Ministry - HOPIUMFORTHEMASSES (Nuclear Blast Records) [Rich Piva]
Three bands really shaped my listening habits and ultimately changed my life when it comes to my heavy music love today. First, was hearing Slayer, Seasons In The Abyss. Next was The Misfits collection. Third, and probably the most profound experience was hearing Ministry’s In Case You Didn’t Feel Like Showing Up. Up until that point I had no idea music could be that intense, that scary, that heavy, not just in what was being played but what came with it. I have never been blown away by an album like I was by In Case.B.D.E. opens us up with a Psalm 69 leaning vibe. A heavy, slow burn with well-placed samples, and multiple vocal styles, this could have been a B-Side from 1992. Did I mention slow burn, yeah it is until we suddenly go all hardcore on your ass. B.D.E. goes in all sorts of heavy and wonderful directions.
HOPIUMFORTHEMASSES is still a later period Ministry record, but it is for sure one of the best ones since the turn of the century. New Religion and B.D.E. alone make this some high-level Ministry material. Could this have been a bit shorter? Probably. Will the politics be too much for some? Yes, but those people should not be listening to Ministry anyway. Ministry fans should be very happy here, as HOPIUMFORTHEMASSES delivers more than we could hope for in 2024. 8/10
When you see a band are signed to Heavy Psych Sounds, there’s not much doubt about what you’re going to get. Tigers On Opium bring ten tracks of stoner drenched psych rock that is certainly worthy of a listen if you are fan of the genre.
The tracks roll along in four-minute blasts, the rolling vibes maintaining trippy and engaging sound that keeps the interest. Three songs of similar style quickly bring the album to the boil, the opening Ride Or Die, Black Mass and Diabolique all heavy on the riff. It’s intoxicating stuff, catchy and full of groove that gets the head nodding and the feet taping.
Things slow down a lit on the psychedelic trip that is Retrovertigo. A calmer, gentle meander through time, it’s a track that works as effectively as the three that precede it. Intricate and melancholic, it’s the perfect foil for what follows, the rampant drive of Sky Below My Feet, which is propelled forward by Hodge’s bass
At times you can lose yourself within this album. The powerful vibe of Paradise Lost is followed by the album’s most interesting song, Radioactive. At over seven-minutes in length, it’s the longest track here, and exudes a real retro flavour. There’s a nod to Zeppelin as the song slows before a single guitar takes the track to its conclusion.
I’ll be honest, this didn’t set my world on fire. It did, however, make for a fine hour of listening, and playing it several times to spend a bit of time with it wasn’t a chore. It’s an album that I think will get better on repeated plays, and I’d certainly recommend a visit to make up your own mind. 7/10
Messiah - Christus Hypercubus (High Roller Records) [Mark Young]
Switzerland! Home to Heidi, Neutrality, incredible chocolate, and extreme music that would stop a (Swiss) clock. Ahem.
Messiah have been active since 1984 which puts them right at the start of the fledgling extreme scene that included Hellhammer and later became Celtic Frost. They went on hiatus after 1994’s Underground saw them reform in 2018. A new album, Fracmont came along in 2020 before OG vocalist Andy Kaina left in late 2021, leaving them to regroup and refocus, taking on new singer Marcus Seebach to move forward once more.
For my sins, I knew nothing about them before this album, which is something I’m about to put right now. And it’s a bit of all right, Sikhote Alin exploding with an absolute belter of a riff that has that old school flavour to it as it, the musical battery is front and centre, right up to the demanded solo break which is delivered in a tasteful and restrained way. The riff is king here and it is on point, possessing that authenticity that comes from having been there and done that.
Christus Hypercubus takes the baton and runs with it, offering a speedier run via those trem-picking verse moments. The main riff itself is an exercise in simplicity, it's not complicated but does exactly what it needs to which is to give space for the more instrumental middle moments. That space is key, giving the song the necessary room to be engaging and show that they are certainly not stuck in the past with ideas and execution.
A frantic opening solo kicks Once Upon A Time…Nothing Off, with that high pace running through it. It has that early death metal build to it, and it is a welcome blast from a band having fun, which bleeds through the speakers. Speedsucker Romance, sorry it didn’t vibe with me. Next.
They are back on track with Centipede Bite, It is rapid, with some more top-level riffology plus quality solo and they there again maintaining that high level of songcraft that has been on display here and with Soul Observatory, its main riff sounding like the Munsters with added triplets. It's raucous and a real blast.
Acid Fish is another one that combines different riff structures to great effect, moving constantly and never settling in one lane. It's another display from a band who know how to put things together and are not afraid to take from their past to move forward now. The Venus Baroness I and The Venus Baroness II close out, with part 1 just going for it, extended solos, heads down fast moments, and of course prime riffs but could probably been trimmed a little. Part 2 heads down a more mid-tempo route, which throws in some melodic flourishes as it makes its way to the end.
This is a strong, strong outing from them. Students of extreme metal will know about them, but others like me probably won’t do. This is a perfect introduction to a band that has rediscovered it’s love for the music and now want to share that with you. It works on almost every song; I won’t lie I just didn’t dig Speedsucker Romance due to it not sitting well with the other songs. Each one has that quality build to it; riffs are everywhere and there is some real magic when they opt to pull back with gentler moments in the run-up to solo breaks such as in Soul Observatory.