterpiece progressive, diverse and in parts sweeping with broad musical strokes. I foresee a bright future for Bright Curse and this album is the start of something very big and very beautiful. 8/10



A View From The Muddy Field: Download 2016 (Review By Paul)

$
0
0
Download 2016

Day 1

Ah, Castle Donington. The “spiritual home” of the rock festival since 1980 when Rainbow, Scorpions, April Wine and Saxon got the ball rolling. Move forward 36 years and whilst the location remains the same, little else is comparable to those halcyon days of the 1980s. These days Download is an unwieldy corporate cash whore, a five day marathon focused on fleecing the punter of as much cash as possible for as little reward. Extortionate food and drink prices, far too few toilets and nowhere to shelter from sun or rain (more of that shortly) along with a percentage of the crowd who are clearly intent on getting rat arsed for five days to the detriment of any poor sod who happens to wander up next to them during a set. As for the camping, well those days are long behind me at this particular venue but anyone who has survived the various fields surrounding the mud-fucked Village carries the scars of a war of total attrition.

However, despite all this, Download manages to pull in the best part of 100,000 fans every year and they do that because they have the muscle to put together a mainstream metal and rock bill which always looks brilliant on paper. This year was no exception with the behemoths of Rammstein, Sabbath and Maiden topping a beefy bill with a tasty undercard. The line-up was sufficient to encourage six of us to part with our readies and secure a hotel about 30 minutes away for the weekend. Two weeks of wall to wall sunshine meant our hopes were high as we left South Wales on Friday morning. We made great time and managed to get a couple of swift beers in before our taxi arrived. Two hours later due to some incredibly heavy traffic we finally got onto the site, already having missed RavenEye and Royal Republic but hoping to catch Graveyard and for four of our party, the bizarre phenomenon of BabyMetal. Grabbing a beer (a mere £5 a pint) and a steak sandwich (£8) Matt and I took up position for Gothenburg’s psychedelic 70s rockers Graveyard (7). Three songs later and all hell had broken loose; rain and hail of biblical proportions swept across the fields, soaking all through to the skin and destroying the credibility of quite a few waterproof manufacturers in the process. Graveyard were forced to bring their set to a close due to the torrent pouring on the stage and on the main stage the Japanese schoolgirls hadn’t even ventured out.

So dripping wet and faced with over ten hours to go, with the tents immediately full to bursting which at least gave some of the smaller acts the biggest crowds they’ll ever play to, we suffered about ten minutes of BabyMetal (4). If this is the future of the metal scene then I’m off to buy a Beyonce release. I just don’t get it. However, many thousands do and Gimme Chocolate! prompted one of the biggest responses of the day, lots of squealing and jumping up and down from grown men as the backing band riffed away and the three young girls went through their choreographed routine. Meh!

Meanwhile three of our party headed back to the Encore Stage for Skillet (8) who by all accounts put on an excellent set which made the rain slightly less of an issue. Now I’m not a fan of Killswitch Engage (7), and in particular the misogynistic idiot of a guitarist whose vile comments about the fairer sex show what a tool he is, but their latest release contains some really decent tunes, if a bit similar and in My Curse, Rose Of Sharyn and The End Of Heartache they have three stomping songs. Putting in a huge amount of effort, the band got the riffs flying and if Adam could just shut his mouth I might have given them an 8.

As the rain showers continued to soak all around to the skin and the sales of £3 ponchos escalated quickly, we sheltered at the edge of one of the pitifully few gazebos situated around the site and grabbed a quick beer before the unmistakable sound of Motörhead came from the main stage. Oh yes, the Lemmy Stage and the Motorhead tribute. We scurried across to find nothing more than a montage of clips playing on the screens, some footage of previous Motörhead at Download and some extracts from Lemmy: The Movie. Disappointed doesn't really capture how we felt and by now we'd also missed the opportunity to catch Kadavar on the third stage. 

The majority of our crew were never going to leave the main stage for the special guest slot as it was Bakersfield nu-metal pioneers Korn. However, Matt and I headed for the tent where we had some respite from the rain. Every rain cloud has a silver lining and The Wildhearts (9) proved to be just that. Now I've never been that much of a fan of Ginger and his band but serving up a greatest hits package of easy to singalong to songs proved a solid move. With the dedicated following singing every word, the rain was forgotten for an hour and a fun time was had by all. Ideal for such occasions.

Jonathan Davies and crew were in full swing as we headed back out to the sodden main stage. Korn (8) always deliver a good show and this was no exception. Arriving in time to hear shoots and Ladders blasting out, the band hit hard and heavy with a classic set list. Placing Blind mid-set was genius, picking up the momentum for the run in which featured Twist, Y’all Want A Single, Did My Time and a massive Freak On A Leash which incited some fantastic shapes from two gents nearby who clearly didn't give a shit about the mud. It's no wonder Korn return year after year. Their appeal transcends genres and live they really do give it everything.

As the rains eased slightly, we regrouped before splitting again to take up positions for the headline event. Rammstein (8) never put on a poor performance and with their stage design combined with the copious amounts of pyro they use, anticipation was high. Now, maybe the rain had dampened the spirits, maybe our position to the right of the sound tower and the ever crackling speaker (thanks Korn for blowing that!) also contributed but the Germans were ever so slightly flat. I've seen them a number of times and their cold approach is part of the act. Tonight they appeared distant and going through the motions a little bit too much. Set list wise, no complaints. A smattering of tracks from across the albums included a rare outing for Zerstoren from Rosenrot, opener and new track Ramm 4, and a welcome return for the title track from Reise Reise. as well as six tracks from Mutter, including the expected Feuer Frei! Complete with pyro frenzy and first encore Sonne which ignited the crowd once more. A bonus for me was the Depeche Mode cover Stripped which Rammstein deliver so well. Rammstein on an off day is still an incredible spectacle and Till Lindemann remains a captivating frontman, his presence intimidating and yet welcoming. The band are heavy as fuck live, with the industrial riffs of Richard Kruspe and Christian Lorenz crushing. The band finished in fine style though with an acoustic Ohne Dich and a captivating Engel sparking a firework eruption. The end of day 1 and a chance to regroup and dry out. 

Day 2

Given the shit forecast we decided to push our departure from the hotel back by a few hours and instead took advantage of our location to do some emergency shopping for wellies and waterproofs. Arriving in the now totally swamped arena just after 2.30, Sixx AM (7) were going through the motions on the main stage. Nikki Sixx and co are an average outfit but with the sun trying to come out they were ideal fare for the early afternoon. The action hotted up somewhat with a storming set from Rival Sons (9), whose new album Hollow Bones had landed just a couple of days earlier. The band's set was based heavily on tracks from the new release which made sense to me. You've got a new album? Then promote it. Enigmatic front man Jay Buchanan is captivating, all Percy and Tyler with a voice to die for. It's guitarist Scott Holiday who really catches the eye though, effortlessly demonstrating his chops with some superb playing. Rival Sons continue to climb and if you like their 1970s tinged hard rock, check them out at your earliest convenience.

Dave Mustaine has never been short of confidence and his latest line up has delivered one of the year’s best releases in Dystopia. Sadly no Chris Adler in the drum seat at Download due to his LOG commitments in the US. Soilwork’s Dirk Veubeuren is the latest incumbent of the drum stool and doing a fine job too. Megadeth (8) have plenty in the locker, opening with the never boring Hanger 18, Mustaine, long serving bassist Dave Ellefson and newish guitarist Kiko Lourerio kicked ass over their hour long set, mixing old classics with a decent smattering off Dystopia. We were also treated (if that's the right word) to a cover of Anarchy In The UK with Nikki Sixx popping up on bass and backing vocals. I'm never sure whether this kind of thing is meant to be a treat for fans or not but it fuels the ego of those on stage. I'd have preferred another Megadeth track to be honest. Typically, as the final stains of Holy Wars concluded a pretty sharp set and Mr Mustaine had asked us all to “drive safely … we want to see you again” the heavens began to open again. A gut churning presentation to wrestler Triple H for some Metal Hammer pointless award turned into a promotion for the wrestler’s NXT outfit who were performing on site. Yawn.

Ed - Myself and fairer member of our crew avoided Megadave and his smugness to check out the UK reunion show of Juliette And The Licks (8) who have happily become a going concern again after six years. Fronted by Hollywood A-Lister Juliette Lewis the five piece came to the stage and immediately kicked off the set with some hip shaking garage rock n roll with dual bluesy guitars and a punk rock attitude. The focal point of the band is obviously Lewis decked out in a Evil Knievel catsuit she has more energy than singers half her age, she commands the stage and uses her sexuality as a weapon to bewitch the crowd with tales of love, regret and a right on Feminist punch to the jaw. the set featured old and new songs the best of which were brand new track Hard lovin Woman which featured six string fireworks from her two amazing guitarists before breaking down into the outro of Whole Lotta Love complete with the "Way Down Inside" part done beautifully. With such a live fire and of course a sassy powerful vocal the set was a joy to behold as big hit Hot Kiss led into a cover of CCR's Proud Mary ending the set strongly. Having only seen J&TL once many years ago I was heartened to see that they had not lost a beat. From one wild frontperson to another Paul picks up where he left off:   

As the mud turned into soup and everything got even wetter than you thought possible, a decision was needed. Deftones or Newport’s finest, the mighty Skindred. Well, I don't get any buttons pushed by Deftones so it was off across the Somme to find a decent vantage point on the second stage. If there is a live band that can make you forget how miserable the weather is then it's Skindred (9). An hour long set contained everything you needed and the band played it as if they were the headliners. Massive anthems, much swearing, crowd participation from the off and even a bit of Justin Bieber and Metallica thrown in. Skindred live remain irresistible and the smiles around the field as soaking wet punters tore off their shirts to participate in the Newport Helicopter during set closer Warning was fantastic. It's only a matter of time before these boys get right to the top of the tree.

By now the place had physically become a joke. Wheelchair users were reliant on kind hearted able bodied fans to navigate across the site and we saw several disabled fans being rescued by their fellow metal heads from the totally appalling conditions. A huge river of mud ran down the centre of the arena, and with the churn making the walk underfoot treacherous a number of people fell covering themselves. The toilets were just unreal and so few in number that men and women alike took to urinating where they stood. Yes, I know that this is what happens when torrential rain occurs but so little preparation or reaction made it very unpleasant. Limited hay laid, no chippings or boarding and overall just a bit of a shambles. Download were very keen to point out their giant statues and dog head which adorned the field but I'd say spend the cash on some shelters for your customers instead.

9.00pm and with the rain still hammering down the tolling of the bell signalled the start of the set for day two headliners Black Sabbath (6). As the first huge chords of Black Sabbath thundered across the arena, it was impossible not to get a tingle down the spine. This had been billed as the final UK appearance by Ozzy, Tony and Geezer to the extent that earlier in the day there were t-shirts proclaiming this on the merchandise stand. By now of course we'd all seen that an arena tour is scheduled for 2017 (save your cash folks £100 is too much). As Ozzy mumbled his way through a ponderous After Forever you wondered what is left in the Sabbath tank. The first half of the set saw Ozzy struggle vocally, although I'm led to believe that he had some monitor and ear-piece issues. Although he's never been a good singer, tonight Ozzy was poor. Long gaps between songs and very little real interaction with the crowd, it was hard not to view the band as a bloated dinosaur whose cessation is long overdue. In comparison to their show at the NEC under two years previously, this had a real feel of going through the motions. Iommi and Butler still churn out the doom, and Tommy Clufetos does a decent job behind the skins and when the second half got into gear it was truly magical to see the forefathers of metal letting rip. The set list, with the exception of Snowblind and a horrible Dirty Women was culled entirely from the first three albums and this was a huge disappointment for me. No Hole In The Sky, Sabbath Bloody Sabbath, Symptom Of The Universe or Never Say Die and nothing from their final release 13. Obviously Iron Man and set closer Children Of The Grave were epic and Paranoid never fails to get you moving but overall this was an unsatisfying finale to a magical journey. Thanks for the music and memories, now retire gracefully.

And that is the end of our Download 2016. The miserable weather broke us and as the rain teemed down once more on Sunday morning and the Twitter feed revealed four hour waits to park the car, we choose to exercise our right not to stand in six inches of mud, soaked to the skin for 12 hours … and we fucked off home. There will be no more weekends at Download. It's just too unwieldy and difficult. The contempt given by some of the security was staggering (watching stewards telling customers to “fuck off” in the car park for example). The facilities for such a large event were worse than I've experienced for many years and when you are a BOA veteran, you realise that your spiritual home actually isn't Castle Donington; it's Catton Hall. (Amen - Ed)

Reviews: Manic In Lithium, Nemrud, Death Roll

$
0
0
Manic In Lithium: Manic In Lithium (Self Released)

Back in the early 90's guitarist Michael Hewett and vocalist Otis Mannick met at the Berklee College Of Music and Boston College Of Music, after this they moved to New York city and created two tapes of music but nothing more than that. However these recordings got lost in the midsts of time but as of December 2015 they were rediscovered by drummer Dean Rickard who mastered the recordings playing them to the res of the band and inspiring the creative spark again. This is where Manic In Lithium has come from both the album (the first of two) and the name of the band recording it, it consists of Otis, Michael, Dean and bassist Derek Cheever armed with new and old songs this record is the culmination of their career so far. With a long gestation period the record is good but it is split in to distinct parts, the two opening tracks Hell Of A High and Falling Down are both 90's sounding pieces coming from the same background of Alice In Chains with some grunge riffs and soulful vocals from Otis that conjure Layne Staley and Jerry Cantrell the grunge rockers give way to a more progressive bent on You Belong To Me which sounds a bit like the band 3 with its frantic acoustics, pace changes and rumbling tom toms.

It's the stylistic differences that make this record interesting there are so many styles on offer you can tell that this record has been developed over time, There's grunge Strapped and Mud Horse, prog the Middle Eastern touches on Dead Trees Come Alive and the laid back funk on Sunshine Never Ends, southern rock on Takin It Easy, a bit of U2 with Turned Around. There is a myriad of styles on this record but I'd liken the band to the lesser known American rock band Ra they have a similar sound and are all the better for it, after a long time it's great to hear that these songs were strong when they were first written, they are enhanced by the production and the band's obvious virtuosity. If this is the first part of the bands two albums it's a good opening but it does feel a little like it's only half the story, the second part will be the real clincher but as it stands Manic In Lithium is an impressive start. 8/10

Nemrud: Nemrud (Rainbow 45 Records)

Turkish proggsters Nemrud are now on their third record and once again they carry the flag for classic sounding progressive rock. There self titled album contains four tracks all over 10 minutes in length that move from introspective acoustic numbers to sweeping orchestral pieces that draw heavily on the bands Middle Eastern heritage. The band are a traditional four piece of guitarist/singer (Mert Göçay) bassist (Levent Candaş) drummer (Mert Alkaya) and keyboardist (Mert Topel), the album benefits from this four piece approach as every instrument is important and given the chance to breathe to create the soundscapes and mystical atmosphere the album strives to create. From the ELP-like synths that open the record in a truly startling way, the album is based around the creation of the universe and the Nemrud which is a place for death to dwell, this concept is the basis for the spacey record that blurs the lines between science fiction with faith. Gods Of The Mountain is a slow opening to the record with a laid back guitar and swathes of synths for the first 5 minutes.

The vocals come in after that and vocally Mert Göçay sounds like Orphaned Land's Kobi Fahri with a beckoning insistent voice that is a major part of the bands sound. Gods Of The Mountain could come of the more recent Opeth numbers with nods to the halcyon days of progressive rock with a hard rock crunch. With such abstract lyrics, huge musical layers and a technically proficient musicians, that are able to handle any genre, with bass-led jazz during Lion Of Commagene as it changes into a sermon for the final part. Nemrud are a very impressive band part Opeth, part Orphaned Land with the right amount of classic prog that brings in ELP, Yes, Floyd (Forsaken Throne) some 80's electro (on the middle eight of The Euphrates) and countless other genres to create a sublime progressive rock album that is mostly instrumental punctuated with magical emotive lyrical passages. Nemrud is a truly excellent prog rock album from a band that I will following very closely from now on. 9/10     

Death Roll: Rolling With Death

Um yeah Death Roll, they are from Norway and they play fast paced, rock and roll. So that's about all I know about the band as they seem to have absolutely no online presence, no website, no social media etc etc so I have no idea who is the band or who plays what but I know they are a four piece rock band so I guess that is something. With little to no background to the record or band I just have to talk about the music and for the most part the songs on this record are foot to the floor hard rock clad in a leather jacket and cruising down the highway with stylistic influences that are shared by countrymen Audrey Horne albeit  Four on the floor riffs, crashing drums and some booming vocals and a punky attitude. Rolling With Death is a by the numbers rock release but will satisfy an urge if you have a hard rock craving. yes Heartattack Man steals the opening line of Stormbringer but Deal Gone Wrong is Chuck Berry style rock n roll and a the rest of the album is full of frantic shots of live wire rock. So Death Roll I don't know who they are but they play good honest music. 7/10

Reviews: The Amorettes, Persona Non Grata, Ouzo Bazooka

$
0
0
The Amorettes: White Hot Heat (Off Yer Rocka)

"It's a long way to the top if you want to rock n roll" this famous line from the immortal Bon Scott has been the motto of many rock bands throughout the years, every young up and coming band can identify with the sentiment but few make it with many falling by the wayside. Scottish all-girl three piece The Amorettes will not fall by the wayside, their snotty, riff driven style of hard rock brings to mind the rawness of Bon Scott fronted AC/DC if the songs were performed by Girlschool. White Hot Heat is the bands third album and once again attracts big hitters with Thunder's Luke Morley handling the production, he also co-writes a couple of the tracks, as does Black Star Riders' frontman Ricky Warwick so with such luminaries of the rock world supporting the band you wouldn't be surprised to find out that White Hot Heat is a rip snorting, hard riffing, kick you in the spuds rock album from word go.

The bands D.I.Y ethic is commendable but this record they have tightened their sound up a little with the rhythm section of Heather and Hannah McKay chomping at the bit, trying to get faster and louder with every song, meaning that guitarist Gill Montgomery has to be both Malcolm and Angus with the six string, she chugs along with Heather's heavy bass until it's time for her to let loose with explosive guitar solo that cut through the noise with their sparkling precision. The band have been called Airbourne fronted by Joan Jett and you can see why on The Runaways-like Batter Up and four chord attack of Eyes On the Prize and White Russian Roulette which would both sit pretty on High Voltage.

However it's not just AC/DC and the Riot Grrl mentality, Let The Neighbours Call The Cops has the loudness and fuck 'em all attitude of the great Motorhead, Come N Get It is a bit glamtastic as is Pervert Alert both sounding a lot like The Sweet in their heyday. Roll is punk at it's purest and Man Meat is yet another DC-styled track but from the woman's point of view. Bon's mantra is true to this day but with the support these Scottish lasses have had the peak of the mountain is most definitely in site. 8/10       

Persona Non Grata: Confirm Your Humanity (Steel Gallery Records)

Any album that opens with a finger plucked bass led opening track is either one of two things, a Les Claypool release or a progressive metal album. Confirm Your Humanity is the latter (sorry Primus fans) and it's progressive metal that sits in the same style as Fates Warning, Shadow Gallery and Dream Theater, think a heavy metal sound, virtuosos on the instruments and passionate songwriting that is built upon mesmerising instrumental pieces and the expansive vocal range of their frontman Bill Axiotis who is a dead ringer for Pagan's Mind man Nils K Rue, I mean he sounds exactly the same with just a hint of Geoff Tate.

Musically the band are very impressive indeed the guitar and bass are the heavy components of the songs with the keys adding the orchestrations and melodies for the cleaner leads to play over all while the drums often sound like they are playing a different song, this of course is a good thing as it keeps the songs interesting meaning that even when the band slow things down on the mega ballad Hope you can still sit in awe of the excellent playing that is going on behind the slightly maudlin song.

This album is the Greek band's third and the production is handled by veteran metal producer Chris Tsangarides who has behind the desk for Priest, Helloween, Anvil, Thin Lizzy as well as Depeche Mode and Tom Jones. He makes sure every instrument pops and allows you to focus on the intricate opening of songs such as Absent and brings out the heaviness on the more jazz orientated Burning Bridges. I'd not heard of Persona Non Grata before this despite my many dalliances with Greek metal, but I'm glad I found them as for me they tick all the boxes, this is a very strong classic sounding progressive metal album that will appeal to fans of Dream Theater and Queensryche. 8/10  

Ouzo Bazooka: Simoom (Self Released)

Hailing from the cultural centre of Israel Tel-Aviv Ouzo Bazooka are a band that play Middle Eastern psychedelic rock, their third album Simoom is a sweeping piece of consciousness altering, mind bending piece with desert influenced music built on as the band say "exotic food and fresh coffee". This inclusive musical nature of the album is evident  on all of the ten tracks, through funky, psych-filled romps such as Black Witch and the freaky Look Around which has the spirit of Syd Barrett looming large, in fact Syd's touch is heavy across the whole of Simoom as the album's kaleidoscopic, experimental nature allows the band, much like the city they come from, to draw from a melting pot of influences.

These are sculpted into songs by mastermind frontman Uri Brauner Kinrot who along with guitarist/bassist Adam Scheflan, keyboardist/vocalist Dani Ever-Hadani and drummer Ira Raviv are the arbiters of the music contained on this release. With glam rock on Shell, hallucinogenic ambiance on It's Real the obligatory slabs of Middle Eastern promise that shine through on tracks such as Clouds Of Sorrow all show Ouzo Bazookas dedication to the psychedelic genre in general. As I've said the influences come from throughout the musical spectrum the Oud and Bouzouki bring the Mediterranean heat as the record works through surf rock, pop rock and every other sound you can think of. With a real mix of East meets West this is shamanic, trippy peace loving music that wouldn't sound out of place on the hippie caravan trail and it's really just groovy...man! 8/10     

Reviews: Anderson/Stolt, Denner/Shermann, Whitford/St Holmes

$
0
0
Anderson/Stolt: Invention Of Knowledge (InsideOut)

Jon Anderson and Ronnie Stolt are two names that will be very familiar to prog rock fans, one the unmistakable (and only real) voice of Yes the other a the impressive guitar prowess of The Flower Kings. the two collaborated to play all of the first side of Tales From Topographic Oceans while at a gig together, this one collaboration has resulted in the two prog rock legends writing an album together that harks back the 1970's prog rock glory days. The album is made up of four parts each then split again to make up a total of 9 tracks most of which over 6 minutes long. What I got from the first playthrough of this record was that the songs are intensely musical but sounds stripped back and at times like an acoustic record with the layered guitars both 6 and 12 string variety, shaking percussion and many world music influences coming from the addition of dobro, lap steel, Portuguese guitar. The record is a musical journey through the Invention of Lying with the title track split into four parts; Invention is the record's most Yes sounding song with the building Anderson vocal based around a Medieval folk sounding musical backing that builds into a the trademark keyboard heavy sound of the band that abandoned their frontman a few years ago, as an opening salvo it's a perfect welcome to the record Stolt's multi faceted musical palette at it's most effective and Andersons chirping falsetto in fine fettle, it's also 9 minutes long and leads into the Indian sounding We Are Truth that forms the second part of the title track and acts as a bridge into the immediacy of the final part Knowledge which once again is a direct psychedelically tinged rocker. With 23 minutes past you realise that you are only still on the first part of the record but the magical mystical journey continues through the second part Knowing, made up of Knowing and the introspective Chase The Harmony. The music on this record is fantastic it's a majestic, grandiose and played by musicians that are all top flight along with two of the prog rock genres finest names. There is too much on this record to give a full autopsy of the record so I suggest you just take up your comfiest armchair, put on your headphones and just ease your way into this progressive voyage. 8/10

Denner/Shermann: Masters Of Evil (Metal Blade)

I reviewed Denner/Shermann's debut effort last year giving the EP a solid 7/10, well the band have been working hard and their debut full length is now upon us. If the names are familiar then you were brought up with schlock-horror of King Diamond, Michael Denner and Hank Shermann were and in Shermann's case still is, the dual axe attack for the Mercyful Fate as well as many other bands including King Diamond's solo work. As I mentioned in my EP review the band unashamedly sound like Mercyful Fate, but in a question I've posed before can you actually copy yourself? Denner/Shermann are trying their hardest to do just that, right down to the cover of this record that was designed by long term Mercyful/King Diamond artist Thomas Holm and features the same bursts of yellow and Satanic beasts as Don't Break the Oath. The eight tracks on this record are prime slabs of speed metal, lightning speed riffs, trade-off solos, frequent changes of pace and a biting high frequency tone giving it a sharp 80's sound akin to DBTO and Melissa. The talent is in evidence from the outset with a thundering rhythm section of Snowy Shaw's drums and Marc Grabowski's bass in almost robotic unison, all of this would be for nothing without a vocalist that has the same powerful lungs as The King, luckily Sean Peck has that role down to a tee already familiar as the Halford-esque vocals in Death Dealer and Cage here he shows off his range a bit more on the atmospheric Son Of Satan which has the tolling bells, a chugging building riff and some ear piercing vocals in the chorus, there's a lower register on the less rapid moments such as the crunch of Pentagram And The Cross, nods to Ozzy on The Wolf Feeds At Midnight Masters Of Evil still relies heavily on the horror imagery of both men's past but you wouldn't expect anything less from two men who have made their name with Denmark's premier metal outfit. The songs on this record are just as good as those two early Mercyful Fate records and indeed better than much of King Diamond's solo output, this is proto-thrash at it's best from the duo that were two of the leading exponents of the sound back in the day. Masters Of Evil is a non stop metal assault from beginning to end and if you lament the loss of Mercyful Fate and love bands like Metal Church, Angel Witch and Satan then Denner/Shermann will come near the top of your end of year list. 8/10         

Whitford/St.Holmes: Reunion (Mailboat Records)

When Brad Whitford left Aerosmith in 1980 he teamed up with ex-Ted Nugent man Derek St Holmes, their debut record was released in August 1981 and unsurprisingly was a mix of the bluesy hip shaking bluesy hard rock of Aerosmith and the Southern styled hard rock of St. Holmes' work with Uncle Ted. Without achieving any major success the band split and both went back to their subsequent charges. However in November 2015 with Aerosmith on a relative hiatus the band reformed and embarked on a reunion tour, as part of the tour package they recorded an album of new songs (packaged with a digitally remastered version of their debut as a bonus). Once again the band is made up of St Holmes on vocals and guitar and Whitford on the screaming leads with the percussive backbeat coming from Tesla's Troy Luccketta who is no stranger to bluesy hard rock with his day job. the band is rounded out by Buck Johnson's keys and the excellently named Chopper Anderson on bass. The new album is imaginatively titled Reunion and it features nine brand new songs written especially for the record with Shapes being the stand out single a big ballsy riff leading the song into it's massive "Come Tomorrow" refrain displaying St. Holmes' excellent vocals that sound very much like KISS lead singer Paul Stanley throughout, most impressively on the Rock All Day which makes the most of the organs with it's sleazy sound, Hot For You has a definite KISS sound to it and Hell Is On Fire is the album's heaviest moment and it's a benefit as a juxtaposition to the more AOR saccharine tracks like Catch My Fall and the country love song of Tender Is The NightReunion is a good album from two old hands that work in unison very well showing that in 2016 unlike 1981 they have become a more pressing concern. 7/10


     

Another Point Of View: Stone Free Festival (Review By Paul & Morag)

$
0
0
Stone Free Festival - The O2 London

This is the first 'Stone Free Festival'. Our decision to go was based on the two 'one off' performances that were advertised. First was the only UK performance of Alice Cooper in 2016, and second was the world premier performance performance of the reworked Rick Wakeman classic The Myths And Legends Of King Arthur And The Knights Of The Round Table. There was a wide selection of music on both days,  with two stages as well as the arena and a lounge offering alternative entertainment. Day 1 was primarily 'Rock', and Day 2 ran a more 'Progressive Rock' programme.

Saturday 18 June

The day opened in the Indigo Lounge in the Indigo O2. First up for us were Jackaman (7) This band first came to our attention when they were announced to play at Rockstock.  Having now seen them live, we can say that Rockstock is in for a real treat. Wow Lynne Jackaman has got a strong voice! Their music has a soul/blues feel rather than heavy rock, but they gave a powerful and moving performance, with some tracks benefitting from the inclusion of the soulful sound of a saxophone. Their short set was very well received by the lunchtime crowd.

The Virginmarys (8) are from Macclesfield and were named 'Best Breakthrough Act' at the 2013 Classic Rock Awards. It is easy to see why. They were next up  and couldn't have been more different. Their sound is what could be described as 'angry rock' and the three of them put all their energy into their music.  Danny Dolan (Drums) is the sort of drummer that wants to be heard. If that means standing up to hit his drums a bit harder, then he isn't afraid to do that, even if causes his drum tech a few headaches!

It was then time for us to take our seats in the main arena for the nights packed agenda. First up were Blackberry Smoke (8), (no strangers to those of us here at MoM towers - Ed) who had flown in that day at the start of their UK tour. They were late on stage - apparently due to being held up at Heathrow. Despite the late start, they gave us a blistering set of Southern Rock including some of their better known tracks such as Six Ways To Sunday and Rock And Roll Again. This is the sort of music that, even when you are sitting down, your feet just want to join in. The audience really seemed to enjoy the music from these guys from Atlanta and gave them rapturous applause as they finished their set.

After a short break for  a bite to eat, we retook our seats for Apocalyptica (7). I had been sceptical about this act - to me, cellos and rock music are poles apart. They are billed as a 'Finnish Cello Metal Band'. Imagine Metallica tracks being played on a cello. Not even gracefully seated, but energetic, unique, and off the scale. It was an amazing performance. Sometimes, its nice to be wrong!

The penultimate act of the evening was The Darkness (8). They are a band with a chequered history, having been on the UK and international rock scene since 1999 and with a string of hits behind them meant that they are bound to give us a great performance. The release of their album Last Of Our Kind in 2015 brought the band back into the limelight after a bit of a lull. We had last seen them at Rockstock in December where they had been heralded as hugely entertaining, and had performed a great set. This outing was no different. Justin Hawkins was on great form, as flamboyant as ever in his skin tight outfit complete with gold codpiece, engaging some members of the crowd in the way that only he can get away with.

Some people commented that if he had engaged in a little less banter with the front row, he would have been able to get another song in before timing got the better of them. Beginning their set with Barbarian and finishing with I Believe In A Thing Called Love gave us a great variety and, overall, they were great to see again. As The Darkness left the stage to rousing applause and cheering,  the crew began to move quickly to prepare the stage for the highlight of the evening. To prevent the eagle eyed audience seeing what was going on, the customary shield was raised at the front of the stage.

After what seemed like hours, Alice Cooper (10) and his band came onto the stage through a curtain of fireworks. Ever the showman, we knew we were in for a real treat. Beginning with The Black Widow, Alice takes us through a string of his music, pausing only to allow his band to take centre stage in solos. Nita Strauss delights with her versatility and energy as she delivers blistering solos whilst striding round the stage and making it her own. Things calm down a little while Alice takes a seat on an upturned and battered trash can to sing Only Women Bleed only to kick it across the stage as soon as he is done. Alice is the only person to die on stage several times a night and everyone cheers his demise and resurrection - his band seemingly helping the sources of his death as part of the show. He also pays tribute to those lost to the rock world. While tombstones bearing the names of Keith Moon, Jimi Hendrix, David Bowie and Lemmy appear at the back of the stage, he delivers a montage of Pinball Wizard, Fire, Suffragette City and Ace Of Spades. As he closes his set with Schools Out  accompanied by the entire audience, there are cheers and demands for an encore. In the brief seconds the lights are down, the only song that could possibly follow that was Elected with the accompanying show parodying the upcoming US Election. Alice for president. He'd get our vote!


Sunday 19 June

After a restful night in our hotel, we returned to the O2 on Sunday morning. There were a few bands we wanted to see who were appearing on the Fireball Stage which was sited in the main foyer, just inside the entrance. Its position meant that bands would be seen, not only by Stone Free ticket holders, but also by members of the public who were at the O2 for any other reason.

First up were Broken Witt Rebels (8), a Birmingham based band with a blues rock sound. They are predicted to have a bright future, and if their performance at Stone Free is anything to go by, that is a prediction they are worthy of. They took a couple of tracks to settle down, but it wasn't long before Danny started to enjoy himself and he built a rapport with the crowd that had formed. The whole band were appreciative of the audience - many of whom had just stopped by to watch and listen as they delivered their original music with growing confidence. By the time they were finished, the cheers and claps confirmed their successful appearance.

The next band we were keen to see, also on the Fireball stage was Colour Of Noise (9). This is a superb band who we first had the pleasure of seeing at Steelhouse Festival in July 2015, and have seen them several times since. They have a great sound, with their influences in traditional rock and roll showing through. We were lucky enough to meet up with the guys later on for a chat. You can read about it here. Matt Mitchell has a great presence on stage and  really draws in the audience. They began the set with You Only Call Me When You Want Something and followed it with perfect renditions of some of the great tracks from their debut album, including their single Can You Hear Me and my personal favourite Heavy to finish with. The small stage seemed cramped for them, as Bruce moved in to fill the spaces that Matt created as he shimmied his way round his small area. Colour Of Noise do not 'do' ballads. When they play, it is difficult, if not impossible, to resist the temptation to join in and dance. As always, they were a pleasure to watch.

We made our way into the arena for the main event which had already started when we arrived. We were seated in a different area, but the first thing that struck me was the arena floor. On Saturday night, it had been a sea of people dancing, singing and joining in with the musicians on the stage. By Sunday night, it was full of people again, but this time they were appreciating the progressive rock programme from the comfort and restraint of a fully seated arena. There would be no repeat of the crowd surfing antics of last night.

Steve Hackett (8) had already been on stage for a little while when we got in we had heard him performing a Genesis track as we entered. Steve is a talented guitarist we had seen a few months ago in Cardiff on his Acolyte To Wolflight tour, and he performed a few of the same tracks, some of which were his new music, others from his previous life as a member of Genesis. As always, we were impressed by the complexity that seems to be fairly standard in prog rock and the set closed with The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway.

After a brief interval, we were looking forward to Marillion (6). As the lights went down they began their set with The Invisible Man, moving through other classics including Kayleigh, Lavender and finally finishing with Neverland. They had to cut the set short, as it was going to take some time to prepare the stage for the grand finale of the weekend. Again, the audience let them leave the stage with cheering and applause ringing in their ears.

The 'Main Event' was now preparing to take the stage. Rick Wakeman (7) released his concept album The Myths And Legends Of King Arthur And The Knights Of The Round Table in 1974 and has always dreamed of re-recording and performing an extended version. With the new album on the verge of being released, this was the first live performance and the realisation of a long held ambition. We'd met Rick earlier in the afternoon, and he'd certainly seemed to be looking forward to the performance. He was on great form, entertaining those who were lucky enough to meet him.

With Ian Lavender narrating, myths unfolded as the orchestra and choir brought the music to life. Rick had centre stage dressed in a regal cloak and he played his intricate music on a bank of keyboards. Taking us through births, marriages quests and deaths, the tempo changed from melodic and choral to fast and fun-filled expressing the different chapters of the legend. Rick finished and the crowd rose for a well deserved standing ovation.

The first inaugural Stone Free festival was overall a success, yes there were a few major kinks to be worked out as there always is with the debut of a festival, but I have no doubt that by next year things will run a lot smoother, well I hope so at least as there was much to be desired about this years organisation. However with a plethora of bands and distinctive feel on both days let's hope that Stone Free will continue to go from strength to strength. (It already has a benefit over many festivals by being all undercover so perfect for the British 'summer')


Viewing all 4388 articles
Browse latest View live