Posts tagged ‘slayer’

June 11, 2013

Black Sabbath

blacksabbath2013

by Phil Freeman

It’s 2013, and there’s a new Black Sabbath studio album. That’s surprising. It’s not the massive shock it was sold as being, when it was announced last year, of course. They’d been reuniting off and on for tours since 1997; I saw them on Ozzfest in 2004. But it’s still a major event in heavy metal culture, most of which descends directly from the first six Black Sabbath albums.

Black Sabbath‘s sound had four crucial elements—Ozzy Osbourne‘s vocals, Tony Iommi‘s guitar, Geezer Butler‘s bass and Bill Ward‘s drums. The latter two were arguably the most important, because Black Sabbath‘s approach to rhythm, particularly on their three best albums (1970′s Paranoid, 1971′s Master of Reality, and 1972′s Vol. 4), was unique in rock. It was a sort of caveman jazz, swinging and bluesy without the intricacy of fusion or the looseness-unto-aimlessness of the Grateful Dead. Instead of simply hammering home the riffs, the way the rhythm sections of bands like Cactus or Grand Funk Railroad did, Butler and Ward wandered around, exploring and extemporizing, but always making it back in time to bludgeon the listener at the perfect moment. So when it was announced that this reunion album would not feature Ward on drums—he bowed out, citing financial chicanery—there was much wailing and gnashing of teeth from fans, who believed the project to be damaged beyond repair, especially once his replacement was named: Brad Wilk of Rage Against the Machine and Audioslave, a capable hard rock drummer but one rooted in hip-hop, funk and metal, not the blues.

Of course, the deck was stacked against Wilk—and Sabbath—from the beginning. A great deal of the magic of the band’s classic records (basically, the first six, with the focus being on the 1970-72 trilogy cited above) was the organic, dudes-in-a-room-laying-tracks-to-tape feel they had. No record is made that way anymore, at least not when there’s major label money involved. Nobody plays whole songs through in the studio. This has been the simple, uncontestable truth for decades, even in the case of so-called “alternative” or “underground” rock. Most rock critics don’t say anything about it, because most rock critics have no idea how albums are actually made.

Listen closely to Nirvana‘s “Smells Like Teen Spirit” and you can hear clearly that Dave Grohl‘s drum performance is looped—he recorded one verse and the chorus, and producer Butch Vig cut ‘n’ pasted his way to the end of the track. Contrast this to the making of the Stooges‘ 1970 album Fun House, during which the band ran through take after take of “TV Eye,” “Loose,” et al. until they had one that was golden. The complete Fun House session tapes were infamously released as a seven-CD boxed set a decade or so ago; it would be impossible to do anything similar for any modern album. Similarly, there was simply never going to be an opportunity for Geezer Butler to lock into an organic, fluctuating, live groove with Brad Wilk—this is the 21st Century, and the drummer’s playing is snapped to a ProTools grid throughout the album, which is called 13. (My assumption is that this title means to define the “real” Black Sabbath catalog as including the first eight albums with Ozzy, the three with Ronnie James DioHeaven and Hell, Mob Rules and Dehumanizer—and Born Again with Ian Gillan. And that’s it. All those ’80s and ’90s albums where Tony Iommi was virtually the last remaining member—Geezer Butler returned for 1994′s Cross Purposes, then departed again—have been excised from the canon.)

February 22, 2013

Interview: Earl Maneein

res15

Earl Maneein is the lead violinist for the metal band Resolution15, whose album Svaha is out now. Yes, lead violinist. Resolution15 has no guitarist; all the leads are courtesy of Maneein’s loud, distorted electric violin. This is most noticeable during the solo sections, when he cuts loose with some long, droning notes that are unmistakably violin-like. During the verses and choruses, though, his playing is staccato and heavy, creating extremely powerful riffing somewhere between Meshuggah and Prong, with bassist Mike Bendy and drummer Kenny Cruz Grohowski providing a churning rhythmic bed beneath him as vocalist Nick Serr rants and raves in a manner that will remind many listeners of Devin Townsend. Some of the songs on Svaha were released as digital singles in 2011 and 2012, including a cover of U2‘s “Sunday Bloody Sunday” that’s reminiscent of Sepultura‘s take on “Bullet the Blue Sky.”

Stream the album below, or buy it from Resolution15‘s Bandcamp page for just $7:

After the jump, an interview with Earl Maneein.

November 28, 2012

Destruction

Spiritual Genocide (Nuclear Blast)

by Phil Freeman

In February of this year, I traveled to Berlin to give a talk as part of a lecture series held at Centrum. I spoke about the German thrash metal scene of the 1980s, focusing on the three biggest bands—Destruction, Kreator and Sodom—but also delving into the work of less well-known acts like Running Wild, Grave Digger, Living Death, Iron Angel, Deathrow, Holy Moses, Rage and Erosion. The German thrash scene was easily as important as the American scene, and just as America had the bands known as the “Big Four”—Metallica, Megadeth, Slayer and Anthrax—Germany had Destruction, Kreator and Sodom. Each of these bands was unique and different from the others, but they had much in common, because of the political realities of life in Germany in the 1970s and 1980s. The core members are all more or less the same age—Tom Angelripper of Sodom is the oldest, born in 1963, but Marcel “Schmier” Schirmer of Destruction and Mille Petrozza of Kreator were both born in 1966. This means that their formative years were the 1970s, during which time there was a lot of terrorist activity in Germany, from groups like the Red Army Faction, the RZ, and Carlos the Jackal. In addition to this, there remains the issue of seeing one’s older relatives grappling with the legacy of Nazism, and having that hang over you. That’s something that greatly impacts an artist’s chosen expression, something which Destruction and Sodom have explicitly grappled with in songs like “Incriminated” and “Bombenhagel.”

Counting 2007′s Thrash Anthems (on which they re-recorded songs from their ’80s releases, plus two new songs) and the four records (two LPs and two EPs) they made between 1990 and 1997 without Schmier, Spiritual Genocide is the 13th Destruction album, and a 30th Anniversary celebration of sorts—the band formed in 1982, even if their first EP, Sentence of Death, wasn’t released until 1984. As long as Schmier’s been a member of the band (he returned to the lineup on 2000′s All Hell Breaks Loose), Destruction have been fairly predictable…in a good way. From their earliest days, they were more precise and technical than Sodom, whose sound was a blend of Venom‘s crudity and Motörhead‘s rock ‘n’ roll fervor, and less blindly aggressive than Kreator. On their second album, 1986′s Eternal Devastation, they were already leaping ahead of the pack; songs like “Curse the Gods” and “United By Hatred” were the equal of any band’s work, from any country.

The songs on Spiritual Genocide may not be as immediately memorable as those on 2001′s The Antichrist or 2003′s Metal Discharge, but the riffs have the blend of aggression and control they’ve perfected over three decades, and they throw a few curve balls at the listener. “Legacy of the Past” is a goofy German thrash summit of sorts, featuring guest vocals from Sodom‘s Tom Angelripper and Gerre of the beer-obsessed (and inexplicably beloved) Tankard, and the “single,” “Carnivore,” has more rock ‘n’ roll swagger than thrash fury—in its album version, anyway. The deluxe edition of the album includes a re-recording of the song, with former members Harry Wilkens and Olly Kaiser on guitar and drums, respectively, and that version is more of an old-school thrash anthem; it could have come off any Destruction album from the late ’80s. Over the last dozen years, Destruction have solidified their style and are now cranking out fan-pleasing albums roughly every two years, much like Motörhead. And also like Lemmy and company, they’re as good now as they’ve ever been, even if nobody outside the cult knows it.

Listen to “Cyanide”:

Watch the video for “Carnivore”:

September 26, 2012

Grave

Endless Procession of Souls (Century Media)

Buy it from Amazon

by MacDara Conroy

Is it my fault that I’d never heard Grave before now, or theirs? The Swedes (or rather, remaining original member Ola Lindgren) have been on the go since the late 1980s and are currently celebrating the 21st anniversary of their debut album Into the Grave. As such, they have good claim to the status of pioneers of Swedish death metal, along with Entombed, Dismember and At The Gates. However, unlike their OG contemporaries, Grave seem like the kind of band that’s greatly admired by peers and oft cited by next-generation acts in the genre yet little known outside of those circles. Always the support act, never the headliner. But props to them for keeping it up after all those years—and I suppose also for refusing to compromise amid changing trends in extreme music, for better or worse.

Endless Procession of Souls is their 10th studio platter and sports a resolutely old-school sound from the outset. The short intro “Dystopia”—a mournful cry of just naked guitar, tuned deep as an abyss—gives barely a taster before the band launches into “Amongst Marble and the Dead,” the best track of the bunch, showing their metal and punk influences in equal measure in a multi-part composition of the kind Carcass made their own back in the day. Yet it’s the sound they’ve captured here—clean without the gloss, meaty without being sloppy—that makes the biggest impression, reminiscent of later extreme metal successors like Nasum.

“Disembodied Steps” brings more of the same, at least until the disconcertingly mainstream metal chorus section—though they just pull it back from the brink with a concrete breakdown. “Flesh Epistle” slows down the pace a tad, while “Passion of the Weak” and “Winds of Chains” chug along angrily, if unremarkably. A few tracks in, and my solid impression is “meat and potatoes.” The arrangements are thoroughly predictable, though there’s a certain level of passion detectable behind the playing that prevents things from tipping completely into workmanlike territory. Still, it doesn’t have that certain something that makes an album a classic.

Later tracks like “Encountering the Divine” and “Plague of Nations” are well composed and expertly played, and catchy enough while listening to them, but aside from the Slayer-referencing speed-fest “Perimortem” and the doom-laden closer “Epos,” they don’t linger long in the memory. Taken individually, each song is fine enough: Lindgren growls his heart out, his twin axe shredding with Mika Lagrén anchored by Tobias Cristiansson‘s hefty fuzzed-out bass and Ronnie Bergerståhl‘s solid drumming. But over the course of the whole album, the similarity of the phrases and the pace tends to blend the whole thing together to the point of indistinction—an endless procession of riffs, as it were. The curious lack of stand-out soloing throughout doesn’t help matters, either. If it weren’t for all that I’d say this was the product of an outfit that took CarcassNecroticism: Descanting the Insalubrious as the apotheosis of the genre and saw no need to vary from that blueprint, like it’s 1992 all over again.

If nothing else, Endless Procession of Souls should please the fans, but I can’t see it attracting any new ones to the fold. Grave haven’t embarrassed themselves here by any means, but what they’ve produced here is quite the thing: an album that’s actually not bad, yet completely inessential.

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