Earth
Angels of Darkness, Demons of Light II
Southern Lord
Having been locked up for about a year (since it was recorded at the same time as Angels of Darkness, Demons of Light I), Angels of Darkness, Demons of Light II finally meets its emancipation, and while you’ve no doubt got its dark, drawn out revelry already figured out, there are some differences to be noted between the two sisters. For one, II is only three quarters of an hour long, a good fifteen minutes shorter than I, despite the same number of songs, and in Earth terms, that’s a good spell. That doesn’t mean it feels any less shorter, though, and that’s largely due to II‘s more optimistic tone. If I was the descent, II is the ascent, punctuated by more prominent contributions from Adrienne Davies’ percussion and Lori Goldston’s cello, both of which seem to pull songs like “Waltz (A Multiplicity of Doors)” and “The Corascene Dog” toward the glowing embers of some distant fire. Much like I — and Earth’s last few albums before it — II is a dust n’ bones affair, albeit a somewhat more redemptive one, meaning it’s got plenty of that hypnotic Americana gothic sound worked into the band’s signature drone doom, but the way Dylan Carlson’s guitar reaches for something akin to a riff on “The Rakehell” is a subtle but dynamic move that reveals beauty and hope in the blackness.
Listen to “The Corascene Dog” from Angels of Darkness, Demons of Light II!
Posted by Jeff on Feb 3 2012 in Reviews
Tags: Adrienne Davies, Americana, Angels of Darkness Demons of Light I, Angles of Darkness Demons of Light II, beauty, blackness, bones, dark, doom, drone, dust, Dylan Carlson, dynamic, Earth, embers, fire, glowing, gothic, hope, hypnotic, Lori Goldston, optimistic, redemption, revelry, riff, Southern Lord, spell, The Corascene Dog, The Rakehell, Waltz (A Multiplicity of Doors)
Corrosion of Conformity
Corrosion of Conformity
Candlelight Records
Corrosion of Conformity’s 1985 Animosity line-up of Mike Dean, Woody Weatherman, and Reed Mullin made big news when they reunited in 2010 for a two-song EP, Your Tomorrow (Parts 1 and 2), mainly because Animosity‘s punk/thrash crossover made such a monumental contribution to heavy music and because it brought an end to C.O.C.’s five year hiatus after the release of In the Arms of God in 2005.* Of course, it’s the former point that garnered the most excitement, the belief that with Pepper Keenan still toiling away in Down, C.O.C. would lay aside its Southern metal sound and return to its influential, raucous, politico-skate metal roots. Well, gray hairs and lost years be damned because the new full-length, Corrosion of Conformity, finds the Raleigh, North Carolina trio in a fresh, aggressive, and loud way, chucking around thrashy riffs like empty beer cans. I’m sure it was never the band’s intent to recreate Animosity, which they don’t do by a long shot, but what they do do is spread their innate abrasiveness over several well-executed styles of metal to create a rush of dynamic anarchy. From the traditional blast of “Psychic Vampire,” “River of Stone,” and “Your Tomorrow,” to the motor-punk of “Leeches,” “The Moneychangers,” and “Rat City,” to the sludgy doom of “The Doom” and “Newness,” Corrosion of Conformity is utter mosh pit fodder, and Dean’s vocals are perfectly vile for such destructive enthusiasm. You know, it would have been totally reasonable to expect these bastard pioneers to be a bit out of step, but this is so on point that it’s worth your biggest broken-toothed grin…and a hell of a lot of spins.
*Even though it was the last recorded C.O.C. album, Mullin actually wasn’t part of the In the Arms of God line-up. In fact, that last time this trio appeared on an album together was 2000′s America’s Volume Dealer. However, Mullin and Dean do have another band called Righteous Fool.
Listen to “The Doom” from Corrosion of Conformity!
Posted by Jeff on Jan 23 2012 in Reviews
Tags: abrasiveness, aggressive, America's Volume Dealer, anarchy, animosity, bastard, beer, blast, Broken, C.O.C., Candlelight Records, Corrosion of Conformity, crossover, destructive, doom, Down, dynamic, enthusiasm, fresh, heavy, In the Arms of God, Leeches, Loud, Metal, Mike Dean, mosh pit, Motor, Newness, North Carolina, Pepper Keenan, pioneers, politico, Psychic Vampire, Punk, Raleigh, Rat City, raucous, Reed Mullin, riffs, Righteous Fool, River of Stone, skate, sludgy, southern, The Doom, The Moneychangers, thrash, traditional, vile, Woody Weatherman, Your Tomorrow, Your Tomorrow (Parts 1 and 2)
Grails
Deep Politics
Temporary Residence Limited
On Deep Politics, Grails’ oft-meditative instrumentation is dressed with an orchestral, cinematic ruching thanks in large part to the efforts of fiddler and composer Timba Harris (Master Musicians of Bukkake). Harris’ involvement on this album helps the Portland quartet wrap their avant-garde post-rock in celluloid and story-telling, and the overall effect is a dynamic soundtrack to curtains blowing in an empty room, cigarette smoke swirling under a lamp post on a rainy night, an empty bottle of desire hitting the floor after a passionate fight, or the bone-chilling glint of a slashing knife. This intricate score of crescendo noir works as both silent beauty and heavy terror, bandying about effluent sci-fi (“Future Primitive”), Italian craftsmanship (Bruno Nicolai’s “All the Colors of the Dark”), blushing romanticism (“Deep Politics”), prog-infused action (“Almost Grew My Hair”), and high-noon drama (“I Led Three Lives”) effortlessly, seamlessly, and extravagantly. Deep Politics doesn’t quite contain the mean zen of albums past, but it’s a creatively rich and enjoyable experience nonetheless. And remember, Grails nuts, the attraction that is Black Tar Prophecies Vol. 5 is supposed to be coming soon.
Listen to “Daughters of Bilitis” from Deep Politics!
Posted by Jeff on Jul 3 2011 in Reviews
Tags: action, All the Colors of the Dark, Almost Grew My Hair, avant-garde, beauty, blushing, Bruno Nicolai, celluloid, cinematic, craftsmanship, crescendo, Daughters of Bilitis, Deep Politics, drama, dynamic, extravagant, Future Primitive, Grails, heavy, high-noon, I Led Three Lives, instrumentation, intricate, Italian, Master Musicians of Bukkake, mean, meditative, noir, orchestral, Portland, post-rock, prog, quartet, rich, romanticism, sci-fi, score, silent, soundtrack, story-telling, Temporary Residence Limited, terror, Timba Harris, zen