Abduction - Existentialismus (Candlelight Records) [Mark Young]
Pyramidia Liberi picks up that baton and charges headlong with it, and in the same way as A Legacy it carries that same air about it, the same attention to detail in how certain riffs should sit together and how to make it flow effectively. This is what Abduction do very well on here, how they build their songs up so that they engage from start to finish. They know that it has to be visceral, it has to grab and keep you hooked and on these they do that to a high level.
The length and execution of Truth Is As Sharp A Sword As Vengeance may deter some fans but for others the ride will be no different than that offered elsewhere on here. Enjoyment of it will depend on how much of a fan you are and if you fall into the shorter = better camp but stick with this as it is not a case of mindless repetition. There is a journey here, and it is one that is worth taking, even for the likes of myself who dip a toe into this genre as I would not class myself as a massive fan of black metal, I can certainly appreciate good music, no matter how abrasive it is.
A muscular arrangement is provided for Blau Is Die Farbe De Ewigkeit which has an all-encompassing darkness to it but with a cracking riff to it as well as some exquisite chord choices from them combined with double bass for days whilst the penultimate Razors Of Occam with its atmospheric start and a tempo that is set to slow is next up. It sees the deployment of a swinging build and the use of cleans as a means of changing things around, at least for a short time before they decide to kick it into touch and light the blue touch paper.
And with that, Abduction are done, their 6 songs completed. Existentialismus should find an enthusiastic home with black metal fans. It’s a very strong album, with no weak songs or drop off in quality and shows that the UK is as equally adept at doing black metal as our friends in Scandinavia. 8/10
Finnish doom metal band, Dawn Of Solace, are back with their 4th album, Affliction Vortex. This album has some seriously good sludgy riffs, great vocals and some interesting song structures all packed into 9 tracks.
The first track, Inception, is just a simple short intro track with some heavy repetitive synth work. It gives off a similar vibe to the intro of M1A1 by Gorillaz. Track 2, Murder, starts off with some big heavy chords being the driving force, and some lead guitar playing over the top. It has a pretty simple verse-chorus-verse-chorus structure, with some nice clean vocals taking the lead, but being accompanied by some harsh backing vocals in the second chorus. Fortress follows up with a similar song structure, but sounding a bit more lively in terms of dynamics, with the guitars taking a bit of a backseat in the first verse and the addition of a guitar solo before the final chorus.
Track 4 is Into The Light, and this one is where things start to get a bit more interesting with the song structures for the rest of the album. It’s got some nice clean vocals in the verse, some faster drumming in the chorus, harsh vocals in the first half of the bridge, which is then replaced by synth for the second half before going back to the chorus for the end of the song. Rival is a great track. It’s got some nice lead guitar over the top of the intro and seems to be a bit more laid back in the first verse. With just clean guitar, drums and vocals. They pick up the speed a little for the pre-chorus and then punch it up even more for the chorus.
Dream is up next, this one begins with some clean guitar, bass and drums before the vocals come in for the first verse. In the chorus, some distorted guitars and harsh backing vocals join in. The verse and chorus pattern is repeated once more before a nice little instrumental break, followed by a guitar solo which leads into the final chorus. The song fades out for the outro. Perennial follows up with a dirty sludgy sounding isolated guitar for the intro. The other instruments and vocals join in for the first verse. The chorus is heavier with the addition of some harsh vocals. The intro riff comes back in before an instrumental break. This is followed by the second chorus with yet another instrumental break coming in just before the bridge. The bridge (surprise surprise) is followed by one final instrumental section for the outro of the track.
This was a really great album, some interesting curveballs thrown in with the structures of the songs. The instruments and vocals are handled really well. The mix isn’t amazing, but everything is pretty clear to hear and there are no jarring issues. A really good effort overall! 9/10
Savage Lands - Army Of Trees (Season Of Mist) [Simon Black]
Enter Savage Lands, whose brand of Eco-activism shouts “Wake the Fuck Up” very loudly from the field of empty tree stumps that used to be a forest in Costa Rica.
Savage Lands are all about activism, pure and simple, of a kind that’s been missing for too long as a meaningful force in music for some considerable time. In the days when a successful music career meant earning a good living (and occasionally a fortune), many artists used their platforms to promote causes and generate understanding in a way that literally changed the world. It’s music that really means something, and listening to it made it mean something to you too, and we’ve lost that in recent decades.
Traditional Folk music had been doing this quietly in the pubs for generations, and the lyrics may have had to be more subtle in for black recording artistes like Billie Holiday’s for Strange Fruit back in 1939, but there were plenty more examples in the modern recording age before the more blatant reflection that the times were a changin’ that was in place by the time Bob Dylan cut Masters |Of War in 1963. By the 1970’s whole genres existed in this space building on the Counterculture movement of the previous decade.
Savage Lands is the brainchild of Sylvain Demercastel and Dirk Verbeuren who have known each other for decades and driven by disgust and anger at the wholesale destruction of the natural environments taking place there. They have assembled an impressive array of contributors for this project. This is music doing something, with every penny it generates in revenues being used to buy land in Costa Rica to re-wild the environment.
Musically this is a pretty eclectic mix of content – it’s a broad mixture styles from a plethora of well-known contributors. This works both for and against it. Having a quite a broad tone and breadth to the work, which keeps a heavy and extreme edge reflecting the anger without alienating a more mainstream audience needs to be balanced against the lack of a distinct band sound. There’s everything here from Punk, to Groove, via Shoegaze and Thrash, and the goal is clearly to appeal to the broadest range of people rather than create a cohesive album with a strong identity of its own.
It can be top notch stuff too, when it works, which is really the point of using such a platform but sadly the lack of consistency can be a problem.
Well, the world is waking up, and I hope that this kind of political focus starts to make an impact on the musical landscape in a meaningful way, but a little focus is needed to target more precisely. Perhaps some more focussed EP’s with a particular and more niche cache of artists is the way forward for this outfit, as this overly broad smorgasbord doesn’t hit consistently hard enough. But in the meantime, I for one am 100% behind their message. 6/10
Leadfeather really likes Led Zeppelin. Probably Whitesnake too. Maybe House Of Lords as well. But probably not Greta Van fleet. Why? Because these guys sound way more legit wearing their Zeppelin love on their sleeve on their debut EP. Roll The Dice. The six songs are huge sounding Page riff filled bangers that sometimes get a bit too close to the sun but is a fun listen nonetheless.
The UK band has no qualms about sounding like bands you have heard before from sometime between 1968 and 1986. These are some big ass rock and roll songs, borrowing from the best of that time frame with Zep being the main well they are drawing from. The title track is a perfect example, but leans more towards something Whitesnake would have done, you know, stealing from Led Zeppelin, in the best kind of way of course.
These guys do rock, but Leadfeather is not bringing anything new to the party, and some will be fine with that. Roll The Dice is rock and roll you have heard before and executed well by a band who certainly are fans of the bands that came before them. I just don’t think we need any more of this, but the riffs are great and the band understands what they are doing. Someone will really dig this, but for me I am indifferent. 5/10