~~~ 2014 ILM METAL POLL TRACKS & ALBUMS COUNTDOWN! ~~~ (Tracks top 30 first then Albums)

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http://open.spotify.com/user/pfunkboy/playlist/6fsnIonKsPLF5NzZ9hJg27

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 10:54 (ten years ago) link

Will resume in about an hour or so, hopefully most will be awake by then.

Still time to say whether you want a thurs or friday finish

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 13:37 (ten years ago) link

ok lets go....

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 15:08 (ten years ago) link

before I post the next one.... just out of interest is anyone using deezer? Should I keep posting the links?

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 15:10 (ten years ago) link

60 Coliseum - Sister Faith 247 Points, 8 Votes
http://i.imgur.com/GaYdhJw.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/5wBu50BQLZiAv7XmuVVBMD
spotify:album:5wBu50BQLZiAv7XmuVVBMD

http://www.deezer.com/album/6424231
http://www.stereogum.com/1337832/album-of-the-week-coliseum-sister-faith/top-stories/

This used to be what indie rock sounded like. During the 1990s, Elephant 6 and Belle And Sebastian were outliers, and the genre (which really was more genre and less loose lifestyle appellation) hadn’t erased all traces of the get-in-the-van ’80s hardcore that helped birth it. As late as a decade ago, when the Louisville trio Coliseum formed, the term “indie” evoked images of Pretty Girls Make Graves or Blood Brothers as much as, I don’t know, Beulah, and it was still vaguely novel to hear a flugelhorn on a Sub Pop record. These days, Coliseum are creatures of the loose metal underground that’s become our greatest resource for facepunch guitars, but they’re not really a metal band. The ingredients of their sound come from other places: Pummeling locked-in bass-thuds from Girls Against Boys, swampy-but-skronky guitar fuzz-bursts from Sonic Youth, beardedly beery vocal blurts from about a thousand different bands. And with their new Sister Faith, Coliseum have made an album that stews all those influences into something powerfully satisfying and maybe even nourishing. It’s not an innovative album by any means, but it might scratch an itch that you didn’t even know you had.

Here’s the best way I can think to describe Coliseum’s sound. It starts with another Louisville band: Slint, who did math-rock throb with a distant but hot emotional fire and who are, low-key, one of the most influential metal bands of the past few decades despite not being remotely metal. But plenty of bands start with the Slint blueprint and take it nowhere; Coliseum do something interesting with it by speeding it up like Motörhead, turning it into no-bullshit rage-out adrenaline music. They’ve been doing it for a while now, growing into their sound and internalizing it, getting better at it to the point where it’s entirely theirs. Sister Faith is their fourth album, and it’s their second with producer J. Robbins, whose involvement is also an important key to this thing. Robbins used to lead Jawbox and Burning Airlines; he’s a principal architect of the post-hardcore clangor that finally mostly disappeared into emo. Those bands blew minds because they led with the rhythm section, keeping everything rigorous and disciplined on the low-end while guitar and voice freaked out, tied melodic knots, threw tantrums. They brought the sense that the rhythmic lockstep was the only thing holding those stretched-out and distended guitars together, the last line that kept them tethered to the earth. And even though Coliseum frontman Ryan Patterson riffs more than Robbins ever did, he brings those same dynamics — all tension, no release, but with a beat that keeps things pushing forever forward.

It’s hard to pick out their individual contributions, but Coliseum called in a whole mess of friends to help out on Sister Faith, turning it into a community affair, and that list of names is a fascinating and illuminating thing. Robbins played on it, of course, and Sister Faith is the first album recorded at his new Baltimore studio. (A note to bands: Use this guy more. Baltimore is a cheap and lovely place to stay, Robbins could always use some extra money for very noble and important reasons, and he will make your drums sound like they’re ready to cave in chest cavities.) Boris frontman Wata, whose own band fits just as uncomfortably into the metal scene as Coliseum does, is here. So is Jason Loewenstein, from the comparatively wussy Sebadoh, whose most iconic song is about the exact moment when a hardcore kid decides that he’s an indie rock kid. Another guy, Jason Farrell, comes from Swiz and Bluetip, two of the bands that pushed DC hardcore into further-out sounds. And so is Elizabeth Elmore, whose bands Sarge and the Reputation came at the tail end of the riot-grrrl boomlet and put a vulnerable human face on the feelings behind that movement. These are all good people, and none of them dictate the direction of the album, but all of them find room for themselves in the racket.

Listening to the album, you’re not necessarily thinking about the people involved in making it, or what their involvement might express. It’s too fun for all that. “Last/Lost” is all strained propulsion, like Hüsker Dü in full attack mode. “Under The Blood Of The Moon” has a big, meaty stomper of a riff working for it. “Everything In Glass” sounds like At The Drive-In if they were a half-step slower; it’s got that same righteous chaos to it. At its climax, “Bad Will” reverts back to straight-up old-school hardcore, its final chorus the sort of thing that demands a raised-fist gang-chant. This is the sound of guys playing hard, aggressive music because it’s what comes naturally to them; it’s the stuff their fingers feel themselves playing when they’re touching instruments. God knows, the world doesn’t need a million more bands like this, and we weren’t necessarily better off when bands like this were the exception rather than the rule. But it’s still an absolute pleasure to hear a band like this is still around, playing this music and playing it well.

Sister Faith is out today on Temporary Residence.

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 15:14 (ten years ago) link

excellent album btw

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 15:15 (ten years ago) link

One I got for xmas actually.

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 15:18 (ten years ago) link

flowers growing vpon the skull of a man

Vote in the ILM EOY Poll! (seandalai), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 15:22 (ten years ago) link

the reason I posted that review btw is because i had a conversation on ilm somewhere (with edward iii, hellhouse and possibly contenderizer (where is he?) ) about how indie rock is so fucking boring now everyone has migrated to metal now to get the sonic kicks they used to get and how that might be bands are now adding tropes from 80s and 90s indie rock as more "indie" fans get into metal and start bands which leads to metallers hearing new to them non-metal from ye olden days. (yes not everyone approves I know)

dog latin you must have thoughts on that!

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 15:32 (ten years ago) link

uh...

An embarrassing doorman and garbage man (dog latin), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 15:33 (ten years ago) link

wut?

An embarrassing doorman and garbage man (dog latin), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 15:33 (ten years ago) link

you usually have lots of thoughts on things!

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 15:38 (ten years ago) link

i dunno...

An embarrassing doorman and garbage man (dog latin), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 15:39 (ten years ago) link

maybe i should hear the album and read the review at the same time. i'm not sure about the assumption that indie is boring now.

An embarrassing doorman and garbage man (dog latin), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 15:40 (ten years ago) link

59    Argus - Beyond The Martyrs    248 Points,    9 Votes
http://i.imgur.com/U5Rkzbf.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/5HNwj591St7iS8pZTh4znj
spotify:album:5HNwj591St7iS8pZTh4znj

http://www.deezer.com/album/6976647

Genre:
Heavy/Doom Metal

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 15:42 (ten years ago) link

bbbbut indie IS boring now!

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 15:42 (ten years ago) link

that coliseum review mentions a whole bunch of bands I like too so it helps explain why I like the band so much

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 15:44 (ten years ago) link

Argus are awesome too btw

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 15:44 (ten years ago) link

So far I've listened to Agrimona and Sungod albums while working, both seemed pretty good, will def listen again more attentively.

Listening now to Coliseum - it's great! Don't really hear PGMG/Blood Brothers comparisons in most songs as much as standard late 90s or early/mid 2000s hardcore? But it's not a bad thing obv, love that music.

i don't listen to much metal btw so looking forward to rest of the results.

antoni, Tuesday, 14 January 2014 15:46 (ten years ago) link

Argus disappointed me. It's a good record, but pales before their last one. It sounds too safe.

Coliseum not only made a great record, they toured the shit out of it and fucking rocked live. One of the best shows I saw all year, which is saying something.

EZ Snappin, Tuesday, 14 January 2014 15:46 (ten years ago) link

High Praise!

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 15:52 (ten years ago) link

antoni welcome! always nice to see people checking out the results and commenting.

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 15:53 (ten years ago) link

58    Aeternus - And The Seventh His Soul Detesteth    251 Points,    6 Votes
http://i.imgur.com/WQHHvRX.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/6ZUnEP5WNVNv5MqGXxHmhB
spotify:album:6ZUnEP5WNVNv5MqGXxHmhB

http://www.deezer.com/album/6425136

Genre:
Death Metal

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 16:05 (ten years ago) link

57    Kadavar - Abra Kadavar    253 Points,    7 Votes,   One #1  
http://i.imgur.com/rHa2YjV.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/6pSduW2CtbBc87aPyhEKxc
spotify:album:6pSduW2CtbBc87aPyhEKxc

http://www.deezer.com/album/6501910
Genre:
80s Synthpop Revivalists

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 16:20 (ten years ago) link

Abba Kadavar

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 16:29 (ten years ago) link

56    Ulcerate - Vermis    258 Points,    8  Votes
http://i.imgur.com/fplRThK.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/0FR1Vn0vo2p8J8WT67eTYz
spotify:album:0FR1Vn0vo2p8J8WT67eTYz

http://www.deezer.com/album/6794719

Genre:
Technical Death Metal

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 16:45 (ten years ago) link

Can't remember if I voted for the Ulcerate, but this one didn't connect with me the way Destroyers of All did. Color Sands was this year's Destroyers of All for me.

beard papa, Tuesday, 14 January 2014 16:50 (ten years ago) link

#27 Decibel, #35 Rock-A-Rolla, #25 Metal Sucks
http://ulcerate.bandcamp.com/

Coliseum - #32 Decibel, #26 Rock-A-Rolla
http://coliseum.bandcamp.com/album/sister-faith

Argus - #43 Metal Hammer
http://shadowkingdomrecords.bandcamp.com/album/argus
http://youtu.be/KJHCwRYBFrY

Argus has been left out in the cold in most polls, so props to ILM!

Aeturnus - no other poll love
http://youtu.be/L_gRlS6iaOg

Kadavar - #27 Obelisk, #6 Obelisk readers, #13 Captain Beyond Zen, #5 Stoner HiVe
http://youtu.be/I7FBmbyDGaA

Fastnbulbous, Tuesday, 14 January 2014 16:52 (ten years ago) link

man, i think half my ballot has already shown up. out of the ilm metal mainstream :...(

j., Tuesday, 14 January 2014 16:52 (ten years ago) link

80s Synthpop Revivalists

Ha. Seriously though, this was my #1. At first I preferred the debut, but the more I listen to this the more I like it. These guys can write a hook, the bass lines are awesome, and I like the singer's voice. It may seem like they're just doing a retro-revivalist shtick, but there's nothing cookie-cutter about it. This stuff holds up against the '70s hard rock dinosaurs they plainly admire (Zeppelin, Sabbath, Hawkwind, etc). There may be nothing especially innovative about them, but it's so pleasurable to just listen to a great band playing great songs that I don't really care.

o. nate, Tuesday, 14 January 2014 16:55 (ten years ago) link

I like the quotes/review blurbs, also worked well on the disco poll: ...AND THE BEAT GOES ON! The GRAND ILM DISCO POLL results are revealed!

Siegbran, Tuesday, 14 January 2014 16:57 (ten years ago) link

Yeah Kadavar grew on me the past month. Love their video for "Come Back Life" - http://youtu.be/4xgi91s7zf8

xp With 415 total albums in the poll, you're doing alright to get most of your ballot in top 100.

Fastnbulbous, Tuesday, 14 January 2014 16:57 (ten years ago) link

(old ILM quotes are always nice to kickstart/restart discussions)

Siegbran, Tuesday, 14 January 2014 16:58 (ten years ago) link

55    Autopsy - The Headless Ritual    258 Points,    9 Votes
http://wac.450f.edgecastcdn.net/80450F/loudwire.com/files/2013/07/autopsy-the_headless_ritual.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/2w3bjJMGoiTHtBjTAGTbDh
spotify:album:2w3bjJMGoiTHtBjTAGTbDh

http://www.deezer.com/album/6638153

Genre:
Twee Pop
Lyrical themes:
Fluffy Bunnies, Hello Kitty, Cardigans.

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 17:00 (ten years ago) link

siegbran feel free to post some! I've got enough to do as is!

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 17:01 (ten years ago) link

I'm definitely feelin' this Kadavar business. At least the couple songs I've sampled so far.

Johnny Fever, Tuesday, 14 January 2014 17:03 (ten years ago) link

#15 Decibel, #11 Metal Sucks musicians, #23 Pitchfork, #38 Metal Hammer, #17 Terrorizer
http://youtu.be/B88XiAjqaqc

Fastnbulbous, Tuesday, 14 January 2014 17:05 (ten years ago) link

54    Morne - Shadows    259 Points,    8  Votes
http://i.imgur.com/Bn4sqA0.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/6QxxWZR17E5i1XZvJwZtcR
spotify:album:6QxxWZR17E5i1XZvJwZtcR

http://www.deezer.com/album/6966792

Genre:
Sludge/Post-Metal

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 17:15 (ten years ago) link

http://morneband.bandcamp.com/releases

Fastnbulbous, Tuesday, 14 January 2014 17:18 (ten years ago) link

53   The Ocean - Pelagial    261 Points,    8  Votes
http://i.imgur.com/L9QSw1i.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/6R9cHdJ7hljxDDYq2tUCdO
spotify:album:6R9cHdJ7hljxDDYq2tUCdO

http://www.deezer.com/album/6959409

Genre:
Progressive/Atmospheric Sludge Metal/Post-Hardcore

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 17:35 (ten years ago) link

#9 Rock-A-Rolla, #3 Metal Sucks, #8 Metal Sucks musicians
http://youtu.be/JfZMTDcqKnQ

Fastnbulbous, Tuesday, 14 January 2014 17:37 (ten years ago) link

52    fen - dustwalker    261.0    9 Votes
http://i.imgur.com/aPpPigN.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/0TCydMhfBWdkVufpSUxdhH
spotify:album:0TCydMhfBWdkVufpSUxdhH

http://www.deezer.com/album/6202706

Genre:
Atmospheric Black Metal/Post-Rock
Lyrical themes:
Solitude, Sorrow, Landscape, Nature

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 17:45 (ten years ago) link

http://www.sputnikmusic.com/review/54547/Fen-Dustwalker/

Review Summary: Atmosphere, melody, and brutality mixed together into a potent musical brew.

Dustwalker embodies a spectrum of moods and sounds that convey a rather compelling musical performance. It's a very meticulously arranged collage of atmosphere, melody, and brutality that exhibits an eclectic range of musical styles. Throughout the album, we witness Fen regressing back to the nature of their previous albums, while yet fusing them with a better understanding of themselves and what emotion they want to convey in their music. There's an array of genres and concepts present within the album as we continue to see Fen embracing an affinity for borrowing and breaking down whatever musical styles appeal to them, and then mixing them together into a potent brew of melodies and rhythms that go well beyond the average metal repertoire. In a nutshell, Dustwalker retains the aggression of Black metal, while adding a delicate touch of ambience and euphony to their music. Certainly an elaborate plot to work with, but it's nothing that hasn't already been explored by other artists. There's a very conspicuous influence which can be felt throughout the album that is distinctively derived from other bands well within their musical vicinity, such as Agalloch, Negură Bunget, and Altar of Plagues who have all pioneered the various possibilities of connecting the charismatic essence of Black metal with outside influences like Shoegaze, Folk, Post-rock and even to an extent, Progressive rock.

A song like "Hands of Dust" really illustrates the overall musical concept of Dustwalker. There's an array of different musical conventions uniting here to compose a sound that aspires to be as engaging as possible, and in that aspect, it succeeds with ease. "Hands of Dust" opens with an introductory guitar arrangement that is embellished with a graceful echoing dissonance, thus exuding an ambient allure to ease our descent into its ever-fluctuating musical realm. This is one of the many times in the album where the progressive influences are at their most consciously evident, because this whole song is a constant ascension to a different mood with every passing second, yet it tends to operate with rather contrasting dynamics in style. For example, during the song's dreamy shoegaze section in the beginning, we hear the vocals alternate from a soothing tone to a more frustrated growl, and yet the music remains well in its calming state. And it isn't until the latter portion that we hear any distorted riffs and relentlessly manic drumming, but even then, though discreetly lingering in the background, we can still hear the echoing remains of its initial ambient texture.

"Spectre" yet again reflects the band's affection for spacey musical environments, though this time they incorporate a more folk-influenced sound. The primary melodic framework of "Spectre" is exuded by a gentle acoustic arrangement, which is accompanied by an electric guitar that lets out a sonic wave of psychedelic radiance in the background. This is definitely one of the highlighting moments of the album because it is just such a beautifully composed piece. The vocals, especially, are sung with an exquisite harmony that really vitalizes the music with a graceful aura. The only flaw in "Spectre" is that it probably lasts longer than it should. After the vocalized section reaches its climax, the song arrives into an instrumental passage that dissolves among a haze of ethereal ambience. And as mesmerizing as these soundscapes may be, you will indeed find yourself noticing how needlessly prolonged this interlude gets after the first 2 minutes, which kind of makes "Spectre" lose some effect from its trancing spell, but overall it is still an exceptional piece. Depending on the preference of the listener, one may find that this sense of repetition actually works thematically with the atmospheric ideology of "Spectre", but Fen, whether consciously or not, tends to exhibit a lot of monotony and repetition within their other compositions, though to a less than inspired degree.

The final two epics, "The Black Sound" and "Walking the Crowpath", seem to surpass their state of relevancy long before they reach their end. Both songs clock in a little over 10 minutes, and within that time Fen embrace their metal attributes much more intimately than any other moment in the album. There's an excessive usage of slow tempos and heavy rhythms being deployed here that express an overall pessimistic sentiment, and though there are some invigorating riffs and bombastic drum rhythms to be found, that's all they really have to offer, lacking any sense of ingenuity to coerce our intrigue enough to eagerly hit the repeat button. "Wolf Sun", on the other hand, is the one and only redeeming song in the latter half of the album, and the reason for that lies in the one quality that "The Black Sound" and "Walking the Crowpath" failed to harness, an innovative approach. "Wolf Sun" displays a combination of alternative rock instrumentation with infuriated Black metal shrieks and raspy vocals. Of course, there is prominent usage of 'clean' singing throughout the song as well, but it is still very compelling to hear the two contrasting musical styles compliment each other in such an irresistibly harmonic fashion.

At its final moments, Dustwalker can very well be considered an even further progression in style from Fen's prior efforts, The Malediction Fields and Epoch, one that focuses more on their Shoegaze and Post-metal influences rather than Black metal. For anyone that was hoping this would be the direction Fen would explore more after hearing Epoch, then Dustwalker will be an experience well worth your time. As I mentioned before, there's an impressive level of creativity being expressed in their songwriting here, particularly in the methods of combining their different musical influences in a way that is both coherent and appealing. This is definitely a 'fan-pleaser', and though it's merely an addition to atmospheric Black metal and nothing that is particularly revolutionary or innovative in the genre, it still makes for a truly satisfying listen to anyone willing to give it a try.

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 17:46 (ten years ago) link

http://youtu.be/z3xu8WO4Yqo

Fastnbulbous, Tuesday, 14 January 2014 17:52 (ten years ago) link

Kadavar were in my top five. Maybe my favorite of all the throwback rock releases this past year. Just great songs.

J3ff T., Tuesday, 14 January 2014 17:55 (ten years ago) link

Production also sounds great. Really makes a difference with this stuff.

J3ff T., Tuesday, 14 January 2014 18:01 (ten years ago) link

51    Cathedral - The Last Spire    263 Points,   8 Votes
http://i.imgur.com/GlpFWLm.jpg
http://www.deezer.com/album/6475137

Genre:
Doom Metal

http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/18020-cathedral-the-last-spire/

After nearly a quarter century, 10 albums, a major-label stint, and a deserved reputation as an act that helped pull doom metal from its stylistic exile, exactly how will Cathedral end its final album? That’s the question that hovers above The Last Spire, the excellent eight-track LP that will mark the end of the long-running, ever-restless English quartet. Early last year, Cathedral played their final show in Australia before returning to England to chart their own demise. For the last two decades, the band has pushed far beyond the slow-growing and wide-set roots of its foundational debut, 1991’s Forest of Equilibrium, to incorporate thrash blitzes, psychedelic tangents and 70s rock bombast. Talking through each entry in the band’s catalogue with Terrorizer earlier this year, frontman Lee Dorian acknowledged the deliberate nature of his band’s non-linear development. Sometimes they wanted to retreat from doom, and sometimes they wanted to retreat into it. “I hate complacency,” he said. “It’s not something you should ever feel, especially in terms of art.”

That perspective has kept Cathedral interesting for the long haul, even if it hasn’t resulted in necessarily great records. For instance, the band’s most recent LP, 2010’s The Guessing Game, spent 85 minutes dipping and diving into prog rock aberrations that sometimes felt excessive and often unnecessary. Cathedral kept twisting free from its traditionally lugubrious mid-tempo maul with an assortment of influences, from Uriah Heep to Genesis. Mostly, it made you wish Cathedral would just settle back in to doom again.

And for a moment at the close of The Last Spire, it seems that Cathedral will indeed exit with a sentimental reminder than that they’ve generally been more than a simply gloomy squadron. “This Body, Thy Tomb”, the final song, opens with a low-strung, generously distorted riff, which Dorian pairs with appropriately funereal imagery: “I exist in this coffin,” he opens from a backlit pulpit. “Murdered trust and misfortune has evolved into strife.” Just past the three-minute mark, though, Dorian and the strangling tone of Garry Jennings go quiet, fading into a series of somber instrumentals-- a twinkling acoustic guitar, a glass-eyed electric solo, a music box melody played on mellotron. Cathedral, it seems, will fade into their own apoptosis.

But the mighty band enters one last time, pounding at Jennings’ lead harder than it has for the entire record. Brian Dixon locks into distended drum rolls and swings hard coming out of them, while keyboardist David Moore and bassist Scott Carlson build steep walls around the riff, conjuring claustrophobia even while heading for the exit. No treacle here: Cathedral ends exactly as it started-- heads down in heavy doom. Swansong attachment aside, that return-to-basics approach is one defining characteristic of The Last Spire, an album that reconnects with Cathedral’s beginnings without simply repeating them.

Another is restraint: In an interview with Ghost Cult Magazine published the week after The Last Spire was released, Jennings admitted that the band left a lot of recorded material on the cutting room floor for this album. Of those five omitted tracks, he said, at least one of them was a 30-minute Cathedral farewell that was never finished. At 56 minutes, however, The Last Spire is very much the right length for a band whose most consistent handicap has been not knowing when to say when, or how to move toward the next track or album. No, efficiency has never been Cathedral’s bailiwick, but on The Last Spire, they operate with surprising and newfound economy. They surround lengthy tracks with much shorter ones and generally just get out of their own way. The first half of the record, for instance, moves as swiftly as anything Cathedral has ever done. A terrifying introduction of swelling field recordings, tolling church bells and grating noise passes quickly into “Pallbearer”, a 12-minute anthem that pauses just enough for an acoustic interlude before sprinting headlong into a burst of thrash. It’s an extended number, but Cathedral anchors shifting momentum to a grim mantra00 “War, famine, drought, disease!”-- and a center of doom gravity. You almost want it to keep going, a rare quality for this band. “Cathedral of the Damned”, meanwhile, crisscrosses samples between verses, choruses and solos, while “Tower of Silence” adds a dose of punk ire to its unfettered seven-minute march. By not pausing to take stock of its progress, Cathedral testifies to its true purpose and power.

The Last Spire is so close to the spirit of Cathedral’s earliest works that Dorian has said it’s the record he’s hoped to make since their debut, Forest of Equilibrium. Importantly, though, it does not feel like a microwaved visitation with the past or some self-obsessed tribute. Rather, these pieces sound like the work of a band hoping to fortify their legacy at the end of their career rather than simply prolong it. The last two decades of exploration reappear here, certainly-- listen for the sidewinding second guitar in the distance during “Tower of Silence”, or, more obviously, the playful and possibly avoidable keyboard-and-bass fantasy that sits at the center of the otherwise morose “An Observation”. But these are simply the positive after-effects of years of auditory experimentation, not the driving force for the record itself. They’ve got too much to fit into an hour for self-involved excess.

If The Last Spire is the end of Cathedral, it’s a lofty exit for a band that’s often tripped over its own artistic ambition and unease. These eight tracks serve as a swift, sinister reminder of why Cathedral mattered at the start and why they intrigued for so many years in the middle. When it mattered the most, they had the sense to recognize that their work was done and to experience the end with dignity-- and, thankfully, doom.


 

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 18:03 (ten years ago) link

#33 Decibel, #46 Rock-A-Rolla, #11 Metal Hammer, #15 Terrorizer
http://youtu.be/ucXybRkZUpw

Cathedral have called it quits, played their last live show, made their last video and the somewhat cleverly titled The Last Spire (released through Rise Above/Metal Blade) is reportedly to be their final album. One never knows for sure — surely over their time together the band must have amassed suitable fodder for rarities collections, live albums, greatest hits, cover records and so forth — but if it actually is the end of their run, The Last Spire is also the point at which the album Cathedral wants to make meets with the album that fans want to hear. It is an 56-minute victory lap that — far from actually sounding like one — presents eight songs of the dark, dreary doom that has come to be thought of as traditional in no small part because of Cathedral‘s crafting of it. The band’s lineup of vocalist Lee Dorrian, guitarist Gary “Gaz” Jennings, bassist Scott Carlson and drummer Brian Dixon present some progressive moments reminiscent of or at very least nodding toward The Guessing Game – the synth interlude that interrupts the sluggish lumber of “An Observation” comes to mind; David Moore‘s contributions of Hammond, Moog, synth and mellotron aren’t to be understated in establishing The LastSpire‘s murky atmosphere — but in their structure and in their intent, cuts like the early “Pallbearer,” “Cathedral of the Damned” and “Tower of Silence” underline the doomed feel for which Cathedral have become so known both in their home country and abroad. They are Cathedral at their most Cathedral. And rightly so. One couldn’t possibly hope for more of them than that.

The aforementioned trio occur sequentially following the intro “Entrance to Hell,” which finds Dorrian repeating the phrase “Bring out your dead” — which in my mind always goes right back to Monty Python and the Holy Grail, but he sells it well — over suitably plague-addled atmospheres, with “Pallbearer” as the longest track on The Last Spire at 11:39 and marked aside from its strong hook by the backing vocals of Rosalie Cunningham behind Dorrian‘s signature semi-spoken delivery and the chorus of “War, famine, drought, disease” repeated to memorable effect. There’s a mournful acoustic break in the middle, but by and large, Jennings, Carlson and Dixon sound big, thick and threatening, and when the acoustics (backed by organ) give way to the resurgent groove and faster push of the song’s peak movement, the effect is fluid and entirely metal. They end slow and offer a more mid-paced distortion on “Cathedral of the Damned,” which is marked out by the spoken guest vocal by Chris Reifert of Autopsy and the line “Living in the shadow of a damned cathedral,” which may or may not be Dorrian dealing with his own legacy and the prospect of moving on after ending the band. Either way, it’s the riff and the buzzsaw guitar tone that stands out most as the band meet their longest track with the shortest full song (that is, non-interlude or intro), slamming head-on into the chorus as they do with no diminished returns on the subsequent “Tower of Silence,” the pair affirming Cathedral‘s potency on all levels as they round out The Last Spire‘s first half, whether it’s the vocals, Jennings‘ righteous solo, the heavy nod of the bass and drums, or the overarching catchiness of the chorus itself: “A tower of silence/Is waiting for me/Looming before/An astral sea.”

Really, one could read a lot of The Last Spire as being emblematic of Cathedral‘s self-awareness as regards their own ending, but when it comes to “Infestation of the Grey Death” starting off the second half of the album, the vibe is more of a return to “Entrance to Hell”‘s plague thematic than the band saying goodbye. Jennings smoothly layers acoustic and electric guitars in the chorus and post-chorus, Dorrian‘s vocals are caked in effects, and Dixon‘s thudding drums provide more than ample punctuation in the tempo’s slower push in comparison to “Tower of Silence,” verses and the chorus following the riff in doomly fashion and a more raucous second third giving way to a return to the heavy-trodding miseries for a sendoff. “An Observation” is the point at which The Last Spire is the least fluid, keeping the ambience consistent early on with the tracks preceding before rumble and synth strings (mellotron maybe?) give way to a synth solo at 5:42 that follows comparatively awkwardly behind a couple seconds of silence, as though the band, in realizing that nothing would offer a smooth transition between one part of the track and the next, opted not make a transition at all. They bring it into context with accompanying guitar and vocals, but just that initial change is enough to pull the listener out of the song’s flow, if only momentarily. Parts flow into each other well in the final minutes of “An Observation” as Jennings builds to a climax before moving into a more Carlson-led section of chugging push, and when “An Observation” is over, it’s time of “The Last Laugh,” which, at 38 seconds, is just that, the last time Lee Dorrian laughs on a Cathedral record. He’s done it plenty, so I guess the band felt it was appropriate to mark the occasion.

More importantly, brief though it is, the interlude does well in giving a couple seconds’ respite before “This Body, Thy Tomb” arrives as the closer. Pacing-wise, it’s an agony, but there’s still movement at its core thanks to Dixon and Carlson, and here as well the organ features heavily in filling out the sound. Mirroring the opener, there’s an acoustic interlude met by mellotron that comes on in much the same manner but still with better continuity than on the song before and a break of footsteps or churning water that leads back into the central figure of the song. It’s the last march — Cathedral‘s last march, to hear them tell it — and with the organ, guitar, bass and drums all firing together toward a single idea, it’s hard to argue against their having gone out in a manner befitting their legacy. The truth is, Cathedral probably could easily have been putting out records like this all along. Nothing on The Last Spire feels especially challenging for the band or the listener. But that they didn’t makes their decision to write this as their epitaph all the more special. It’s an album that, even if one isn’t familiar with the context surrounding or with the legacy that Cathedral will leave behind them, would make a surprisingly good place to start for a first-timer, since it’s accessible and it summarizes so much of what’s always been most appealing about the band. Since that unmistakably was their intent in creating it, The Last Spire is as true to Cathedral‘s idea of who they are as any of their work has ever been. – The Obelisk

Fastnbulbous, Tuesday, 14 January 2014 18:06 (ten years ago) link

Whoa, that's WAY lower than I was expecting Cathedral to place.

J3ff T., Tuesday, 14 January 2014 18:07 (ten years ago) link

maybe ilm metal thread regulars have gone off doom

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 14 January 2014 18:10 (ten years ago) link


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