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)
Orange Goblin
A Eulogy for the Damned
Candlelight Records
If you’ve got a beard, own a bong, or ride a bike, chances are this year’s most anticipated release for you is Orange Goblin’s A Eulogy for the Damned. And why not? The band released its first six albums in ten years, and its now been damn near five years since 2007′s Healing Through Fire, so chances are you’ve got one hell of an itch to take to the starry highway to hit up OG’s cosmic dope show once again. But where the UK quartet was once raw and bloozy it is now cooked and mean, and the smoky caravan kitsch it once proudly boasted in its space-brewed riffs has given way to a prouder, louder form. In fact, aside from vocalist Ben Ward’s chain-link preaching, the Southern boogie doom of “Save Me From Myself” or the bold groove of “Return to Mars,” there’s very little left in the way of OG’s former scuzzy self, and what stands before you today is a tyrant fifteen stories tall, an angry world-eater with a heavy metal law to lay the fuck down. And this is a metal album in many ways thanks to songs like “Red Tide Rising,” “Acid Trial,” “The Fog,” “Death of Aquarius,” and “Bishop’s Wolf,” which is not something you could have really said about any past OG album. It is also very much a statement album, the aforementioned songs leaving the deepest cut, but even OG’s familiar stoner rock fare, like the melodic “Stand For Something” and “The Filthy and the Few” contain a demented edge to ‘em, and the acoustic-psych intro on closer “A Eulogy To The Damned” points to OG’s dark, force-fueled approach to making this record. If you’ve ever hoped that Orange Goblin would one day step up and make a power move, that they’d drop all that whiskey-soaked astro-noodling and put some steel and muscle into their tunes, A Eulogy for the Damned is your hope come true.
Listen to “Red Tide Rising” from A Eulogy for the Damned!
Posted by Jeff on Jan 18 2012 in Reviews
Tags: A Eulogy for the Damned, A Eulogy To The Damned, Acid Trial, acoustic, angry, astro, beard, Ben Ward, bike, Bishop's Wolf, bloozy, bold, bong, boogie, brewed, Candlelight Records, caravan, chain-link, cosmic, dark, Death of Aquarius, demented, doom, dope, force, fuel, groove, Healing Through Fire, heavy, highway, law, Loud, mean, melodic, Metal, muscle, Orange Goblin, Power, preaching, proud, psych, raw, Red Tide Rising, Return to Mars, riffs, Rock, Save Me From Myself, scuzzy, smoky, southern, space, Stand For Something, starry, steel, stoner, The Filthy and the Few, The Fog, tyrant, UK, whiskey
Dwellers
Good Morning Harakiri
Small Stone
Well, it turns out that Peace, and Other Horrors, the four-song EP Dwellers put out last year, was an experimental little project because there’s not much folksy, acoustic Americana Gothic to be found on their debut full-length, Good Morning Harakiri. Although, to be fair, Good Morning Harakiri does contain a good deal of slide guitar, but it’s used as a vehicle for delivering some grungy psych-blues instead. I suppose the idea behind this one is that the six songs included here are the musical equivalent of splitting yourself open and spilling your guts all over the place, and if that’s the case, this Salt Lake City trio (comprised of Iota and Subrosa members) has made one fine mess. While it is atmospheric, exotic, and trippy at times, Good Morning Harakiri is, ultimately, blessedly doomed, absolutely heavy, and full of Southern-fried muscle, and if Gideon Smith was to ever rip through a set of songs from Soundgarden’s Ultramega OK in Earth’s jam room, this is what it would sound like. Forget what it does to your insides — this ritual rock rattles your goddamn bones.
Listen to “Lightening Ritual” from Good Morning Harakiri!
Posted by Jeff on Jan 3 2012 in Reviews
Tags: acoustic, Americana, atmospheric, blues, bones, doomed, Dwellers, Earth, exotic, folksy, fried, Gideon Smith, Good Morning Harakiri, gothic, grunge, guts, heavy, Iota, jam, Lightening Ritual, muscle, Peace and Other Horrors, psych, rip, ritual, Rock, Salt Lake City, slide, Small Stone, Soundgarden, southern, Subrosa, trippy, Ultramega OK