Posts tagged ‘dale crover’

October 31, 2011

Black Tusk

Passage Through Purgatory (Relapse)
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Taste the Sin (Relapse)
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Set the Dial (Relapse)
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by Phil Freeman

Georgia has been flooding America with metal the past few years. Much of it is of a psychedelic bent, whether it’s the hard riffing and prog excursions of Atlanta’s Mastodon (the most successful and the most schizophrenic of the current crop of bands), the ’90s-besotted guitar swirlscapes, tribal drumming, and male-female vocal exchanges of Kylesa, or the epic art-boogie of Baroness (the latter two acts both calling Savannah home), there’s almost always a feeling of wanting to get out of oneself, to journey through inner worlds via massive amplification. Black Tusk are the latest band to emerge from Georgia, and they’re easily the most down-to-earth of the bunch; in fact, far from being travelers through intercranial space, they’re pretty much wallowing in the mud. The trio call their sound “swamp metal,” and that’s a pretty accurate description.

Passage Through Purgatory is the band’s debut album (except for an early self-released EP or two), originally released in 2008 and reissued earlier this year by their current label, Relapse, with two bonus tracks, “Beneath” and “Fatal Kiss” (originally released on split singles with The Holy Mountain and Fight Amp, respectively), appended as bonus tracks. The original album was only 25 minutes long, so the extra material doesn’t exactly pad the CD to an unreasonable length. Black Tusk aren’t a jam-oriented band. They grab onto a riff with all six hands, tear into it until it’s reduced to shards, and move on to the next one. Andrew Fidler‘s guitar is a fuzzy, distorted shriek; when he cranks it up and starts charging ahead, he gets a sound almost worthy of Black Flag‘s Greg Ginn, more hardcore than metal. Bassist Jonathan Athon mostly shadows him; their instruments don’t separate much in the mix, because virtuosity and fancy-pants showboatin’ aren’t the point here—bludgeoning the listener into submission is. James May‘s drumming is a mix of tribal rhythmic hypnosis, D-beat relentlessness, and hard rock throb. He doesn’t seem to need more than a kick, a snare, a tom and a crash cymbal to achieve his goals, most of which are destructive in nature. All three men sing—or rather, shout, bark and roar.

Taste the Sin is the trio’s second album, released in 2010. It’s noisier and punkier than Passage Through Purgatory, as though they were attempting to shrug off the psychedelic influences they exhibited on the first record. “Red Eyes, Black Skies” and “Way of Horse and Bow” are raw bash-and-shout explosions, exercises in the deployment of old techniques—a pick-slide over a grinding Lemmy-stye bass line, stuff like that. It’s like they decided they’d rather sound like Disfear than an amped-up Kylesa, and frankly, they were making the wrong decision. They don’t get back to core competencies until the album’s second half: “Twist the Knife” features dual lead vocals, a truck-wheels-spinning-in-mud riff and drumming worthy of the MelvinsDale Crover, and the next four tracks are a suite. “Redline” is an instrumental, a fanfare, a setting of the scene—it ends, and a gently tapped cymbal counts cadence for a blasting dragstrip guitar riff as “The Take Off” does exactly that. May smashes the snare like he wants to snap his own hands off at the wrists, as Fidler and Athon riff in unison and howl in counterpoint. The guitar break (no time for a solo per se) is a coil of barbed wire wrapped around your ankle, tightening every second. “The Ride” is the mood piece at the suite’s midpoint, ominous chords crashing before a hard-swinging, almost-boogie beat comes in and we’re shouting at each other again as the car careens down unlit midnight roads. “The Crash” sounds like its title, working from an already over-the-top energy level to peak after peak until the inevitable (desired) explosion.

The latest Black Tusk album, Set the Dial, has all the aggression of its predecessor, but the sound is a little more live-wire; the production this time is a little less sludge and a little more punk. They’re stretching out a little more, too; three of its ten songs pass the four-minute mark. They’ve never had more than one four-minute song per disc before. “Mass Devotion” verges on the atmospheric, and the instrumental “Resistor” ends with an acoustic interlude, for hell’s sake. Of course, these subtleties are sort of like Motörhead recording a ballad just to prove that they can. Black Tusk’s stock in trade remains head-down bashing, and they do it extremely well here, making the first half of Taste the Sin seem like a momentary and forgivable miscalculation. Evolution is a very slow and incremental process. These three Georgians are determined to get where they’re going at their own deliberate pace, and for the most part it’s been an extremely enjoyable ride so far, so I’ll be sticking with them.

November 2, 2010

Electric Wizard

Black Masses (Rise Above)

by Phil Freeman

Electric Wizard, Black MassesElectric Wizard are a great example of how a band can seem to be doing the same thing over and over and yet wind up with a pretty varied discography, for good or ill. They’re a quartet from England that started out as a trio, with Jus Oborn on vocals and guitar, Tim Bagshaw on bass and Mark Greening on drums. This lineup lasted until 2002, at which point Greening left and was replaced by Justin Greaves, former drummer for Iron Monkey (basically, an English Eyehategod). Greaves was the bridge between lineups, as he stuck around when Bagshaw departed to form Ramesses with Greening. Oborn then recruited female guitarist Liz Buckingham of 13 and Sourvein (he wound up marrying her, too) and bassist Rob Al-Issa. This lineup lasted until 2006, when Greaves left. He was replaced by Shaun Rutter, and when Al-Issa quit in 2008, some guy named Tas joined, and that’s Electric Wizard circa 2010.

The original trio lineup recorded four albums: a self-titled 1995 debut; 1997′s Come My Fanatics…; 2000′s Dopethrone; and 2002′s Let Us Prey, as well as 1998′s four-song Supercoven EP and the odd split single here and there. The Oborn/Buckingham/Al-Issa/Greaves lineup can be heard on 2004′s We Live (the cover of which actually lists the band as The Electric Wizard) and 2007′s Witchcult Today; as far as I know, the Oborn/Buckingham/Al-Issa/Rutter version of the band never recorded (unless he drums on their split single with Reverend Bizarre, which I haven’t heard but have heard bad things about). And now, on Black Masses, it’s Oborn/Buckingham/Tas/Rutter.

Most critics call Dopethrone the band’s best album, but I think a lot of them are responding as much to its admittedly awesome cover art (a painting of Satan doing bonghits that looks like it should be adorning the side of a van) as to its music, which is distorted and muddy in a way that doesn’t actually serve the songs. I prefer Electric Wizard when they clean up a little, so the interplay between instruments—which, for all their deliberate primitivism, is actually quite impressive at times; they’re not technicians, but they can set up a righteous post-Sabbath groove—is clearly audible. For my money, the best examples of Electric Wizard on record are Come My Fanatics… (which also finds the band taking a left turn into almost Bill Laswell-esque psychedelic dub territory on the instrumental “Ivixor B/Phase Inducer,” a trick they’d repeat on the piano-led “Night of the Shape” from the underrated Let Us Prey) and We Live, on which a crisp sound helped introduce, and showcase, the two-guitar lineup. While 2007′s Witchcult Today had a fuzzed-out sound, its retro feel worked quite well, and the band wrote some impressive songs; it’s another strong record from a band that’s never made a bad one.

The same is true of Black Masses. Sonically, it’s the closest the two-guitar version of the band has come to the massive wall of hateful noise the original trio constructed on Dopethrone. It’s raw and ugly, with plenty of feedback and distortion, and effects warping Oborn’s voice, though they can’t quite mask the fact that somewhere along the line, he became a real singer, not just some guy yelling. After a single listen, it’s impossible to pick out individual songs as particular highlights, though it’s important to point out that “Venus in Furs” is not a Velvet Underground cover. Shaun Rutter may be the best drummer the band’s ever had; he’s definitely the most active, playing more fills than his predecessors and driving the music forward where in the past it had frequently mistaken sludgy inertia for crushing power. Black Sabbath‘s secret weapon wasn’t their ultra-heavy guitar riffs, it was their swinging rhythm section, and Rutter’s no Bill Ward, but he’s got an almost Dale Crover-ish ability to make a snare drum sound like a door the size of your house slamming on your head. There are some excellent, ultra-fried guitar solos on Black Masses, too, especially on the disc’s next-to-last track, “Scorpio Curse,” and the closing instrumental, “Crypt of Drugula,” features plenty of non-solo guitar noise as Rutter and Tas lock in and throbs and thunder and lightning crash around them.

Electric Wizard’s discography is all of a piece—downtuned, stoner doom is their thing, period—but there are definite gradations of quality, and Black Masses is easily one of their strongest albums. If you’ve never heard them before now, it’s not a bad place to start, not at all.

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