 Hank
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Poster: Hank @ Fri Apr 29, 2011 12:08 pm
Electric Wizard - "Black Masses"
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After the towering success of 2007's "Witchcult Today," Electric Wizard's hotly-anticipated 2010 release "Black Masses" feels a little disappointing. It's not bad, and it's a lot better than most of the pseudometal that gets flogged to consumers these days, but it doesn't crush my psyche like "Witchcult" or their earlier classics. Let's examine it.
The first thing one notices upon spinning this record is that its overall feel doesn't have much to do with the sound that is generally associated with doom metal. Instead of monolithic, lumbering doom riffs, we get harsh shambling patterns that have much in common with sludge metal. Part of this comes from the tempos, which on average are a little faster than the usual dinosaur doom fare. The tones on this LP aren't immense or majestic, but instead rough, droney, and claustrophobic. Unlike their other releases, you pretty much have to listen to this disc at high speaker volumes, because only then will you hear the thundering fury of the sound. At office or crummy-headphone volume, it sounds pretty noisy and subdued. Also notable in the mix are a lot of spacey keyboard and guitar effects, which are present but not overbearing in their older records.
The other jarring thing about the sound is that singer Jus Oborn's vocals are mixed unusually loud in the mix and sheathed in a tinny David Bowie-style reverb effect. Oborn's not the virtuosic singer that, say, Pete Stahl is, and I think his voice sounds better when it's less prominent and treated as another instrument in the mix ("Dopethrone" is a great example of this approach). He seems to rely increasingly on a "sneering" vocal style that kind of takes away from whatever gravitas the songs have - the punningly-titled "Satyr IX" here is a case in point. I think he's going for an Ozzy feel here, but it doesn't quite work.
So what of the songs, you ask? The LP begins with the chugging sludge tune "Black Mass," which is a decent song that vaguely recalls "Dunwich" from the previous record, though it doesn't swing like that song. Oborn repeats the title often and sounds pretty excited about the fact that a black mass is happening. Next up is a cut called "Venus in Furs," which, to my immense disappointment, isn't a cover of the Velvet Underground song of the same name. I'm sure that my feelings about this track are colored by that disappointment, but I find the song to be mediocre at best. However, I'm quite sure that THE WIZARD were at least inspired by the Velvets song, because the overall sound of "Black Masses" with its noise and harsh drone is actually quite close to that of the Velvets' "White Light / White Heat."
These are followed by "The Nightchild," which sounds like a pretty good doomy tune but is dragged down a bit by whining vocals from Oborn, and "Patterns of Evil," which has one of the coolest titles ever but is completely forgettable. In all seriousness, I've listened to this tune three dozen times and it just doesn't stick with me. Then we get the aforementioned "Satyr IX," which again has good music but is hurt by trebly production.
Fortunately, the next track is "Turn Off Your Mind," another tune with a great title but one that actually delivers on all fronts. Great (bad) vibe, good riff, and listenable vocal execution. This is the catchiest song on the record by far, and furthermore, has a message that I can really get behind. An excellent dismissal of the world at large and an irresistable invitation to withdraw into the Void.
The following song "Scorpio Curse" is similarly well-done, with the dire atmosphere, brain-drilling guitars, and lyrical pessimism that we expect from THE WIZARD. "This world is dead," chants Oborn, and he's right, at least for the song's seven nihilistic minutes.
The LP closes with another worthless but innocuous ambient / instrumental piece, "Crypt of Drugula." I kind of wish Electric Wizard would stop using this classic Stooges trick to pad out their albums, but what indeed can one do?
I give THE WIZARD props for trying to shake things up with "Black Masses" instead of just churning out a followup record plump with enjoyable but generic doom metal, as they certainly could have. It seems, though, like more of their effort went into style innovations than songwriting. With only two killer tunes and a lot of missteps in production, "Black Masses" is only somewhat better than "We Live," falling far short of the cataclysmic brilliance of "Witchcult Today," "Come My Fanatics," or "Dopethrone." Even so, you should still buy it, to send the message that there's still a market for music that doen't suck, conform to trends, or appear in "Old Navy" commercials.
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