2019 Metal ’n’ Heavy Rock/Heavy Music Poll: RESULTS - Top 100 Countdown

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There's a lot of Winger in A Kodex's DNA but the thicker sound and epic scope adds a lot of power to the cheese, almost makes it sound cool

I'm going to listen to Have a Nice Life next

hooper (Drugs A. Money), Sunday, 23 February 2020 05:55 (four years ago) link

I would've voted for this. It's better than a few things on my ballot

hooper (Drugs A. Money), Sunday, 23 February 2020 06:35 (four years ago) link

It takes an exceedingly rare breed of record to capture the hearts of a majority of the AMG staff, let alone one that falls within the realm of power metal.

I don't know whether their office is literal or virtual but this statement is astoundingly bereft of self-awareness. They routinely praise power metal to the high heavens, don't they?

romanesque architect (pomenitul), Sunday, 23 February 2020 11:21 (four years ago) link

Hurray for the roll-out!

Le Bateau Ivre, Sunday, 23 February 2020 11:33 (four years ago) link

the cover of that paladin record is fucking awesome, can't wait to check it out

american bradass (BradNelson), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:02 (four years ago) link

a 3 way tie up next

Oor Neechy, Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:23 (four years ago) link

I'm pretty tired of lewandowski cover art at this point.

bold caucasian eroticism (Simon H.), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:25 (four years ago) link

(re Miznor)

bold caucasian eroticism (Simon H.), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:25 (four years ago) link

Possibly a victim of his own success, but I still like his stuff.

romanesque architect (pomenitul), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:26 (four years ago) link

He's obviously a talent but you can only paint the Large Sad Man in so many poses.

bold caucasian eroticism (Simon H.), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:28 (four years ago) link

108 TIE
Devin Townsend - Empath 85 Points, 3 Votes

https://i.imgur.com/A2cazoV.jpg
https://open.spotify.com/album/7MPJRyMFbWbgezRP2Pj4TZ

http://www.invisibleoranges.com/devin-townsend-empath-review/

There is, of course, a musical change of direction on Empath compared to the most recent Devin Townsend material. This, if anything, signals more of a modal pattern for him than any one particular sound, leaping from one sonic space to the next throughout his entire career, be it solo work, his (self-titled) prog bands, or Strapping Young Lad. The throughline of those groups — the dense production, the panoramic visionary scale of the music, the interlaced pop-metal, post-Zappa prog, art rock, and dashes of the extreme — all express themselves across Empath, which presents an interesting dilemma when discussing the record: for Townsend himself, so well known for left-turns, stylistic reconfiguration is likewise so expected that his work becomes hard to analyze successfully. That said, Empath demands more specific note than just “more, but different, again.”

Following the dissolution of the Devin Townsend Project — his previous outfit which saw increasingly more serious and inwardly-drawn music after a macro-scale four-album musical inventory from Townsend and a brief arena pop-metal phase — Townsend seemed to want a level of creative freedom that a traditional group setting didn’t really offer. There’s nothing on Empath that feels like it couldn’t have been played by Devin Townsend Project, and in fact, several moments will remind listeners of Ki, Addicted, and Epicloud. The last record of that run, Transcendence, felt very much like an ending or some inward epiphany about what that group had brought Townsend as a person as much as a player — also, it was a glorified solo project and such endings require terminations, else they won’t endings be. Empath feels like, in this sense, the bright, bursting light breaking through the deep introspective clouds of Transcendence, the wild effusive creative outpouring that comes after such a focused and thoughtful record.

The tenor of Empath skews toward an airy, light approach even in moments of sonic density and downtuned guitars, feeling like a post-modern heavy metal approach to the fairy tales of classic Yes as much as it does a Disney musical scored by the man who once helmed Strapping Young Lad. A lot has been made of the connection this album has to, of all people, Chad Kroeger of Nickelback, but the importance of that connection is that inspiration from an unlikely source (among many others) allows Townsend to pursue his artistic voice without regard to profitability or fame (something that we must begrudgingly respect Nickelback for, a group that has soldiered on with their very particular vision for hard rock despite taking a critical and pop cultural licking for over a decade now). What this amounts to timbrally and structurally across Empath is the kind of sonic chaos and wide-winged span that frankly should have been on Ziltoid the Omniscient’s sequel Dark Matters: Ziltoid the Omniscient. The former was motivated by a wild and unrestrained sonic approach employed by Townsend who freely plucked ideas from Strapping Young Lad, his solo work, and his side experiments to craft a single manic burst of creativity; the sequel, meanwhile, felt restrained to the palette its esteemed predecessor had carved out for it, attempting to be a proper follow up in terms of material rather than in spirit.

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Empath feels like Devin Townsend learned from the sequel’s mistakes, allowing himself to indulge in that free-spirited jaunt across the million sonic spaces he’s able to successfully employ without feeling forced or like he’s trying to make you giggle, something other prog metal bands that attempt this kind of stylistic breadth sometimes fail tremendously at doing.

This does not mean that, to be frank, Townsend does not crawl up his own ass at times. What it does mean, however, is that those excursions are a great deal more understandable. By now in his career, we know that Townsend sometimes indulges on what at first seems to be perhaps wasteful whimsy, but is later validated by his sincerity. The power of a multicolor, bright, and bold record like Empath is that extreme metal touches are depicted in the way that big scary monsters in children’s cartoons are, as opposed to the morbidity of a group like Mortuary Drape or the esoteric spiritualism of Chaos Moon. Empath often plays like the soundtrack to some invisible, impossible Disney musical cartoon that exists only in his mind, paced track by track to have overtures and moments of terror and trial, introspection and elation, joy and fear, love and sorrow. The muted internalities of Transcendence are gone, replaced not by music that gestures out to the world but instead draws inward with a sense of childlike creative joy. This joy is infectious; even at moments that at first feel weaker or even cheesier, the album is effervescent and effusive in play and elation, which means more than a moment-to-moment whoa-factor.

It’s ironic that Townsend made perhaps the most cinematically cohesive record of his career since Ziltoid the Omniscient with what is notably not a concept album. Intriguing, partly because nearly every single record between Ziltoid the Omniscient and Empath was a concept album of some sort, be it by a fully-written narrative or by specific thematic unities employed in the material. Empath is wider, more a sequence of material that Devin Townsend just happened to write with no real gameplan in mind, much like the origins of Epicloud before it. Unlike that album, though, Empath/ spans wider and more often finds success, acting as the light-side counterpoint to the dourness of Deconstruction.

Empath dances wildly like bold, brightly colored cartoon animals engaging in epic quests and tales of ageless enlightenment and romance alongside fart jokes and slapstick gags. It is one of the most earnestly expansive Townsend records, finding a parallel perhaps closest in a record like Synchestra. It is too early, it seems, to order it among the constellated stars of Townsend’s lengthy career, and its unearthly brightness may be off-putting for some desiring a record more akin to Ocean Machine: Biomech, Alien, or Transcendence — but, for its mad breadth and boisterous joy, not to mention really fucking good songs, Empath is an exceptional record and an indication that Townsend’s future career may be forever fertile.

Oor Neechy, Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:28 (four years ago) link

Ok genuinely TOO LOW

bold caucasian eroticism (Simon H.), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:29 (four years ago) link

Dunno man, the sad man in me is so large that he's always on the lookout for further artistic depictions of himself.

2xp

romanesque architect (pomenitul), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:30 (four years ago) link

Possibly a victim of his own success, but I still like his stuff.

― romanesque architect (pomenitul), Sunday, February 23, 2020 4:26 PM (three minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink

He's obviously a talent but you can only paint the Large Sad Man in so many poses.

― bold caucasian eroticism (Simon H.), Sunday, February 23, 2020 4:28 PM (one minute ago) bookmarkflaglink

108 TIE
Devin Townsend

:D

imago, Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:30 (four years ago) link

Speaking of which, I couldn't get into this album because it lacked a large sad man.

romanesque architect (pomenitul), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:31 (four years ago) link

3 votes! Are you kidding? I have previously been on record hating Devin Townsend and even I voted for this. Genesis is wonderful

tangenttangent, Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:32 (four years ago) link

This is like a mega mix of all the things I like about him, with the bonus of impeccable mixing

bold caucasian eroticism (Simon H.), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:32 (four years ago) link

last few devy records have impressed me a lot initially and then got really hard to listen to. i think he's possibly on a path toward making the best music of his career though

american bradass (BradNelson), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:33 (four years ago) link

well, best outside of biomech

american bradass (BradNelson), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:33 (four years ago) link

Btw I'm glad we're doing a top 120 instead of, say, a 77.

romanesque architect (pomenitul), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:33 (four years ago) link

hard to outdo the greatest album of all time xp

american bradass (BradNelson), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:34 (four years ago) link

Plus one for large sad man holding prism artwork btw. His stuff is like John Martin pastiche, which I am personally all for. Meanwhile, this Paladin album is irreproachably fun.

tangenttangent, Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:35 (four years ago) link

108 TIE
Gaahls WYRD - Gastir - Ghosts Invited 85 Points, 3 Votes

https://i.imgur.com/9zdVKRM.jpg
https://open.spotify.com/album/7HeOApPwPNQit4zyEPPlUX
https://gaahlswyrd.bandcamp.com/album/gastir-ghosts-invited

https://www.angrymetalguy.com/gaahls-wyrd-gastir-ghosts-invited-review/

Kristian Eivind Espedal, aka Gaahl, is a controversial yet prolific figurehead in the Norwegian black metal scene. His work with Gorgoroth, Trelldom, God Seed, and Wardruna showcases how influential and varied his vocal abilities truly are. Of course, felony charges for assault, receiving death threats for coming out as openly gay in 2008, giving eccentric interviews involving the dramatic uttering of one word, and teaming up with former Gorgoroth bandmate King ov Hell in a failed attempt to wrestle the name away from guitarist and sole remaining founding member Infernus in 2007 all have a tendency to overshadow any and all of your accomplishments, no matter how powerful. With all that in mind, we are now in possession of GastiR – Ghosts Invited, the debut full-length from Gaahl’s newest project, Gaahls WYRD. With lofty claims of musical extremity and esotericism, as well as a more varied vocal delivery by Gaahl himself, GastiR comes across as a promising endeavor that looks to reshape the blackened landscape to Gaahl’s vision.

And when all the pieces fit, GastiR shines. Late album highlight “The Speech and the Self” contains some incredible hooks by guitarist Lust Kilman (aka Ole Walaunet) and interesting fills by drummer Spektre (aka Kevin Kvåle), with Gaahl’s vocals saddled somewhere between a low muttering growl and a clean vocal that’s best described as nestled between Peter Murphy and Aaron Stainthorpe (My Dying Bride). Elsewhere, closer “Within the Voice of Existence,” once it actually gets going, highlights the potential Gaahl and company are capable of, with an incredible atmosphere that builds to an explosive climax by the album’s end. The talent that they possess together in these two songs makes for an intriguing display of songwriting.

Too bad the rest of the album doesn’t hold a candle to those two songs or their lofty promises. To put it bluntly, GastiR plays out more like Gaahl having a vocal fever dream over some rather run-of-the-mill black metal. Opener “Ek Erilar” exemplifies this, as most of the song features Gaahl either singing in a low, growling register or howling with some rather paint-by-numbers black metal before abruptly ending when things are just getting somewhat interesting musically. “Carving the Voices” adopts a mid-paced crawl with Gaahl sounding his most Murphy-ish over a backdrop that wouldn’t sound out-of-place on any other black metal album. The biggest offender lies in “Veiztu Hve,” a track that starts off promising with its urgent tempo, atonal full-chord riffing, and Gaahl delivering a menacing spoken word section. Sadly, it devolves with one of the worst chants I’ve ever heard in a black metal song, and that chant stretches out for almost half of the song’s almost-seven-minute entirety.

The Iver Sandøy production and mix also leave a lot to be desired. Spektre’s drumkit sounds muffled, especially where the bass drum is concerned. Anytime Spektre utilizes double-bass, it sounds like wet cardboard being cracked with a baseball bat. Elsewhere, Eld’s (Frode Kilvik) bass is so buried that it might as well not be there. Thankfully, Kilman’s guitars cut with the right amount of heft and treble. The same can’t be said about the songwriting, as songs are either not fully formed (“Ek Erilar,” “Through the Past and Past”), or drag on for far too long, effectively stifling the potency (the chanting chorus of “Veiztu Hve,” the overbearingly long first-half of “Within the Voice of Existence”).

Gaahl stands as one of black metal’s most gifted vocalists and lyricists, as well as an intelligent, highly-respected individual, and I’ve enjoyed prior contributions of his throughout his storied career. This makes GastiR all the more disappointing, as I’m not blown away by most of the songwriting on here, and the songs that did impress me did so because of the strength of the songwriting present, not due to any thinking outside of the box. Perhaps this is just Gaahl testing the waters with a new band, but I’m left wanting something more substantial than what GastiR has to offer.

Oor Neechy, Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:35 (four years ago) link

Two of mine placed yesterday (Mizmor at #6, Dawn Ray'd at #10). I loved Dawn Ray'd, btw, kind of reminded me of Yellow Eyes maybe? Definitely not a politics-first-music-an-afterthought vibe like I get out of Neckbeard Deathcamp (who has the superior Twitter, when they're not banned for threatening violence on Proud Boys).

Schammasch Cannonball (Tom Violence), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:36 (four years ago) link

This band's name confuses me

bold caucasian eroticism (Simon H.), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:37 (four years ago) link

Didn't vote for it but this one's underrated, much like older Gaahl side gig Trelldom.

romanesque architect (pomenitul), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:37 (four years ago) link

I assume it means something like Gaahl's Fate (cognate with 'weird')?

romanesque architect (pomenitul), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:38 (four years ago) link

Gaahl's Wyrd: a band named after himself, in the tradition of Rod Torfulson's Armada Featuring Herman Menderchuk.

Schammasch Cannonball (Tom Violence), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:40 (four years ago) link

I do not know 'Gorgoroth', so have no idea of the context this is coming from, but this lovely seething album was a great addition to last year. Kind of like an occult prog metal Nick Cave. SO glad we are doing this top 120

tangenttangent, Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:41 (four years ago) link

Gaahl's reputation as a vocalist is fully deserved imo. A shame he's never done a truly phenomenal album, though, including with Gorgoroth.

romanesque architect (pomenitul), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:42 (four years ago) link

108 TIE
Multishiva - Savupäivä 85 Points, 3 Votes

https://i.imgur.com/80BpZBE.jpg
https://multishiva.bandcamp.com/album/savup-iv

www.angrymetaldrugsamoneyguy.com/george

It's the dogs bollocks and you fuckers better check it out

Oor Neechy, Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:43 (four years ago) link

Fuck yes! My #3!

hooper (Drugs A. Money), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:45 (four years ago) link

Haven't heard this but I'm convinced after reading that review.

romanesque architect (pomenitul), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:45 (four years ago) link

(Not even joking btw.)

romanesque architect (pomenitul), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:46 (four years ago) link

I was one of the Devin votes, shocked at the low placement.

sadly won't get to hear any of this shit live as it's the same day as Toxic Holocaust/Soulfly which I had already bought tix for.

sorry for butt rockin (Neanderthal), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:46 (four years ago) link

Couldn't find a review so Angry Metal George is going to review it here.

Oor Neechy, Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:48 (four years ago) link

Wild chaotic sludge from Finland! First track "Total Fucking Dunkelheit" is like blackened Hawkwind. The next song "Monoliitti on Nyrkki" was top e on my tracks ballot and is literally the worst acid trip ever
A lot of it reminds me of Amon Duul II as well, Michael B said it reminded him of High Rise

hooper (Drugs A. Money), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:48 (four years ago) link

*Top 3 tracks

hooper (Drugs A. Money), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:48 (four years ago) link

Oh wait I remember commenting on 'Total Fucking Dunkelheit', which is an amazing title. Time to get acquainted with the song that's appended to it.

romanesque architect (pomenitul), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:49 (four years ago) link

Yeah this is pretty awesome.

romanesque architect (pomenitul), Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:51 (four years ago) link

Wow, yes. Love those nightmarishly stretched vocals

tangenttangent, Sunday, 23 February 2020 16:53 (four years ago) link

107 Venom Prison - Samsara 86 Points, 2 Votes
https://i.imgur.com/CdXMR1r.jpg
https://open.spotify.com/album/6b6JTJkCWhpGVIZvw2zPi3

https://venomprison.bandcamp.com/album/samsara

https://www.angrymetalguy.com/venom-prison-samsara-review/

Life is dull and painful. Homeostasis demands a cycle of finding food, eating that food, and shitting what’s left of that food to keep your body running. Your job requires that you do the same tasks over and over to stay employed, and if you don’t it makes the whole “finding food” step much more stressful. The foundations of Maslow’s pyramid are banality and suffering. Sometimes it’s difficult to pinpoint why you go on living if this is the human condition. Other times, a death metal album cuts your junk off and force-feeds it to you to remind you that it, above the karmic cycle, above self-actualization, above the promises of eternal bliss, is the highest power and the reason to clock in on Monday and head to the bathroom.

Though the whole dick-cutting-off thing was Animus’s game, Samsara, the second full length from Venom Prison, is no less violent. The band’s grindy, slammy death metal draws many parallels to Cattle Decaptitation, whether it’s their everything-but-the-kitchen sink approach to riffing, their sudden outbursts of groove, or their vicious takes on social injustice. Samsara has no dull edges, no safe entrances, and a complete lack of regard for your safety. “Implementing the Metaphysics of Morals” careens between melodeath riffs, blackened blasting, slams, and even a Dimebag solo in five minutes. “Dukkha” begins with a 911 call reporting a suicide and only increases in intensity from there. This album just doesn’t give a fuck what you think is going to happen next.

While Samsara’s songs rarely follow an easily digestible structure, the band have an uncanny ability to transition almost imperceptibly between different ideas. “Asura’s Realm” moves between searing leads and Pig Destroyer pit fodder as if the two are different notes in the same phrase. Slam flows straight through Nile riffage into a glistening lead to begin the second verse in “Uterine Industrialization.” Beautiful needles of melodic black metal perforate the brutality of “Sadistic Rituals.” It’s at once scrappy and graceful, and listening along is like watching the camera pan through a crowded environment as Jackie Chan drunken-boxes his way through the goons inhabiting it. Except here, the goons are capitalists, bigots, and misogynists, and Chan’s fists and feet are riffs, blast beats, screams and roars.

Ben Thomas and Ash Gray have to spit out axe-acrobatics at a downright unhealthy rate to keep this momentum flowing, but they’re nearly outmatched by the rest of the band. Mike Jefferies plays a grounded, rumbling bass while Jay Pipprell pummels his kit as if every skin is a fascist’s face. The drumming rolls along with the riffs at a breakneck pace, beating the snare with a special contempt. On top of this insanity, Larissa Stupar puts out a diversity and intensity of roars, screams, growls, and gurgles that few vocalists could hope to match, doling out her vitriol in unhinged explosions. With the quintet’s powers combined, Samsara is a godsend for death metal fans starving for punishment.

You could hardly ask for a more exciting death metal release. Like Unfathomable Ruination, Venom Prison salt their winding structures with enough memorable ideas to hold them together and save their most intense material for just when it’s needed. Aside from a predictably disappointing mastering job, I can hardly find an issue on Samsara. These songs are propulsive, inventive, and constantly exciting, and the album sets the bar high for this year’s tech-death output. It’s albums like this that grant both perspective on and momentary release from the suffering and banality of the human condition, and bands like this that challenge the status quo and change the death metal landscape in subtle but important ways. Think on these higher goals while you eat and shit yourself towards death.

Oor Neechy, Sunday, 23 February 2020 17:04 (four years ago) link

:(. 2 votes? One of my highest

sorry for butt rockin (Neanderthal), Sunday, 23 February 2020 17:06 (four years ago) link

Good vocalist, and I mostly enjoyed my first encounter with the album, but it felt a little superficial afterwards. Then again, I'm not an impartial judge of deathcore.

romanesque architect (pomenitul), Sunday, 23 February 2020 17:09 (four years ago) link

106 Spirit Adrift - Divided by Darkness 88 Points, 4 Votes
https://i.imgur.com/2nzDfjh.jpg
https://open.spotify.com/album/2LkBu897BhMBDlYW0NLI4w

https://spiritadrift.bandcamp.com/album/divided-by-darkness

https://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/spirit-adrift-divided-by-darkness/
8.1

Led by young oracle Nate Garrett, the second album from the Arizona heavy metal band carries the torch of their forebears and revives the genre with impressive songwriting and ambition.

Spirit Adrift is Arizona musician Nate Garrett’s vehicle for metal obsession, burning through thrash, doom, NWOBHM, melodic metal, and anything that’ll throw you out a window if you speak ill of Phil Lynott. He is not here for a nostalgia trip; he’s exploring the power within, approaching a unified theory of metal. Spirit Adrift’s second record, Cursed By Conception, is where he found his voice through forging a shared power in doom and thrash. Now, Divided By Darkness shows he has the vision for the greater pantheon.

Metal shouldn’t be measured like a recipe, but for Spirit Adrift, balance is key. No one element dominates over another: The rhythms are as mean as the solos are joyous as the cleans are beautiful. It’s how a track like “Born Into Fire” splices ripping leads and more Euro-style mournful cleans into something coherent. A thrashy jaunt like “Hear Her” can live right next to the more ambitious “Living Light,” where Garrett gets an assist from Witch Mountain’s Kayla Dixon for some vocal harmonies. Even though these sounds are well-established and defined, Garrett’s songwriting breathes new life into them. Darkness understands metal not as just a mash of distortion sounds, but as a continuous, living tradition that has meaning. He talked about Conception as a return to childhood loves of classic metal, and Darkness turns that pure love into mastery.

Even with Garrett’s expanded palette and a full band behind him, there are still shades of melancholy that have carried over from his early writing. “Tortured By Time” is the most classic doom track here, adding a modern sheen to end-time gloom. “Angel & Abyss,” though, is Darkness’ centerpiece for its reconciliation of Spirit Adrift’s past and future. It’s Metallica’s “Fade to Black” where death isn’t the exit, where it doesn’t end in self-destruction but in lead-centric renewal. Garrett channels young James Hetfield’s hopeless voice for most of the song, and ends with an Ozzy-like maniacal cackle, conquering the despair (or at least living with the madness.) It almost acts as the totality of ’80s metal majesty, a tour of hesher emotions. More than anything else on the album, it captures the me-against-the-world vibe that has informed many a metal classic.

There’s plenty of old school revival bands, yet most of them operate as if metal stopped in 1989. Though it pays much reverence to ’80s classics, Darkness also reaches into the early ’90s, when metal was in the midst of a fundamental transformation: Guns n’ Roses and Metallica proved tougher, un-glam looks was bankable, and Alice in Chains and Pantera previewed the sea change to come in their somewhat slower, markedly darker sounds. It’s an important sliver in metal history to which Darkness pays homage.

Two of Darkness’ biggest touchstones are Metallica’s Black Album and Ozzy Osbourne’s No More Tears, transitional records, both from 1991, that ultimately ended up massive commercial successes. There are few patterns more satisfying than the detuned stomp of Metallica’s “Sad But True,” and Spirit Adrift milk everything out that crunch on the title track. Garrett clearly worships Metallica, and Hetfield in his prime was an untouchable rhythm guitarist. Some keyboards sound lifted from Tears, particularly in the title track and instrumental closer “The Way of the Return,” and like Ozzy, goopy keys somehow make them sound even tougher. Darkness is old school, though not chained to one institution, more accessible but not commercial, deeper but not more complicated, a lunge forward without compromise. Garrett is a younger oracle to carry on the torch of heavy metal. Sounds like an unchill role, but he’s got the chops.

https://www.angrymetalguy.com/spirit-adrift-divided-by-darkness-review/

I’ve always worried whenever a band leaves their roots behind to explore different paths that, depending on who you ask, either betray their humble upbringings (and rabid fanbases) or turn them into creative juggernauts. Case in point: Arizona’s Spirit Adrift, once a one-man doom metal project spearheaded by vocalist/guitarist Nate Garrett, has blossomed into a fully-realized heavy metal machine,1 and both 2016’s Chained to Oblivion and 2017’s Curse of Conception being radically different from each other in terms of both mood and style, but thankfully not quality. That last point is startling, as the band’s not even been around five years yet. So I approached Divided by Darkness with an open mind, curious as to where Garrett and company were going to take me this time.

And here we are in the 1990s. My beat-up SNES (or Super Famicom for you non-Americans) works again, my flat-screen TV has been replaced by the familiar TV/record player/liquor cabinet/wooden fire hazard all-in-one that my parents flat-out refused to get rid of,2 and opener “We Will Not Die” wears its Painkiller t-shirt with pride as it reworks Priest‘s epic “Hell Patrol” into a slightly more modern twist. The tight-riffing Garrett flings about retains the drive of its influence while adding a slightly crunchier tone, with his bass work and drummer Marcus Bryant providing a groove-laden pocket for the duo to work with. Garrett’s voice definitely leans more towards James Hetfield than Rob Halford, helping to differentiate itself from the Priest classic even more. No lie, it had me grinning ear-to-ear from beginning to end, and made itself a spot among my small list of Songs o’ the Year in no time.

If Curse of Conception was starting to walk away from the sound and trappings of the American doom metal scene, then Divided by Darkness sees them taking off to the skies, waving one final goodbye before flying off to parts unknown3. Only “Living Light” peers back at the band’s younger days, with the second half delivering hefty riffs before Garrett delivers yet another beautiful Trouble-inspired vocal harmony to close out the song. The rest of the album pays homage to the greats of metal, with “Angel & Abyss” being the clear standout. Opening with a mood that recalls Metallica‘s “Fade to Black,” by the song’s end, it goes into full-bore “Bark at the Moon” territory, complete with maniacal laughter, keyboards, and staccato riffing to close the song out.

Spirit Adrift - Divided by Darkness 02
And that’s also a bit of a nitpick with the album. Sometimes, Spirit Adrift wear their influences a little too close to their sleeves. Not to the point of being flat-out plagiarizing, but enough for an eyebrow to be cocked every now and then (the aforementioned “Angel & Abyss,” for example). Granted, I was smiling just about the whole entire time I heard the album, and it still plays more like a love letter to the classics of yore than trying to cop a well-established style. Also, the title track and “Tortured by Time” don’t hit as hard as the rest of the album, but even then they’re good songs on their own.

Much like Pallbearer4 before them, Spirit Adrift left the trappings of their doom metal beginnings behind for a sound more classic and all-encompassing. With not even five years of existence behind them, the future definitely looks bright for this young quartet, and Divided by Darkness accomplishes the unthinkable: moving forward by giving a respectful glance to the past. Between this and last month’s incredible Exile by Black Sites, there’s no shortage of wealth provided by digging into our genre’s glorious past to see what can be made for future generations to enjoy.

Oor Neechy, Sunday, 23 February 2020 17:19 (four years ago) link

TOO LOW! This one cracked my top ten.

Judi Dench's Human Hand (methanietanner), Sunday, 23 February 2020 17:21 (four years ago) link

Didn't vote for it but I like these guys. Totally reliable at what they do.

romanesque architect (pomenitul), Sunday, 23 February 2020 17:22 (four years ago) link

really wanted to listen to this album all last year and before i submitted my ballot and just did not have the time lol

american bradass (BradNelson), Sunday, 23 February 2020 17:23 (four years ago) link

paladin record is extremely fucking awesome

american bradass (BradNelson), Sunday, 23 February 2020 17:23 (four years ago) link

the venom prison record sounds right up my alley and i'm also sad i missed out on it

american bradass (BradNelson), Sunday, 23 February 2020 17:30 (four years ago) link


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