Posts Tagged ‘Lamb of God’

OMAR CORDY’S TOP 30 METAL ALBUMS OF 2012

Thursday, January 10th, 2013

Omar Cordy’s Top Metal Album of 2012

 

1. BIOHAZARD – Reborn in Defiance (Self-Released)

2. ISHAHN – Eremita (Candlelight)

3. THE DEVIL – The Devil (Candlelight)

4. BRENDON SMALL – Galaktikon (Self-Released)

5. CRYPTOPSY – Cryptopsy (Self-Released)

6. LULLACRY – Where Angels Fear (End of The Light)

7. CATTLE DECAPITATION – Monolith of Inhumanity (Metal Blade)

 

 

 

 

 

 

8. DERKETA - In Death We Meet (Self-Released)

9. DOWN – IV The Purple EP (Down Records)

10. SARAH JEZEBEL DEVA – Malediction EP (Listenable)

11. EPHEL DUATH – On Death and Cosmos EP (Agonia Records)

12. AS I LAY DYING – Awakened (Metal Blade)

13. SHADOWS FALL – Fire from the Sky (Razor and Tie)

14. CANNIBAL CORPSE – Torture (Metal Blade)

15. MESHUGGAH – Kollos (Nuclear Blast)

16. CORROSION OF CONFORMITY – Corrosion of Conformity (Candlelight)

17. OVERKILL – The Electric Age (eOne Metal)

 

 

 

 

 

 

18. FLYING COLORS – Flying Colors (Mascot)

19. ABIGAIL WILLIAMS – Becoming (Candlelight)

20. DEHUMANIZED – Controlled Elite (Comatose Music)

21. MALIGNANCY – Eugenics (Willowtip)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

22. TERRORIZER – Hordes of Zombies (Season of Mist)

23. ABORTED – Global Flatline (Century Media)

24. NAPALM DEATH – Utilitarian (Century Media)

25. LAMB OF GOD – Resolution (Reprise)

26. JEFF LOOMIS – Plains of Oblivion (Century Media)

27. SPINESHANK -Anger Denial Acceptance (Century Media)

28. FEAR FACTORY – The Industrialist (Candlelight)

29. EXUMER – Fire & Damnation (Metal Blade)

 

 

 

 

 

 

30. GOD FORBID- Equilibrium (Victory)

by Omar Cordy

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KEEFY’S TOP 20 ALBUMS OF 2012: 20-11

Thursday, December 20th, 2012

People seem to love or hate these Year End Top Metal albums list-thingys. As a long-time reviewer, I enjoy doing them, but you have to find the right balance. Last year I tried to do a top 100 list, and honestly it was brutal, and I don’t mean the music. This year I have cut the list down to a more manageable number. A full list of Top 40 albums will run next week, but for the next two days, we’ll run the top 20. Without further ado here is my list from 20-11.

 

 

#20. ALCEST- Les Voyages de L’Âme (Prophecy Productions)

Hauntingly beautiful, disturbing and introspective. Those are the words that describe ALCEST in general, and their early 2012 offering. Maestro NEIGE is one of the most creative thinkers, genius lyricists and bravest art makers in all of music, not just metal.

 

 

#19. ROYAL THUNDER- CVI (Relapse)

For a band that has only had the public ear for a few years, ROYAL THUNDER’s CVI is amazing and refreshing. MLNY PARSONZ is a reluctant hero and front woman for the bluesiest, brooding proto-metal band to come along in ages.

 

 

#18. WOODS OF YPRES- Woods V: Grey Skies and Electric Light (Earache)

With the one year anniversary coming up of the tragic death of DAVID GOLD, it was bittersweet revisiting this album recently. His passing looms large over the music left behind in retrospect. Woods V is an epic masterwork of gloom ridden, melodic Doom. A terrible loss for the music world.

 

 

#17. HIGH ON FIRE- De Vermiis Mysteriis (E1)

Another concept album that made the top 20 list. Another magical, proto-metal burst of grand musical ambition from Messrs MATT PIKE and company. This is a band that keeps getting better and better. The record is also a guitar playing tour de force from start to finish too.

 

 

 

 

 

#16. DEVIN TOWNSEND PROJECT -Epicloud (Hevy Devy/InsideOut)

DEVIN TOWNSEND is at the pinnacle of his powers. He might also be the JAMES BROWN of metal, the hardest working man in the business. Epicloud is his most straight forward, rocking and fun effort. Worth buying for the performance of ANNEKE VAN GIERSBERGEN alone.

 

 

#15. GOATWHORE- Blood For The Master (Metal Blade)

One of the top outfits in metal, 2012 saw the band release another great album. They even get some commercial exposure for the first time ever. It was long overdue for a unit that has made some of the most consistently harsh, and evil music from America in a long time. Kudos!

 

 

 

#14. CONVERGE- All We Love We Leave Behind (Epitaph)

For a band that has rewritten some of the heaviest music in their career, they shun the term metal or the typical definition of it. Yet, their latest album is one of the hardest to come out this year. A band that continues to write and re-write the book on modern music.

 

 

#13. THE DEFTONES- Koi No Yokan (Reprise)

Not quite as heavy as their previous efforts, but still an astounding melodic statement from one of the most creative forces in modern metal. Few albums can be said to be this rough and gorgeous sounding too. THE DEFTONES pulled it off.

 

 

 

#12. LAMB OF GOD- Resolution (Epic)

One of the heaviest and bad-ass albums of the year. Credit to the band for also making the most diverse album of their career, without sacrificing what has made them the leaders of modern metal. The shame of RANDY BLYTHE‘s legal troubles abroad has been not enough attention has gotten paid to how adventurous and cool Resolution is musically.

 

 

#11. MARES OF THRACEThe Pilgrimage (Sonic Union Metal)

Just missed the top ten. A complex, heavy concept-thick album that stays with you long after the music stops. G THÉRÈSE LANZ doesn’t get nearly enough notice for her lyrics, which match the best of any album in 2012. Another brilliant release from the most brutal band in Canada, and maybe sonically; the heaviest tone in modern metal too.

 

 

Next: 10-1

 

by Keith (Keefy) Chachkes

 

 

 

 

 

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LIVE REVIEW: LAMB OF GOD

Wednesday, December 19th, 2012

The House of Blues, Boston, MA

This is only one out of five reviews to come, so prepare for a veritable shitstorm of loquaciousness, jumbled memories, and chicanery that only your favourite poseur can bring consisting of equal amounts hilarity and pit dickery. I’m fucked, as is the world, and everybody in it.

 

Hailing from God-Save-The-Queenland, SYLOSIS are one of those bands that can only be rightly called “Modern” Metal. Being a combination of MeloDeath (as opposed to Melodic Death Metal, take note), Thrash, and Metalcore, they define genre tags, so your average Metal mag will love them (viz. Metal Hammer). They certainly are a talented band, and deserve the success they have received, though I’ve yet to get a full-on boner for them. They’ve got the skill and the shred that you’d ask for in a Thrash/Death Metal band, but end up being neutered by the cleanliness of their sound and the sheer lack of aggression that is called for in this thing we call Metal. However, they do know how to get a nice circle-pit going, and circle-pits are awesome in my book. SYLOSIS has only been on this side of the pond twice, but didn’t appear too excited to be playing in front of a decently sized crowd, so it almost gave the impression that they wanted their set to be over, and fast.

 

SYLOSIS was an early delight.

 

After SYLOSIS came everyone’s least favourite Hick-Metal project, going under HELLYEAH, a name that may only have been conceived after a night of Jack Daniels and rawhide. With members coming from MUDVAYNE, PANTERA, and NOTHINGFACE, they had potential to at least make some okay music. How on Satan’s green Earth do you make VINNIE PAUL’s spectacular drumming sound lackluster? It’s almost criminal how painfully popular the insipid excuses for “songs” HELLYEAH produces became. The fact that their front man could stand up on that stage and grandstand to a crowd of drunken fools and get applause for namedropping the U.S. armed forces, as well as make the audacious claim that “we’re all Metalheads” without the slightest degree of irony is appalling and offensive. I’ve seen a better live presence and consideration for the audience’s feelings from BLESSTHEFALL, and they’re godawful, pun fucken intended because they’re Christcore. HELLYEAH is so bad that an actual stench, an unmitigated olfactory assault, was making itself apparent while they went about abusing guitars and making them honk like abused geese rather than sing gracefully. HELLYEAH is a bad band, and VINNIE PAUL lending his drum talents is no excuse for this shameful waste of equipment, cotton, and time.

 

HELLY EAH has VINNIE PAUL, and little else going for it.

 

After that torture, pain was renewed, however more earnest in spirit, by IN FLAMES, Sweden’s biggest export aside from perhaps meatballs.

 

ANDERS FRIDÉN of IN FLAMES.

IN FLAMES may have crossed the line into pure fucking un-metal with Soundtrack To Your Escape, but I just have too big of a heart to deny them access into my ears and soul. Though yes, Sounds of a Playground Fading is beyond (and I say this acknowledging my own presence in the LGBTQ community) gay, IN FLAMES’ overall output has been to my satisfaction.

Set List:

Sounds of a Playground Fading

Where the Dead Ships Dwell

Reroute to Remain

Embody the Invisible

Cloud Connected

Fear Is the Weakness

The Mirror’s Truth

System

Deliver Us

Take This Life

My Sweet Shadow

 

And now for the fun part: LAMB OF GOD, in the flesh, and proselytising their message of fear, pain, hatred, and power. To deny you grew up with LAMB OF GOD, either as a young-un just discovering Metal, or an OG watching Metalcore hatch from an egg comprised of obsidian and cheap beer piss, would be a bloody lie at worst, and a fib and best. To say that you weren’t mindlessly headbanging to “Laid To Rest” or “Ruin” during their set that night would be to deny that you have a soul or a passion aimed towards something real. Sure, LAMB OF GOD are what you can call “entry-level”, but damn they’ve got soul.

 

 

RANDY BLYTHE: The stuff of legend on this night.

Due to RANDY BLYTHE’s recent incarceration in Czech prison for “killing” someone, it wasn’t surprising to see a few “Free Randy Blythe” shirts in the crowd, even though the man was alive, well, and hairy on that stage, appearing space-ship like as they performed their vitriolic version of a “Walk With Me In Hell” with a fervor that just about blew away every other band playing that night. Randy poured bottle after bottle of water upon his head, as though making up for a missed shower, CHRIS ADLER beat his kit like it owed him rent money, and the dual guitar attack of Mark and Willie had more crunch than on record. John Campbell played bass and looked like a wizard. Cool. Randy commanded the crowd to “get ignorant”, but in all reality, it got ignorant when a fight broke out during SYLOSIS. To say nothing of the praise HELLYEAH, for being god awful.

 

WILLIE ADLER jams!

LAMB OF GOD is one of those bands that I can check off my list of “gotta see live before I die”, and damn was it a blast. “Now You’ve Got Something To Die For” made HELLYEAH’s own shout-out to the U.S. Army pathetic in comparison (and this is coming from someone who isn’t all “hoo-rah” about what our men & women in uniform are made to do, by the way), “Ruin” was insurmountably heavy, “Set To Fail” had even slicker blasts and grooves, “11th Hour” had vitality unmatched, the final breakdown of “Black Label” was impossibly brutal, etc. etc. In short, seeing LAMB OF GOD live just about re-affirmed in my mind that they’re not to be fucked with. They may be placed alongside bands like CHIMAIRA, TRIVIUM, SHADOWS FALL, etc., but they’re just a tad bit more pissed than your average “Heavy Metal” band, and that’s the bottom line.

 

CHRIS ADLER kills it all night!

 

Set List:

Desolation

Ghost Walking

Walk With Me in Hell

Set to Fail

Ruin

Now You’ve Got Something to Die For

11th Hour

The Undertow

Omerta

Contractor

 

Encore:

The Passing

In Your Words

Laid to Rest

Redneck

Black Label

Review by Sean Genovese. Concert photos by Echoes In the Well

 

 

 

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METAL ARMY DEBATES: THE STATE OF WOMEN IN METAL

Sunday, December 2nd, 2012

 

Cristina Scabbia of LACUNA COIL

It’s debate time again at Metal Army. We figured you were all burned out by the election and enough time has passed by now, so we could bring you all a worthwhile topic: Women in metal. We are always interested in analyzing social paradigms (I know, a heady concept for metal heads). I’ve always felt there was a wide contrast between how many powerful and talented women there are in the metal community and how they are treated and portrayed by that same community. Since I am not a woman, I consulted three of Metal Army’s best writers (of any gender) in Melissa Campbell, Rachel Hacker and Lynn Jordan. They each have a unique perspective to share on the subject. We have also included some concert photos of our favorite women in metal, doing what they do, so read on…..

 

KRYSTA CAMERON, EX-IWRESTLEDABEARONCE

 

Melissa Campbell: Overcoming obstacles to love metal 

Ever since I became a fan of metal, I knew that I some were going to look down on me for being a girl. There have been plenty of moments where I’ve been laughed at by male metal listeners or told by them that I can’t listen to “their” music. Thankfully I’ve found plenty of guys who don’t care what gender I am. Those more negative experiences with metal guys have not caused me to harbor any bad feelings towards guys either. I idolize men like RONNIE JAMES DIO as much as women like AMY LEE.

 

LYRIS HUNG of HUNG

MLNY PARSONZ of ROYAL THUNDER

 

Another problem I encountered in the past was not being allowed to go to metal shows. My father forbade it because he believed all those terrible stereotypes related to shows where males were in high attendance compared to females (i.e. rapes, getting hurt in pits, being kidnapped). Even though I promised to have my sister with me at all times, he was quite uncomfortable granting me permission. In his eyes, we as women were not capable of handling ourselves alongside “those types” of men.

 

KIMBERLY FREEMAN of ONE EYED DOLL

 

However, in 2010, my mother bought me and my sister tickets to go to Rockstar Energy Drink Mayhem Festival. My father was not too happy about it and claimed he was unaware we had been planning to attend. He started to trust us more when we returned alive and we are now able to go to shows with relatively low complaints from him.

JILL JANUS of HUNTRESS

 

All that being said, gender discrimination in the genre has gone down in recent years thanks to the rise of female fronted (or completely female) bands. A few decades ago women were mainly viewed as sexual objects in the metal community. To those whose main goal was to just be a groupie and have fun that was alright. Other females who wanted to be taken seriously as musicians often had trouble with it (i.e. LITA FORD). The best contribution I can make (since I don’t want to be a musician) is to continue going to/writing about gigs and representing the female community.

 

 

Rachel Hacker: The Made-up Stigma

I read Jezebel every damn day of my life. Maybe if i stopped reading it, I’d get a boyfriend.

Nah.

So. Women. Consistently considered the lesser sex throughout history. Always being chastised for what we can’t do compared to men. Men are the “invisible demographic,” making them the standard for comparison on woman. However, comparing both of them side by side on every issue is absurd. This is essentially the classic apples-to-oranges argument, but this time we’re comparing penises and vaginas.

 

FARIDA LEMOUCHI of THE DEVIL’S BLOOD

 

In the ever commercialized musical world of “Call Me Maybe”, there is an equally commercialized world of hard rock and heavy metal. Through seeing the 1996 stock photo of MARILYN MANSON in the local newspaper, or that GUNS N’ ROSES poster your dad secretly displays in the Man Cave, almost everyone has an image of what metal is “about.” The standard for what men wear and do as a rock artist was set in the 60s, while many women were still taking care of families to develop a true voice in metal and hard rock.

 

RAE AMITAY of MARES OF THRACE/THRAWSUNBLAT/WOODS OF YPRES

 

SUSAN WENDELKEN of DORMITORY EFFECT

It’s only been in the past few decades that women aren’t put down on account of not having a family by age 30. Women don’t feel pressured to rush through getting married anymore, and we have some pretty damn good years of vitality in our 20s or older. The hoards of young women, with non-sagging breasts and sharp minds, are ready to do something different than clean diapers. Why not make play some metal and look hot doing it?

 

CARLA HARVEY and HEIDI SHEPHERD of BUTCHER BABIES

Some women and men find the “hot chicks in metal” to be degrading and embarrassing. Who’s embarrassed? Not me. The sex industry is huge, which means there are obviously people buying the porn that women and men make. Separating our sex and our music isn’t going to change much, considering most of the world is desensitized, anyways. Individuals who believe women should “cover up” are also playing the “chivalry card.” This ideal is essentially is built upon that women are “delicate flowers who can’t do anything on their own.”

Bullshit.

Women in metal are still being treated as if they can’t make their own decisions. “Oh, you’re topless, you must not be intelligent enough to know what you’re doing, let me help you.” It was only 100 years ago that masturbation was a mental illness, or that women still had sex while partially or fully clothed. So why are we still trying to cover up women- figuratively and literally?

SOM PLUIJMERS, ex-CEREBRAL BORE

If you’ve got a good rack and wanna show it, go for it. And while some tiny corner of the internet blogs about your lack of modesty, you’re too busy driving to the bank to care. Unfortunately, most of the bands with the “hot chicks in metal” don’t have music I actually like, but there will never be a moment where I feel like telling another women to cover up. The fashion standard for women in hard rock and metal should be the woman’s choice, not someone else’s choice. Therefore, if men are “apples” and women are “oranges,” the way they handle metal shouldn’t even be compared beyond the thought that “it exists.” The last thing we need is someone else like Mitt Romney.

 

TRACY MYZERI GONZALEZ of EYES LIKE CYANIDE

AMANDA DANIELS of ENABLER

Lynn Jordan: Women in the Metal Scene

PAUL STANLEY of KISS was once asked his opinion about a female hard rock performer. His response? “You need balls to rock ‘n’ roll”. MARC STORACE of KROKUS was doing record reviews for a magazine, and when one for a female performer came up he said,”…she should be doing better things. Like giving me head.”

I read both of these quotes many years ago. As you can see, I haven’t forgotten them; they remain etched in my brain.

ARCH ENEMY, led by ANGELA GOSSOW

I have to admit that when I first started playing bass, my inspirations were mostly male. There were women I loved that were famous with the heavier music that I admired that were writing their own songs, putting out great records and putting on incredible shows. As talented and gutsy as these women were, many male music fans still had a hard time giving them props. How dare these women get onstage and think they have what it takes?

How dare they?

But despite that, to this day no female Metal artist or all-female band has garnered the gushing recognition or respect that their male contemporaries receive as a matter of course. Why not?

 

STEVIE FLOYD of DARK CASTLE/TAURUS

I believe that for men to acknowledge and respect the female presence as Metal musicians is to give power to women that they don’t want them to have. Heavy Metal is a testosterone-fueled monster with images of blood, war, cars, devil worship, drinking, fucking, death, etc. None of these things are considered feminine. Men do these things. Women were intended to hang in the sidelines to worship, clean up, pay the bill, swallow, look pretty and smile while providing various services (comfort, food, shelter or sex-related) to these battle-scarred warriors of musical carnage. Many men don’t like women to be sweat-streaked, angry and storming a stage. Many men don’t like it when women speak their mind. Others don’t like a cursing, spit-fire bitch not taking their shit. Some men get defensive when a woman does something they think is exclusively theirs. And they certainly don’t like it when a woman can do something as well as they do, and does not need their approval to proceed as they please. So the very genre that prides itself on speaking its mind, empowering its listeners and letting its aggression out really doesn’t want their women to be a part of its voice.

 

SIGRID SHEIE of HAMMERS OF MISFORTUNE

There is also that double-standard of image vs. talent. If a female musician is beautiful, even if she is gifted, she had to have used her looks to get ahead. If she isn’t that attractive, but is talented, she is dismissed because some dude doesn’t want to “pee in her butt”. It’s a bitter pill and a tough choice for female musicians to make. Do you tone down the sex for respect and get shorted in attention and sales, or do you ramp up the sex, get the attention, alienate some female fans and get less respect from the male ones? It’s a tough call. Male musicians do not have this dilemma. They either are good or they aren’t.

 

OTEP SHAMAYA of OTEP

As 2012 comes to a close, I do not see this changing much. Metal has popular bands with women in them, We have noted bands with women in them, such as ARCH ENEMY, IN THIS MOMENT, OTEP, LACUNA COIL, THE AGONIST, NASHVILLE PUSSY, FIREBALL MINISTRY, SISTER SIN, ALL THAT REMAINS, STRAIGHT LINE STITCH, a slew of female-fronted Goth and Symphonic Metal bands, and (on the lighter side), EVANESCENCE and HALESTORM. With all the females that can play Metal well, the mystery remains as to why it never coalesces into a one kick-ass band, and when they do…it’s a cover band playing songs originally made popular by men. We still can’t have our own voice from the stage, but we do get the annual “Hottest Chicks in Metal” pictorial. That’s another tough choice – to pose or not pose for band promotion (if you’re deemed “hot” enough to make the cut)? Is one reduced to something less than an equal once you’ve shown your ass?

 

G THÉRÈSE LANZ of MARES OF THRACE

MEG CASTELLANOS of TOTIMOSHI

 

JEANNE SAGAN of ALL THAT REMAINS

All that said, let us be the women behind the men, and we soar without barrier. OZZY would be dead, or at least strung-out, broke and on Skid Row, if it wasn’t for SHARON OSBORNE. Love her or hate her (I happen to think she’s awesome) without her, OZZY would have been a footnote in BLACK SABBATH‘s history and Ozzfest would never have happened. MELISSA CROSS has been the vocal coach for male Metal screamers in SLAYER, LAMB OF GOD, MACHINE HEAD, among many others. SUSAN SILVER was a manager who brought us SOUNDGARDEN and ALICE IN CHAINS. DEBBIE ABONO managed such extreme bands POSSESSED, EXODUS, VIO-LENCE, FORBIDDEN and OBITUARY. “METAL” MARIA FERRERO was mentioned in many a Thrash band ‘thank you’ list as a promotional force back in the day, which she continues now as the founder of ADRENALINE PR. MARSHA ZAZULA, is co-founder of Megaforce Records with her husband Jon, and they have signed METALLICA, ANTHRAX, TESTAMENT and more. Many bands have started out with their girlfriends or wives acting as managers, promoters and helping to book shows. Many Hair Metal bands have admitted that if it weren’t for the ladies that gave them a place to sleep, something to eat, encouragement and support, they would not have made it – literally and figuratively. Maybe the day will come when males of the Metal scene will truly appreciate the depth of strength women bring on AND off the stage. The more we succeed as a unified supportive front, the more Metal music succeeds overall, and the more powerful we all become.

Do we dare?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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ALBUM REVIEW: WESTERN MASSACRE

Monday, June 18th, 2012

Freedom Through Violence (Self-Released)

 

One of the reasons metal is one of the most vital forms of music is that the permutations of sub-genres is never ending. The seed of a new style often begins as a kernel of an idea in one kid’s mind, sitting in his room wood-shedding. From there bands form around incorporating new approaches to existing ideas and influences to craft new music. Such is the case with WESTERN MASSACRE and their delivery which is described as “death groove”. The brutality of CANNIBAL CORPSE and JUNGLE ROT mixed with the mood and attitude of PANTERA, LAMB OF GOD or SEPULTURA is what we found on their full length Freedom Through Violence.

From the first notes of “Steel Casket” one thing is clear, these guys can bring the heaviness. Harsh guttural vocals fill your ears with dread while down-tuned riffs pummel your brain. Not only does this song have great sense of rhythm, but has a melo-death influence that many of the bands coming out of the Massachusetts scene tend to have. The band is as unrelenting musically as they are catchy, as proven by the hints PANTERA-esque southern licks that pop up here and there. Guitarists Kyle Leary and Chad Hoag shred all day long and will give the guitar geeks much to talk about. The second track “Brazilian Carnival” brings more of the same wrought iron chords and savage beats. Drummer Jeff Greene does a nice job behind the kit of blending his syncopated, off-time hits and fills with his impressive double bass work. For a band to make this match of styles work and be tight, the drummer has to hold it down and Greene does so at all times. Vocalist Matt Lentner seems like he’s gonna tear his own throat out on occasion, channeling Satan with is crazy high screams. The end of the song has a mosh part/outro solo/last riff motif is one that many bands would envy writing. “Facelift” starts off with more of the tough-guy mosh parts, but then adds this unique textural guitar theme that blew me away. From there you get a straight ahead face melter worthy of most modern metal bands. Once again you have two guys on guitar praying to the alter of DIMEBAG DARRELL at times with inventive playing, and slick ear candy. “Roadhouse” sounds like the bastard child of LoG and a beastly deathcore band, complete with sick blast-beats and scream along chorus. To change things up a bit “Blood and Stone” opens with a solid thrash riff, before transforming all HULK-like into a brutal deathcore song. Even bassist Nate Larsen gets to step out of his supporting role and throw down some tasty riffs. Next comes their eponymous song, full of galloping riffs and blind raging fury. Other top tracks on the album include “Defector” and the final song which is the epic title track. By cleverly writing original songs with this much brutality and flavor, this is a band we will be hearing from for a long time. You can buy their album from their website here.

WESTERN MASSACRE-Killer music makers.

GRADE: B+

by Keith (Keefy) Chachkes

 

 

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ALBUM REVIEW: HUNG

Friday, May 11th, 2012

Hung (ReThink Records/The End Records)

 

Metal heads tend to be some of the most open minded fans of music I have ever met (except for you elitist hipster fucks). I might not have believed it in my younger days when I was even more cynical than I am now, had you told me about all of the successful sub-genres of metal. Not just because I didn’t think it was possible, but the two guitar band/ lead singer format has been so endearing to music lovers since the inception of rock music. Still, new bands and their little fiefdom’s of fans are coming along every day and people are enthusiastically repping them. More often then not it is more about the way a band combines influences of sub-genres, rather than invents a new one from scratch. Such as the case with New York City’s HUNG, who shows off their considerable talents on their debut album which is on Chris Adler’s (LAMB OF GOD) ReThink Record imprint.

The album opens with the instrumental “Eos” which is highlighted by the interplay of guitar and lead violin. That’s right, lead violin played by the bands’ namesake Lyris Hung (TRANSIBERIAN ORCHESTRA). She is a world renowned performer and classically trained artist who also loves metal. The sweet, mellow tones of the opening track belie the musical storm about to come on. Second track “Desert of Sad” really lifts off and you get an idea of the band’s more fully formed style. Sounds from Swedish melo-death to thrash, to pagan metal all collide and it sounds like a beautiful chaos. Lyris alternates between rhythm guitar-style (chords, riffs) parts bowed on her violin, to cool solo flights where she sounds more like a shred guitarist than anything else. Vocalist Dmitry Kostitsyn’s snarling screams and growls alternately between verses and the mix works in spades. Later on the songs’ chorus he actually sings and adds one more melodic dimension. “Maria” continues the impressive writing with stunning lead lines from both Lyris and guitarist Jon Clark. Clark often plays counter-point lines to the violin parts, so when he does step out for a lead or a harmony line, his work really stands out. Kostitsyn delivers more of his rough hewn vocals and sounds a bit like Helmuth of BELPHEGOR when he wails in his high range. “Progeny” could be termed a full-fledged prog/tech-death work out. It has definite motifs of brutal heaviness and a mellow interlude that are also well developed. One of the reasons all of these shifting styles blend well together is because the band has a secret weapon, a killer rhythm section. Bassist Sam Roon can either hold down the low end or chip in some fine lead runs of his own while drummer Kenny Growhowski adds his unique approach to the mix. Grohowski has an impressive resume in the jazz world, which makes sense when some of the bands parts take on an OPETH/CYNIC type flavor. “Evil Tsar” might be my favorite song on the album. It has straight out speed metal riffs and just bananas lead playing again from Lyris. This is definitely the most fun song and best mosh pit track the band has to offer. Shifting gears yet again with the epic “Left For a New Life” which is sprawling in scope. It definitely has some prog and death metal elements to it, including one of Clark’s better guitar solos. After a mellow interlude of “Inertia”, “Infernal Redeemer” bites back with a funky bassline and a jazzy take on a power-groove tempo. Growhowski’s fills on this song are gonna have drum geeks losing their shit for months after this comes out! “Matter of Blood” starts off with some balladry before veering into the folk metal realm again. The final track “Sediments of War” is another track that encompasses all of the strengths the band has to offer. I feel like they are just scratching the surface of what they are capable of. We will be watching their career with great interest in the coming years.

HUNG: Breaking and blending boundaries all at once.

GRADE: A

by Keith (Keefy) Chachkes

 

 

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ALBUM REVIEW: DAITRIBE

Thursday, April 19th, 2012

Epochalypse A.D. (True Gemini Records)

Sometimes a band can be new to the public but, be blessed with a familiar sound or style. One such band is DAITRIBE, hailing from Chicago, IL. The band is led by guitarist Tristan “1690” Grigsby who besides being an accomplished shredder is best known from his appearances as part of the great PANTERA Home Videos (or DVD’s now) from the 1990s. In addition to appearing on several tributes to his fallen friend DIMEBAG DARRELL, Grigsby has put together a cool band and written a batch of tunes that call to mind the great power groove and thrash influenced metal of the decade before last. Another PANTERA association is the album was mixed by the bands’ famed producer/engineer and guitar tech Sterling Winfield.

The album opens up with “Betray”, a manic down tuned thrasher. The beats and riffs are really heavy and compliment the demented screaming of vocalist Rich Collins. When the breakdown comes up, a brief but tasty solo section comes in for Grigsby to work his magic. The last third of the song slows down the pace to an AIC like groove that I really liked. “Control” ups the ante considerably and is an aggro workout with chunky riffs and more harrowed vocal wailing. Collins sounds to me a lot like old-school Pete Dolving of THE HAUNTED, just straddling the line between metal and hardcore vocals. The chorus is pretty decent and will have people singing a long live. Grigsby let’s another lead fly and has a really neo-classical flare at times. There is a definite nod to DIMEBAG in his style, especially his use of double tracking leads. “Loss By Distance” starts off with some ethereal sound effects, but then delves in to mid-90s FEAR FACTORY style machine gun riffs and tight drumming. Grigsby’s brother Michael handles the job behind the kit and does a fine job. The drumming on this track is among the best on the album. The band does a very good job of balancing older influences, but keeping up with modern metal sensibilities like LAMB OF GOD or UNEARTH would do. “My Eyes” has kind of a modern, heavy rock/arena metal sound to it and could be a surprise hit for the band. Neat grooves and some singing by Collins make for a catchy, solid tune. Bassist Ricky Riccardo lays down some cool mellow lines that help the track along. “Sanctuary” starts off like a gentle ballad, but then has an anthem like feeling not unlike JUDAS PRIEST or IRON MAIDEN. The single “I Hate Me” is another ripping jam. The band does a good job with pedal to the metal, straight-ahead licks with a bit of flare to them, but doesn’t throw in too many unexpected twists and turns. The chorus has yet another scream-along part that would be fun in a live setting. “Crime Legacy” is an interesting cut which rages most of the way until a chill breakdown switches things up. Other top tracks include “False Hopes” and “Liar Messiahs”. You can get the record directly from the band here.

DAITRIBE: Carrying the torch.

GRADE: B

by Keith (Keefy) Chachkes

 

 

 

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LAMB OF GOD Prove They Won’t Be Going Soft On New Record

Friday, September 23rd, 2011

RANDY BLYTHE has been tweeting an awful lot about New York City lately and that’s because he’s been in NYC for the past several weeks, tracking a new LAMB OF GOD album with his bandmates. LAMB OF GOD has been a favorite of mine since they were BURN THE PRIEST and they were playing local shows around Virginia that I would go to when I was growing up. Now, they are metal elite and were starting to be questioned as to whether they would tone it down a bit to appeal to even more of the mainstream. Rumors were running rampant across blogs and forums; no one knew what to expect.

Now, RANDY has silenced the chatter with a new clip that he posted on Twitter. One listen to that blood curdling scream tells you all you need to know about the new LAMB OF GOD record. It’s going to be brutal, pounding and groovy. I’m sure that LOG will make it worth the wait but I’m still really bummed that I have to wait until the beginning of 2012 to hear this beastly record!

More info as we get it!

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DEZ FAFARA and MARK MORTON Collaborate In New Project

Wednesday, September 14th, 2011

Thanks to Twitter, we have even more good news for metalheads today! It looks as though MARK MORTON (LAMB OF GOD) and DEZ FAFARA (DEVILDRIVER. ex-Coal Chamber) are collaborating on a new project, which in theory will be awesome. Fafara posted that the project was similar to “CIRCUS OF POWER meets ‘Badmotofinger’-era SOUNDGARDEN” while Morton likened the sound to doom legends TROUBLE.

Apparently 14 songs have been finished but no plan for release has been made as of yet. More info as we get it!

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ALBUM REVIEW: LANDMINE MARATHON

Monday, September 12th, 2011

Gallows (Prosthetic)

 

This artwork made me go what the f$% is that when I first saw it. It is by Rob "Mid" Middleton

 

Famous author Oscar Wilde once remarked that “Ambition is the last refuge of failure.”  I often find myself reminded of this quote (an all other things Wilde) when thinking of bands with sky high expectations. As humans we foist unrealistic demands on each other, only to be crushed and left angry later. This is no different for artists as well (Wilde was likely addressing them directly). Sometimes groups live up to the lofty bar we wish them to reach and sometimes they die trying. Lucky for LANDMINE MARATHON death is off the table when it concerns their career or their terrific new album Gallows. Not only dies it live up to the hype, it will cement their status act as one of the best groups in modern metal.

Right from the first second of the album when a whammy-bar horse squeal in the style of DIMEBAG DARRELL/EDDIE VAN HALEN announces the opening track “Three Snakes Leaves”, they are not playing around. A death and blackened thrash metal workout of a song follows and I couldn’t help but head bang along to the furious beat. As always Grace Perry’s insane death metal snarl buoys the track. Her voice is razor sharp to match her lyrics and delivery. Andy York, the newest member of the group just beats the piss out of his drums with blazing double kick-work and super fills. Halfway through the song dueling guitar solos of Ryan Butler and Dylan Thomas (I was just talking about writers a minute ago, right?) are melodic, tight and full of fire. Butler produced the album which speaks even more volumes about his talent. With no let up in their sights, “Cutting Flesh and Bone” is another slab of outrageous riffitude and histrionic screaming. Perry’s voice is very consistent and while she doesn’t display a huge variation in her movements, she is crisp and deep with her growls at all times. The coda of the song has a bit of a Chris Adler/LAMB OF GOD feel to that I rather like. “Knife From My Sleeve” starts with a chilling death march beat and an equally deadly yowl from Perry. I can’t say enough times how she has topped all of her previous work on this record. Slow and hypnotic at the start, only the harmonizing of the guitar leads provides any hint of light in the dampened, grim mood. Then the song is set off with the whip crack beat and back to the furious tempos. Then in the perfect throwback to old-school death metal (think OBITUARY, MALEVOLENT CREATION and LM heroes BOLT THROWER) we return to the doom riffs of the intro for guitar hero worship time before fast forwarding to a blast beat tornado of an ending. “Liver and Lungs” is also chock full of speedy chord changes and aggression. Firing on all cylinders seems to be the speed the band shines brightest, so why not keep going to the well? I say do it! Perry takes on a higher pitch scream at length for the first time on the record here and then downshifts back to the guttural bellows for contrast. The breakdown riff is pure SLAYER circa 1985, which I personally would never complain about. “Dead Horses” might be the top track on this album after “Knife…”. They just kill it in every facet of the song that is possible. York might really have been the missing link for the band, judging from his unconscious performance. I can’t wait to see him live. Every single cut has something ear-catching and impressive. The riffs are rough enough for the tough-guy mosh ninjas, but tech enough for the nerds yet still true enough for purists to like them. “Cloaked in Red” is another song bowing at the altar of SLAYER by way of modern European blackened death metal. Further sonic assault and battery comes by way of “Beaten and Left Blind”. Another killer breakdown is sure to signal the point in their show after which soft kids can pick their front teeth off the floor. I would also be remiss to mention this song has by my count the fifth or sixth awesome guitar solo. Yep, you have received confirmation that lead guitar is still cool and not just for the neo-thrash kids. The last track “Morbidity” is a fitting title for the closing out an album like this. More classic sounding motifs crush your head in their vise-like grip of awesomeness. One grip I have is the brevity of the album, at a touch under thirty minutes. That and I’d like to hear the bass work from Matt Martinez higher up in the mix. Still, it’s nice to see this band live up to and catapult over the bright shine of attention’s spotlight.

 

LANDMINE MARATHON: meeting and defeating high expectations.

GRADE: A-

by Keith (Keefy) Chachkes

 

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