Iced Earth: Plagues Of Babylon (Century Media)
The American metal machine rolls into town
again, this is their second album with new vocalist Stu Block, who managed to
defy the critics on Dystopia by having his own style but
staying true to the vocal delivery of long time frontman Matt Barlow. Things
start off with the triumphal intro of the title track which begins like a metal
funeral procession, before the trademark Schaffer riffage kicks in picking the
pace up and starting things off in familiar territory lyrically with the
continuing story of the Set Abominae (Iced Earth's mascot), and the hints to
ancient Egypt, 6 tracks are part of the "Something Wicked Saga" and
the other 6 are standalone tracks. Plagues
Of Babylon is Iced Earth to
the core with the relentless razor sharp riffs of Schaffer driving the songs
along with a thrash-like ferocity, backed by the lead guitars of Troy Steele
and the muscular rhythm section of Raphael Saini on drums and Brit Luke
Appleton on bass. Key to the sound too are the excellent vocals of Stu Block
who still has the perfect voice for Iced Earth and is a better replacement for
MB than Ripper ever was (sorry Tim). The Set Abominae theme is the first half
with songs about genocide, slavery, plague and zombies being the major lyrical
themes of this continuation which ends with the 7-minute The End? this provides a cliff-hanger to the
saga for further continuation Onto the stand alone tracks then and they a
varied between the creeping horror of Cthulu,
the Western-metal of Peacemaker, the political
rallying cries of Spirit Of
The Times (previously
recorded by Schaffer's side project Sons Of Liberty) as well as a cover
of Highwayman which
features vocals from Michael Poulsen and Russell Allen in the other two roles,
finally the band have an obligatory ballad with If I Could See You which features Schaffer's Demons
& Wizards cohort Hansi Kursch. This yet another great album from Schaffer
and co it has all the Iced Earth hallmarks that make the bands great, excellent
riffs, massive gang chorus vocals and some seriously good songs. 8/10
Seven Deadly: Obliviation (WEMC
Productions)
Seven Deadly rose from the ashes of Panic
Cell and stormed onto the scene with a four track stunner of an E.P (reviewed
in these pages many moons ago). So now it's time for the full length debut,
some line-up shuffling has gone on with PC bassist and founder member Bobby now
concentrating on other ventures, however the rest of the band are still the
same with H Virdee and Dave Irving dealing with the six strings bringing the
hammering riffs and massive breakdowns, Rob Hicks smashes the hell out of his
skins, new boy Murillo Rassi brings the groove on bass and Archie Wilson shows
off his diverse vocal delivery easily soaring in the clean melodies and then
roaring like a demon in the screaming parts. This is muscular modern metal at its'
finest and it shows that it's not just the Yanks that know how to do this stuff
we Brits are pretty good at it too. The album is made up of 12 killer tracks
with the anthemic From This
Darkness, Blood On Your Hands and Allegiance coming
from the E.P albeit with a much more muscular production and arrangement here. The
band mix modern metal sounds of Lamb Of God, Devildriver and Trivium with the
more groove based sounds of FFDP and Disturbed who are also alluded to in the
electronic samples used throughout the album. From
This Darkness is still a
massive track and its melodic outro is followed by the heavy as hell Posthumous, the band drive the
melody home with Pure Steel which
would feel at home on a FFDP album. Throughout the album the band walk the line
between heavy and melodic with H and Dave's guitars weaving intricate
leads/solos with crushing riffs, the rhythm section driving the songs along at
100mph, special mention to Rob Hicks' drumming which is superb, Archie's vocals
too are amazing, he has an expansive range that is part David Draiman part
Randy Blythe see the title track. This debut is a monster filled with massive
slabs of modern metal that get better as the album goes on and better again on
repeated plays. Hopefully the strength of this album will see Seven Deadly
headlining arenas soon!! 9/10
Skull Fist: Chasing The Dream (Nuclear Blast)
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