Abduction – Black Blood (Candlelight) [Steve Walsh]
If there is a competition (albeit one that’s mostly in my head rather than occupying much time in the minds of the bookies at Ladbrokes) for the best upcoming UK Black Metal band, Derby’s Abduction must surely be a front runner. Starting as a solo vehicle for an enigmatic figure known simply as ‘A|V’, the ‘band’ released three albums in quick succession before going relatively quiet over the last two years (although, to be fair, most of us did). This seems to have prompted a rethink because Abduction are now a proper band, and, as a storming performance at last years Damnation Festival proved, quite a formidable aural and visual experience.
Opener Kernos Crown sets a solid base for the album, with thundering drums and a swirling mesh of interlocking guitars. But thereafter most of the tracks display characteristics of other genre and are not content to simply regurgitate BM tropes. Undoubted centrepiece of the album is Plutonium Gate, an eleven minute epic that moves from monastic ritual like vocals though rolling, roiling guitars and drums punctuated by an abrupt stabbing chorus and a couple found sound or ambient interludes to culminate in hurtling, screaming closing section that concludes with a glorious fists-punching-the-air coda and a dead stop that feels like falling off a cliff edge. Phew, quite a ride.
Lightness At The Grand Conjunction has a slower pulse underneath the sheets of guitar and an almost abstract structure, parts of which sound like it could be a ballad if it were stripped of the electric guitars. Oddest of all is A Psylacybic Death, which, as the title would suggest, is a disorientating plunge into a psychedelic BM nightmare. Final track, In Exaltation Of The Supreme Being, could almost be a companion piece to Kernos Crown and completes the circle back to something more typically BM.
Along with the skilfully orchestrated multiple guitars, A|V’s voice is a key feature of the bands overall sound. It’s always a guttural growl but the lyrics are often clearly discernible, and he always sounds just human, not at all like he’s trying to emulate one of Satan’s minions. BM bands often seem to strive to be as cold and detached as possible, but there’s a warmth and humanity about Abduction that helps to set them apart. 8/10
Amputate - Dawn Of Annihilation (Massacre Records) [Matt Cook]
The first (and really only worthwhile) installment of the Saw franchise sees Dr. Gordon violently grind his foot off with a rusty saw in order to free himself of the chains that bind him in an abandoned, musty bathroom. Aside from the obvious connection, that iconic scene came to mind when listening to Amputate’s latest foray, Dawn Of Annihilation. The blood-soaked screams of terror, whip-lashing drum lines and jaw-breaking percussion also did the trick. These eight songs are gangrenous and infected, poisoned beyond repair.
Tom Kuzmic is hoarse as fuck and spurns the electrifying tempo. His foundation-toppling screams of dominance featured on the title track, which sounds like it could be about the Manhattan Project (“What have we done?”), covers the operating-room walls with viscera and bone marrow. Not to be outdone, Max Grinder (who is not in fact a male stripper, though that can’t be immediately corroborated) mans the kit with vicious machinations and fuming animosity. And the string work devised by Kuzmic and fellow guitarist (and backing vocalist) Nuno Santos adds a lustful element of thrashy solos and virtuosic shredding, culminating in catchy, old-school, chunky refrains.
The record concludes with Buried By Ashes, which is frenetic while at the same time harboring a variety of different techniques and styles that fluidly combine for a rugged close to the album. To call Amputate’s sophomore effort anything less than Dawn Of Annihilation would be doing it an injustice. Over the span of 35 minutes, the floor of the ER is bathed in blood, bile and bone matter. All while the four-piece looks on with sinister grins affixed to their demonic faces. 8/10
The Los Angeles stoner rock band Sea Of Snakes have unleashed their full-length debut on us, and I must say it is quite a nice was to introduce themselves to the masses. The band has had a couple of singles and EPs but with their first long player, The Serpent & The Lamb, the band have begun to establish themselves as a force in the US stoner rock scene. We have got an absolute banger to kick us off with Start A War, which is an upbeat stoner anthem with a nice doomy breakdown halfway through. Jason Busiek’s voice goes from husky and whiskey drenched to a higher octave with the greatest of ease. The vocals are killer throughout The Serpent & The Lamb.