Plagueboys climbs one step up from Motherblood going deeper down the misery hole with an album about “civilisation and savagery”, tears streaming from their eyes as the blacklights shine and timer ticks down to the doomsday. Staying true to their 80’s new wave influences, this is where the band have really honed their songwriting as the echoed guitars of Imminent Collapse could come from The Unforgettable Fire, the bass-heavy throb of Conspiracy Of Love is deep in lust with Killing Joke and even references frontman Mat McNerney’s bright burning but short lived Beastmilk. It’ll get your foot tapping but carries with it a menace, that carries through into the title track, all insistent bass and layered guitar noise, the final song Tears On A Camera Lens making me think of an alternate universe Duran Duran.
The yelps on Heart Like A Slaughterhouse are pained, dark Americana, while High On Annhilation is like scitzophrenic Joy Division. Gorgeously morose, but infectious, Plagueboys is the next symptom of Grave Pleasures condition, you’re going to want to let it consume you. 9/10
Tanith - Voyage (Metal Blade Records)
Ah the 70’s such a nostalgic time, it looks like everyone is trying to hark back to those golden years when we were outside of the EEC, there was strikes about pay conditions, massive inflation, blackouts, a cost of living crisis and politicians that couldn’t care less about the people they’re supposed to represent. It all seems a little too real now, but for music it was one of the most fertile times in music history, pop, to rock, to prog, to disco and funk as electronics came in towards the end of the era, it really started many of the genres we know today and gave birth to what we understand as classic rock and prog rock today in 2023.
So as long as the rest of life feels like the 70’s why not the music? That’s where Tanith come in, formed in 2017 and with a previously well received (in these pages) album under their belt, the British/American act are music from another time, a psychedelic, prog rock journey through space time and science fiction novels. Twin vocals from Russ Tippins (guitars) and Cindy Maynard (bass) are cleverly used for duality on all the songs the vibe entering into Fleetwood Mac play Rush. They are retro act for sure, aggressively so, the stereo sound designed for vinyl listening as analogue and vintage equipment was used in the recording process, at Excello Recording in Brooklyn with engineer Hugh Pool, of both the debut and this follow up.
Called Voyage, Tippins wanted it to sound like the albums he listened to growing up in the 70’s the twin guitars of Wishbone Ash with the quirky prog of Jethro Tull and the versatility of Red-era King Crimson. The production of the record was a voyage in itself as Covid forced them to work on it separately Russ in the UK as Cindy and drummer Keith Robinson were stuck in the US. Then finally as they were able to record guitarist Charlie Newton left the band the day before tracking started, hit with this revelation all the remaining trio could do was carry on regardless their bond getting stronger, the result of this triumvirate being another cracker of an album. The dual guitar harmonies are still there Andee Blacksugar brought into to be the Downing to Russ’ Tipton maintaining them as two guitar band but the creative decisions taken by just the three of them.
The opener Snow Tiger comes at you like the feline in its name, proto-metal riffs and gallops shift between acoustic scrubbing and intricate basslines before a twin axe solo section, Falling Wizard reminds me a lot of Uriah Heep as Rush influences come on Olympus By Dawn. It’s not an album that languishes, the songs are all quite contrite and to the point but pack lots of variation and experimentation in with Seven Moons (Galantia Pt.2) the big prog moment of this record (Pts.1 and 3 were on the debut). Voyage is an adventurous follow up from Tanith, stuck in the past but for all the good reasons it’s a throwback that’s clad in Paisley and smell of patchouli oil, prog rock with a proto swagger get your ticket for this fantastic Voyage. 9/10
The Omaha, Nebraska band Through Fire are modern hard rock with vitality that comes from the American post-grunge sound of bands such as Breaking Benjamin,Three Days Grace, Shinedown, Crossfade et al, with the trappings of nu-metal bands such as electronics, the opening track Karma Kills especially feels like Linkin Park with its dark electronic atmospheres.
Texas Hippie Coalition – The Name Lives On (MNRK Heavy)
If like me you think that the best thing the Abbott brothers were part of (other than Damageplan), was the Rebel Meets Rebel project with legendary Outlaw Country performer David Allan Coe, the brother have I got a band for you! Texas Hippie Coalition have actually supported DAC in the past along with Scottish boogie masters Nazareth and Southern rock trailblazers Lynyrd Skynyrd, so you’ll probably know what you’re in for on the name alone but this seventh studio album doesn’t radically shift the direction of what THC have been doing since the early 2000’s.
No comments:
Post a Comment