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  • binnie
    DIAMOND STATUS
    • May 2006
    • 19145

    Vain – Enough Rope

    God bless Davy Vain. His twisted brand of rock ‘n’ roll – debauched, yet beautiful – is as unrelentlessly unique in 2012 as it was in 1989. From the opening seconds ushering ‘Greener’ into life the whiff of Sunset Strip is pervasive: the sleazy serpentine riffs, the massive drums, the rolling bass-line (not to mention the inappropriate artwork). But this was no Crue, Ratt or Poison rip-off. This was – and is – something else, something in Davy Vain’s crystalline pipes which pushes these songs – just as it did on 1989’s lost hard rock classic, ‘No Regrets’ – into the stratosphere. It’s effeminate, yet menacing; tender, yet nasty. Wrapped around a succession of hooks that Johnny Thunders and Michael Monroe would kill for, it is utterly, utterly captivating.

    ‘Triple X’ – which features the lyric ‘sex quicksand’ – is utterly ridiculous, preposterous, even, but in these hands it works. It’s the rawness that kills, leaving the New Wave inspired ‘Cindy’ and (the brilliant) ‘Distance of Love’ drenched in sweat. You can even forgive the lesser moments, the filler of ‘Vain’ and ‘Solid Gold’. Vain has always done more than most Sunset bands – more than bombast or the sleaze and glam, what we get here is something generally debauched, sensational and yet delicate, a series of very personal moments of lust made universal. It seaps out of the speakers, leaving the likes of ‘Worship You’ sounding genuinely dangerous – an ode to the desire to place a woman on a pedestal and do nasty, nasty things to her. During the title cut you realise that this is music where fun become abandon, pleasure becomes abuse and excess is an artform.

    I feel dirty………………………give me more!
    The Power Of The Riff Compels Me

    Comment

    • binnie
      DIAMOND STATUS
      • May 2006
      • 19145

      Guns ‘N’ Roses – Chinese Democracy (2008)
      If ever a record was doomed to fail before anyone had ever heard it, this was it. Nothing – I mean NOTHING, not a blow job from Scarlet Johansen, a kiss from God, or the pin to Bill Gates’s credit card – could possibly live up to the anticipation which Axl Rose engendered around this record by spending such an inordinate amount of time recording it and allowing so much rumour to mask it in opinion which ranged from mystique to farce. Add into that Axl’s rather, errrrrrrm, ‘unorthodox’ methods of treating both his own fans and his band’s legacy, and 20+ years of primadonna behaviour, and what you have is a recipe not just for pre-judgement but flat-out blind prejudice. ‘It can’t work without Slash’ they screamed (surely Izzy would be a more significant absentee if you want to pursue that line of argument?); ‘Axl’s mad’ they wailed. ‘He’s lost his voice’….’he’s fat’……and so on. At this stage, anything Axl does will be unfairly mangled by the ramifications of his own persona.

      But, to truly and fairly review this record we have to be clear from the outset about what it isn’t. Firstly, it is not a metal record – indeed, in places it is barely a hard rock one. Secondly it is not – and was clearly never intended to be – anything like ‘Appetite For Destruction’, the perennial albatross around all members of G’N’R (Velvet Revolver had the same problems bypassing its legacy). Indeed, aside from Rose’s distinctive pipes, much of ‘Chinese Democracy’ sounds little like anything G’N’R put down on record before it, and you can’t help thinking that if he’d called it a solo project it would have had a better reception by side-stepping the emotional attachment to the original band – indeed, given the long list of musicians and collaborators here, this was a record made by a ‘band’ only in the very, very notional sense of the term.

      So, what is it then? Something of a noble failure if truth be told – a schizophrenic record full of glorious, glorious highs but marred by moments of baffling mediocrity. At its heart is Rose as singer-songwriter rather than fucked-up rock ‘n’ roll pariah, a side of his vision first shown on the ‘Illusions’ records. If there is a core to the sound it is piano-led songs layered in heavy guitar. At its worst (‘Catcher In the Rye’) it sounds like James Taylor arranged by Uncle Fester; at its best (see the quite frankly astounding ‘Prostitute’) Rose managed to deliver heavy music layered with genuinely adult emotion without sacrificing its immediacy – a rare thing in the world of metal. It may have one or two too many ballads – ‘This I Love’ sounds like a bloated Andrew Lloyd Webber out-take – but Rose is clearly at his most comfortable when displaying his more intimate side. ‘Sorry’ is a dark, claustrophobic reworking of the power ballad which displays both his lyrical cleverness and ability to suck you into his nightmarish world; whilst ‘If The World’ injects a rather conventional medium with elements of dub and trip hop (Portishead, anyone?) on the way to creating a luscious, dream-like soundscape of incredible beauty; and ‘Street of Dreams’ sounds a bit like Billy Joel with a screw loose – the hyperbole may be 20 years out of date, but it’s powerful nonetheless.

      Best of all is ‘Riad N’ The Bedouins’, which is like nothing else in rock. It’s so gloriously over the top – like an Opera crammed into one sonata – so grandiose that it could only have been made a man who manages to make the ridiculous visceral and savage (‘Locomotive’, ‘Coma’….) – it sounds like Queen hitting you in the face with a brick. Combined with the bitterness which drips off the Trojan horse beauty of ‘There Was a Time’, and the sheer oddity of ‘Madagascar’ what we have are moments of dazzling vision, scope and vanity – at once captivating and instantly loveable.

      The problem – and it’s a serious problem – is that the whole is much less than the sum of its parts. This is largely because of the record’s aforementioned ‘schizophrenic’ nature. The grandiose statement of the gems is out of step with the scuzzy rock ‘n’ roll of ‘Scraped’ (which is forgettable) and the titletrack (which sounds closest to the dirtied up glam rock which Guns made their name on, but is out of place here). The songs stand on their own merits – the near perfect rock song, ‘Better’, is a case in point – but feel like a miss-dressed ensemble together. Sacrificing some of these moments would have added cohesion and brought the record – which clocks in at 71 minutes – in at a more endurable pace.

      The biggest problem here, however, was the length of the project’s gestation – the production is so overcooked and overthought, tweaking many of the sounds to the point of artificiality and layering the tunes in layer after layer of instrumentation, that is robs the songs of their raw power through suffocation. The real tragedy here is that these songs were not allowed to stand by themselves as a testament to Rose’s vision. But none of this makes for a disaster. Indeed, if truth be told, what we actually have here is a missed opportunity – there is so much of real quality here that had Rose relinquished control to a fresh set of (quality control) ears, the end result would have been a return with a bang rather than a whimper. A record as frustrating as its author, it is one which nevertheless remains criminally overlooked (not to mention under-rated) – a record which deserves to be admired for being so brazenly, and honestly, out of step with anything happening in the musical scene, ‘Chinese Democracy’ is a ginger peg stuck in a (rather pompous) hole of its own making.
      The Power Of The Riff Compels Me

      Comment

      • Dave's Bitch
        ROCKSTAR

        • Apr 2005
        • 5293

        Originally posted by binnie
        Guns ‘N’ Roses – Chinese Democracy (2008)
        If ever a record was doomed to fail before anyone had ever heard it, this was it. Nothing – I mean NOTHING, not a blow job from Scarlet Johansen, a kiss from God, or the pin to Bill Gates’s credit card – could possibly live up to the anticipation which Axl Rose engendered around this record by spending such an inordinate amount of time recording it and allowing so much rumour to mask it in opinion which ranged from mystique to farce. Add into that Axl’s rather, errrrrrrm, ‘unorthodox’ methods of treating both his own fans and his band’s legacy, and 20+ years of primadonna behaviour, and what you have is a recipe not just for pre-judgement but flat-out blind prejudice. ‘It can’t work without Slash’ they screamed (surely Izzy would be a more significant absentee if you want to pursue that line of argument?); ‘Axl’s mad’ they wailed. ‘He’s lost his voice’….’he’s fat’……and so on. At this stage, anything Axl does will be unfairly mangled by the ramifications of his own persona.

        But, to truly and fairly review this record we have to be clear from the outset about what it isn’t. Firstly, it is not a metal record – indeed, in places it is barely a hard rock one. Secondly it is not – and was clearly never intended to be – anything like ‘Appetite For Destruction’, the perennial albatross around all members of G’N’R (Velvet Revolver had the same problems bypassing its legacy). Indeed, aside from Rose’s distinctive pipes, much of ‘Chinese Democracy’ sounds little like anything G’N’R put down on record before it, and you can’t help thinking that if he’d called it a solo project it would have had a better reception by side-stepping the emotional attachment to the original band – indeed, given the long list of musicians and collaborators here, this was a record made by a ‘band’ only in the very, very notional sense of the term.

        So, what is it then? Something of a noble failure if truth be told – a schizophrenic record full of glorious, glorious highs but marred by moments of baffling mediocrity. At its heart is Rose as singer-songwriter rather than fucked-up rock ‘n’ roll pariah, a side of his vision first shown on the ‘Illusions’ records. If there is a core to the sound it is piano-led songs layered in heavy guitar. At its worst (‘Catcher In the Rye’) it sounds like James Taylor arranged by Uncle Fester; at its best (see the quite frankly astounding ‘Prostitute’) Rose managed to deliver heavy music layered with genuinely adult emotion without sacrificing its immediacy – a rare thing in the world of metal. It may have one or two too many ballads – ‘This I Love’ sounds like a bloated Andrew Lloyd Webber out-take – but Rose is clearly at his most comfortable when displaying his more intimate side. ‘Sorry’ is a dark, claustrophobic reworking of the power ballad which displays both his lyrical cleverness and ability to suck you into his nightmarish world; whilst ‘If The World’ injects a rather conventional medium with elements of dub and trip hop (Portishead, anyone?) on the way to creating a luscious, dream-like soundscape of incredible beauty; and ‘Street of Dreams’ sounds a bit like Billy Joel with a screw loose – the hyperbole may be 20 years out of date, but it’s powerful nonetheless.

        Best of all is ‘Riad N’ The Bedouins’, which is like nothing else in rock. It’s so gloriously over the top – like an Opera crammed into one sonata – so grandiose that it could only have been made a man who manages to make the ridiculous visceral and savage (‘Locomotive’, ‘Coma’….) – it sounds like Queen hitting you in the face with a brick. Combined with the bitterness which drips off the Trojan horse beauty of ‘There Was a Time’, and the sheer oddity of ‘Madagascar’ what we have are moments of dazzling vision, scope and vanity – at once captivating and instantly loveable.

        The problem – and it’s a serious problem – is that the whole is much less than the sum of its parts. This is largely because of the record’s aforementioned ‘schizophrenic’ nature. The grandiose statement of the gems is out of step with the scuzzy rock ‘n’ roll of ‘Scraped’ (which is forgettable) and the titletrack (which sounds closest to the dirtied up glam rock which Guns made their name on, but is out of place here). The songs stand on their own merits – the near perfect rock song, ‘Better’, is a case in point – but feel like a miss-dressed ensemble together. Sacrificing some of these moments would have added cohesion and brought the record – which clocks in at 71 minutes – in at a more endurable pace.

        The biggest problem here, however, was the length of the project’s gestation – the production is so overcooked and overthought, tweaking many of the sounds to the point of artificiality and layering the tunes in layer after layer of instrumentation, that is robs the songs of their raw power through suffocation. The real tragedy here is that these songs were not allowed to stand by themselves as a testament to Rose’s vision. But none of this makes for a disaster. Indeed, if truth be told, what we actually have here is a missed opportunity – there is so much of real quality here that had Rose relinquished control to a fresh set of (quality control) ears, the end result would have been a return with a bang rather than a whimper. A record as frustrating as its author, it is one which nevertheless remains criminally overlooked (not to mention under-rated) – a record which deserves to be admired for being so brazenly, and honestly, out of step with anything happening in the musical scene, ‘Chinese Democracy’ is a ginger peg stuck in a (rather pompous) hole of its own making.
        Was that a fair,Unbiased review of the MUSIC on Chinese Democracy i just read?.Why I believe it was,Thank's Binnie

        I agree that the ordering and range of song's on here is chaotic.As you said it is a shame the song's will never be judged on there own merit's but rather by the man who wrote them.It is a shame because there are some absolute killers in there.

        Nice review
        I really love you baby, I love what you've got
        Let's get together we can, Get hot

        Comment

        • binnie
          DIAMOND STATUS
          • May 2006
          • 19145

          No problem DB, glad you liked it.
          The Power Of The Riff Compels Me

          Comment

          • binnie
            DIAMOND STATUS
            • May 2006
            • 19145

            Accept – Stalingrad

            Another torrent of twisted, testerone charged, teutonic metal from Accept to kick your ass and leave you thirsting for more. Album number 2 for post-Udo singer Mark Tornilla – following on from 2009’s epic comeback ‘Blood of Nations’ – sees the band in even more vital form. There’s nothing you’ve not heard before but everything you’d expect – piercing vocals, powerchords, ripping solos and duel guitar harmonies inbetween bloody riffs – and when they kick into the title track you’re surprised. Scratch that. You’re shocked. Shocked at just how HEAVY that is. On ‘Stalingrad’, Accept haven’t just managed to deliver the goods as they did with such aplomb on ‘Blood of Nations’, they excelled themselves and evolved their sound (under the caring hand of uber-producer Andy Sneap, of course). The difference this time around is clearly Tornilla’s heightened involvement in the songwriting process and the result that this sounds like a band in killing mode with songs stripped of their fat to their raw essentials – pure metal heaven. Accept’s ‘reunion’ has been less hyped than many, but listening to this you can’t help that wish that Maiden or Priest would do something like this and just revel in the joy of being in a metal band.

            It’s perfectly paced too. ‘Hung, Drawn & Quartered’ and ‘Flash To Bang Home’ approach thrash, whilst the colossus of a closer ‘Shadow Soldiers’ is pure mid-paced grandeur. It’s beautifully crafted stuff – ‘Hellfire’, ‘The Galley’, you say clichéd, I say classic. And it’s delivered with a lifetime’s talent – Wolf Hoffman, in particular, further cements his place as one of metal’s great. Great songs, great production and heavy fucking metal – what are you waiting for?

            There will be better metal records released this year. And there will be more important metal records released this year. But I doubt there’ll be one you’ll have more fun with than this.

            BANG THY HEAD!!!
            The Power Of The Riff Compels Me

            Comment

            • fourthcoming

              Accept......the original version and the new version is such an underrated group. Always great live too.

              Comment

              • binnie
                DIAMOND STATUS
                • May 2006
                • 19145

                From the vaults: Amen – Amen (1999)

                Amen’s incendiary debut was a self-consciously punk record – colourful, exuberant and taking aggression to the point of artifice via hyperbole, it was a glorious headfuck of a sound. Loathed by punk purists as derivative and contrived; and loved by kids thirsting for something with more substance than Nu Metal, Amen never quite realised their potential commercially or creatively.

                It wasn’t for lack of talent or sincerity. Casey Chaos is an infectious personality, and Ross Robinson’s ultra-raw production built the entire band around his voice. At its best, we get hook-heavy, bouncy, body-blow punk rock. Sure, you’ve heard the tales of suburban neurosis before, but you can’t deny the sheer bloody power of ‘Coma America’ and the raucous brutality of ‘I Don’t Sleep’. No-one could doubt that Amen were good, but they couldn’t quite slip over into great. The problem was that running pedal to the medal means that the band loses rather than gains impact – the adrenalin-shot-after-adrenalin-shot approach is one compounded by Robinson’s go-to raw production style, with the result that many of these songs – whilst great on their own merits – are swamped by the torrent of the whole. When they mix it up on closer ‘Resignation/ Naked & Violent’ – a cacophony of discordant volume – you realise that the potential Amen had once they took the courage to step outside of their mould. It’s inspired – but elsewhere, as the punk purists noted with glee, there was too much plundering the collective works of the Circle Jerks, Black Flag and Bad Brains to really make Amen match the hype which Roadrunner heaped on them. There was a sense of a band trying too hard, a band that had become stylised – that’s not to say they were faking it, but rather that they felt the need to strive for more than actually were.

                Personally, I couldn’t give a shit about the flaws – Casey’s rage is infectious and trips off the syllables in his bark straight into your soul. It’s a go-to ‘I’M ANGRY’ record – ‘Unclean’ is just great rock ‘n’ roll, raising the middle finger for the sake of it. And in that sense it was – and remains – a satisfying trip. At the distance of 13 years, it can finally be appreciated for what it is, rather than what it was supposed to be.
                The Power Of The Riff Compels Me

                Comment

                • binnie
                  DIAMOND STATUS
                  • May 2006
                  • 19145

                  Originally posted by fourthcoming
                  Accept......the original version and the new version is such an underrated group. Always great live too.
                  Indeed - so, so important in the evolution of metal (proto-thrash etc).

                  I didn't think it would work without Udo. I was wrong (I noted that on the review of Blood For Nations - Stalingrad is better)!
                  The Power Of The Riff Compels Me

                  Comment

                  • binnie
                    DIAMOND STATUS
                    • May 2006
                    • 19145

                    From the vaults: Dio – Sacred Heart (1985) Reissue.

                    ‘Sacred Heart’ is the overlooked Dio record, lost between ‘Holy Diver’ and ‘The Last In Line’ and the opulent brilliance of ‘Dream Evil’. It is in many ways a match for any of those records and pretty much anything else released in the mid-80s. Reissued with HD and TLIL, it deserves to be more widely appreciated and listened to.

                    What separates ‘Sacred Heart’ from the first 2 Dio records is the rather ‘Big’ ‘80s production, the sheen of which makes the songs a little leaden in some places, and over keyboard heavy in others, features which perhaps render it more ‘of its time’ than ‘timeless’. But if you can look past the production, the songs are strong. Really strong. Dripping with the distinctly Dio sound – which, contrary to popular opinion, didn’t really have much in common with the rest of ‘80s metal – the tunes here were far superior to what far more commercially successful legends like Sabbath, Ozzy, Priest, and Maiden were putting out at the same time. People forget that. Sure, the band were a little constrained by the ‘Holy Diver’ formula, but you can’t resist the melodic heaviness of ‘Another Lie’ and ‘Rock ‘N’ Roll Children’, or the infectious groove of ‘Like The Beat of a Heart’, which sounds like a titan swatting lesser bands aside.

                    In truth, ‘Sacred Heart’ is marred by the fact that the first 2 Dio records are pretty much untouchable. Yet it’s certainly heavier, and more aggressive, than the band had been before. Opener ‘King of Rock ‘n’ Roll’ is a lost metal anthem which kicks and screams through the ether of 25 years. And the title track – swaggering with statuesque grandeur in the manner of ‘Heaven & Hell’ or ‘Holy Diver’ – is dinosaur-bollock heavy and infectiously hummable. Being heavy is easy; being melodic less so. But combining the 2, that’s an incredible talent.

                    Lyrically, you know what you’re getting with Dio. Wizards, rainbows and dragons aplenty. All the mystique and splendour are fine and dandy, but it’s really incidental to the power of the music in comparison to Dio’s voice – this was a time when metal was about escapism and enjoyment, and the fantasy only complements that. Add into the mix the sound of a band killing it – this was the last album to feature the classic line up of Jimmy Bain, Vivian Campbell and Vinny Appice – and you’ve got a classic album found wanting only in comparison to the band’s previous releases. Campbell in particular is on fire here, laying down incendiary solos and tones – remind me again why one of the most talented players of his generation has been playing back-up on ‘Pour Some Sugar On Me’ for 25 years?

                    The reissue package itself has been put together with the care and respect which Dio deserves. The deluxe package features plenty of images, posters and artwork, and the second disc contains the ‘Hide the Rainbow’ EP and a short live set from San Diego in 1985. Both are welcome additions for Dio diehards, even if they are somewhat incidental to the majesty of the record itself. Listen to it and remember.

                    God bless you Mr. Dio.
                    The Power Of The Riff Compels Me

                    Comment

                    • binnie
                      DIAMOND STATUS
                      • May 2006
                      • 19145

                      Soulfly – Enslaved

                      The opening bars of discordant guitars which usher ‘Resistance’ into life announce that album number 8 Soulfly is a very, very different affair from recent efforts. Since 2005 – when Max Cavalera turned his post-Sepultura outfit towards (even) harder sounds – Soulfly records have become increasingly bludgeoning but, in the wake of his side project Cavalera Conspiracy with brother (and original Sepultura drummer) Iggor, ‘Enslaved’ is another step up. And damn it’s good. The opening salvo also harks back to the more politically charged lyrics of his ‘90s heyday:

                      Brethren, arise, arise
                      Strike for your lives and liberties
                      Now is the day and the hour
                      Let every slave throughout the land do this
                      And the days of slavery are numbered
                      You cannot suffer greater cruelties than you have already
                      Rather die free men then live to be slaves

                      But this is no retro-Sepultura wannabe record. The presence of new drummer David Kinkade allows for forays into the more extreme end of metal, which makes for something heavier than Soulfly have ever sounded. The blast of death metal and Discharge-esque hardcore of ‘Treachery’ and ‘World Scum’ – the latter of which evokes ‘Morbid Visions’-era Sepultura before snapping into a hulking chorus – makes for a Cavalera record as vital as ever. But it’s not just the heaviness. Extreme metal bands are ten a penny, but what makes groups like Sepultura, Cavalera Conspiracy and Soulfly special is the ability to enthuse and inspire by channeling charisma and integrity, factors which ooze from these songs. Cavalera has always channelled something which the more technical metal bands lack, something primitive, a raucous anger which is so captivating. ‘Legions’ and ‘Chains’ are riotous, hook-heavy groove metal; whilst the thrash-riffage ‘American Steel’ is so violent it almost allows you to see the circle pit. Such moments are tempered with moderations in pace. ‘Redemption of Man By God’ – featuring Devildriver’s Dez Fafara on vocals – is a twisted epic, whilst ‘Intervention’ sees the madness made more palletable by Mark Rizzo’s unique approach to guitar melody. It’s inspiring stuff.

                      No-one would suggest that ‘Enslaved’ is a return to the heights of ‘Chaos AD’ or ‘Arise’, or that it is as influential. Nor is it a huge departure for Soulfly’s sound. But when the ‘Albums of the Year’ lists are compiled come December, you’d expect to see it there. You sense here that everything has been tweaked and stepped up – the playing, the dynamics, the sheer bloody bluntness – and that makes for something wonderful for the world of metal.
                      The Power Of The Riff Compels Me

                      Comment

                      • binnie
                        DIAMOND STATUS
                        • May 2006
                        • 19145

                        From the vaults: Rye Coalition – Curses (2006)

                        Album number 4 from New Jersey rockers Rye Coalition featured the sonic knob-twiddling of Dave Grohl. The result is that is rocks harder than fat girl at a gang bang. This is straight-up dirty, rock ‘n’ roll – with cowbell. From the party hard sentiments of ‘Burn the Masters’, the joyous cinnamon hooks of ‘Young Yellers’ and ‘Secret Heart’, or the stoner leanings of ‘Cigarette Catostrophe’, each song is distinct. Wedded to Grohl’s insistence that each song is kept on the straight and narrow of big hooks, what we’re left with is something noteable in a world where rock bands are 10 a penny.

                        It’s impressive, if over-stylized, stuff. You never get the sense that the band is quite in the moment and the likes of ‘Cocaine Werewolf’ and ‘Between an I-Roc and a Hard Place’ see the balance of quirkiness and cliché become strained. On closer ‘Achilles Wheelchair’, however, (on which they channel Rush) you get the sense of just how good this band could be.
                        The Power Of The Riff Compels Me

                        Comment

                        • binnie
                          DIAMOND STATUS
                          • May 2006
                          • 19145

                          From the vaults: Entombed – Left Hand Path (1990)

                          It opens with a scream. Then comes the guitar sound – THAT guitar sound: a bowel-collapsing, viscous ooze of evil. Much emulated, but never bettered. The title (and opening) track of Entombed’s debut record announced that things were about to change, and played a huge role is shaping Death Metal at a point in which the genre was still in its birthpangs – we had Autopsy and Death, but this was something different. Where modern Death Metal is all about clinical perfection, technique and relentless complexity, ‘Left Hand Path’ was uncomplicated, dirty, nasty and blisteringly tortuous. It was also – hail Satan! – a LOT of fun.

                          Recorded in one week for under £1000 and launching hordes of Swedish copyists, ‘Left Hand Path’ was a ground-zero moment in extreme metal. 1990? 19-fucking-90? It doesn’t sound old. In fact, it still sounds huge. Here we get the gnarly anthems like ‘Supposed To Rot’ and ‘Morbid Devourment’. The blitzkrieg groove of ‘Premature Autopsy’ and the sheer transcendence of the heaviness made this an epic listen. Derided in the post ‘To Ride, Shoot Straight and Speak The Truth’ (1997) years for diluting death metal to ‘death ‘n’ roll’, you can hear the inception of that sound here in ‘Drowned’ and ‘Revel In Flesh’ – owing much to punk of Discharge, MC5, but also the metallic grandeur of Black Sabbath, Entombed always stood apart from their Death Metal peers despite influencing and shaping the genre so vitally. It’s a shame, then, that the conservative nature of many metal fans has resulted in Entombed post-1997 work overshadowing the legacy of their early records – by all rights they deserve to be a central part in the narrative of metal’s history, as important in their own way as Black Sabbath or Megadeth.

                          Is every song here an ode to the finessed mode of songwriting? No: the relentlessness of this is the aural equivalent of been run over and left to die. And that’s the point. The aesthetic here is indebted to punk, in which feel is far more important than form. The testament to its brilliance is that 22 years on, despite the ‘Entombed sound’ being part of Death Metal’s vocabulary, this sounds fresh, exciting and invigorating. Easily one of the most important albums in metal – the virtuosity of modern death metal is impressive in its own way, but you can’t help but wish more it channelled the sheer bloody dirtiness of ‘Left Hand Path’.
                          The Power Of The Riff Compels Me

                          Comment

                          • binnie
                            DIAMOND STATUS
                            • May 2006
                            • 19145

                            Rival Sons – Pressure & Time

                            There have been a lot of false starts in the ‘Classic Rock Revival’ stakes in recent years: Wolfmother, Black Stone Cherry, The Datsuns, and the Hurricane Party spring to mind – solid, but rarely spectacular. Only Airbourne have really come close to catching the energy – the vitality – of their influences. Rival Sons are different, for two reasons. Firstly, they have wonderful, wonderful songs – it’s the thing that made the Black Crowes more than a derivative band, and it has the potential to do so here. Secondly, their brand of Classic Rock owes little to the Neanderthal stomp of Sunset Strip or AC/DC and much more to the groove and shake of Aerosmith, Grand Funk Railroad and Creedence Clearwater Revival. It’s a trick that bands like The Raconteurs and The Kings of Leon have taken to heart, and one that will hopefully garner Rival Sons suitable success, too.

                            They’ve an ear for melody as well. The title track pulsates and struts around gospel blues, teasing and building rather than blowing its wad in 90 seconds and dulling us for another 120, as so many blues rockers do. The ballad ‘Only One’ has a Motown sway to it, whilst the fuzzy psychedelia of ‘Get Mine’ has a 60s soul kick to it – there’s so much pop and sway to it, a result of the rather brilliant rhythm section of Robin Everharm and Michael Miley. With a record as fun as this, you can even forgive and forget the less tunes on offer here.

                            Ultimately, the nostalgia fest which is currently gripping hard rock is an unhelpful injection of inertia. As good as Rival Sons – or any other band of this ilk – are, listening to their records is probably likely to make you itch to play the shit out of your older records, rather than re-play theirs. But this is a variation on a tradition, and it’s done with class – on the pure abandon of metamphetamine blues propelling closer ‘Gypsy Heart’, you sense that Rival Sons may have the potential to transcend their influenes.
                            The Power Of The Riff Compels Me

                            Comment

                            • binnie
                              DIAMOND STATUS
                              • May 2006
                              • 19145

                              Black Breath – Sentenced to Life

                              10 songs. 32 minutes. This band do not fuck around. Sounding like a macabre DRI, and wielding a guitar sound which is positively vicious, Black Breath kick into life the gnarly kind of extreme thrash that hearkens back to 1985 – not because its pastiche, but because it has the sense of power gained from a primitive metallic bludgeon. And it’s heavier than a deathstar. ‘Feast of the Damned’ and the title track are a hell of an opening statement of intent: gang vocals, panzer-division riffs and a hardcore aesthetic which only makes the demonic lyrics all the more sinister, Black Breath are one of the most infectiously violent bands in metal today. Vehement and volatile: this is the most twisted collection of riffs you’ll hear all year.

                              Passing from the ridiculous into the sublime, the grandiose savagery of ‘Endless Corpse’ is extreme metal at its best. Perhaps more comfortable in the short-sharp blitzkrieg mode than the slower, anthemic power of ‘Obey’, Black Breath have delivered something truly special this time out. Wielding a sledgehammer where most extreme metal prefers the precise intricacy of the scalpel, beyond being unholy in its heaviness, this rawks too. If 2010’s ‘Heavy Breathing’ was an evil masterpiece of thrash, ‘Sentenced to Life’ steps up the game in every way.
                              The Power Of The Riff Compels Me

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                              • binnie
                                DIAMOND STATUS
                                • May 2006
                                • 19145

                                From the vaults: Korn – Korn (1994)

                                ‘Are you ready?’ Jonathon Davis asks at the opening of Korn’s debut record. The answer in the world of metal was a collective ‘Errrm, not really’. Starting with a tingling of symbols and jazzy bass, this was a very different kind of metal. Downtuned, elastic riffs and hip-hop beats were a long, long way from Maiden’s grandeur, Megadeth’s technical weaponry, or Dio’s dragons. ‘Blind’ is – oddly for metal – BASS heavy and features Davis’s spoken vocals and a chanted refrain instead of a chorus proper. ‘Ball Tongue’ is awash with scat rhythms, freaky, creepy vocals and the soft-heavy dynamic that sounded so fresh in 1994 only to be tiresome 4 years later. It was a curve ball: captivating, unnerving and challenging metal to its very core, for 5 years or so Korn led the way of handful of bands who simultaneously widened metal’s sonic palette and its fanbase.

                                18 years on, however, what stands out here is how sketchy some of these songs are. This may be Korn’s best – and most important – record, but it ain’t their best collection of tunes. But what it lacked in finesse, it made up for in raw bloody power. ‘Need To’ is a funky Nirvana; ‘Clown’ features a cement mixer guitar tone; whilst the classic bag-pipe led ‘Shoots & Ladders’ is a demented nursery rhyme. It was explosive at the time: Rob Halford didn’t sing ‘nick nack paddywag give a dog a bone……’! The masterpiece, however, was ‘Daddy’: a tortuous take of Davis’s child-abuse in which the singer – pushed to the edge by producer Ross Robinson – breaks down. It sums Korn up, perfectly: as brave and dignified as they are self-aware and self-indulgent. Whether you like ‘em or not has far more to do with your aesthetic choice than any objective opinion. It’s so shudderingly hateful than you can almost overlook how thin songs like ‘Faget’ and ‘Divine’ actually are.

                                ‘Korn’ signified a shift in heavy music whether you like it or not. For all its seismic impact, however, these ears don’t hear a lot of Korn in the modern metal scene – that this sounds so dated, so of its time, is an indication of how hermetically sealed Nu Metal became in the world of metal. That’s good or bad depending on your opinion. But even Korn’s biggest haters would have to admit that they had little in common with their spawn: the 1000 downtuned copyists and millions of 13 year old kids whose LIFE WAS JUST SO GODDAMNED COMPLEX are hardly the band’s fault. Emotive, vulnerable and completely unlike anything that came before it, Korn showed that heavy music post thrash and post grunge could still be reinvented and rejuvenated. Their continued commitment to innovation – note their recent metal/dub-step record – mark Korn out as a band who have always marched to the beat of their own drum. I respect that, even if I don’t care for the output.
                                The Power Of The Riff Compels Me

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