Saturday, February 14, 2015

Leprous - Bilateral


Unassuming and quietly confident, Leprous solidified their position as the leading producers of ridiculously catchy bizzaro metal


Most of the time when I review something here, its because I think that the album or game or whatever is somehow interesting enough to warrant writing about it. In Leprous' case, not only do I think Bilateral (and their other, also excellent albums) is worth talking about but I'm trying to put into words the fact that I've been listening to Leprous consistently, every day, for the past few weeks. Sometimes just one album a day, sometimes two - they really put the hook in me, which is kind of relieving in a way as I had been worried I would never really "get" them. Man, do I get them now.

Bilateral is, at its core, a progressive album - odd instruments and sounds (Spanish horns, funny keyboards, etc.), longer songs, and strange lyrics (seriously, take a look) are all here, as you would expect. What makes this album (and all of Leprous' material, really) stand out is the way in which these genre standbys are deployed in such a competent way. Basically what it comes down to is that these guys know how to write a goddamn song, make it interesting and memorable and melodic, and still clock in under eight minutes - which is very impressive considering how easy and annoyingly commonplace it is for bands these days to write ten minute long jerk-off fests that go nowhere. But thats another topic entirely, so whatever.

Why do I think Bilateral is so strong? Because it features the concentrated effort of dedicated musicians to pull off while still incorporating maddeningly catchy hooks and choruses. Songs like "Painful Detour", "Cryptogenic Desires", "Thorn", and the title track have as many "guaranteed to stick in your head for days" moments (or more) as a standard pop act - right up there with bands like King's X and Galactic Cowboys in that area, which is a pretty damn nice change from the usual stuff. Like those aforementioned bands Leprous have a solid mix of metal and prog going on, and they go back forth between clean and harsh vocals - more heavily utilizing cleans, with the screaming serving as a nice bit of palette-cleanser throughout the album as they shift from bite-sized, straight-ahead rockers (title track, "Waste of Air"), longer, proggier tunes ("Forced Entry", "Painful Detour"), soft-ish, richly harmonized ballads ("MB. Indifferentia", "Acquired Taste"), and their own European quirkiness ("Restless", "Thorn", "Cryptogenic Desires"). Every song on this album is memorable and distinct, and new ideas come and go so quickly that it always feels fresh and slickly constructed. Bilateral is quirky without being mawkishly so, fresh without being pretentious, and immensely listenable without sacrificing complexity. An impressive and absorbing record from start to finish.

 

Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Revocation - Deathless


As intricately constructed as any of their previous works, Deathless sees Revocation focusing on stronger hooks and tighter songwriting than ever before, with brilliant results  


Every so often a band comes along that captures the fickle hearts of the metal community, is hoisted aloft on their flabby shoulders and is proclaimed as the new poster child of the genre, and with Deathless, Revocation seems like a group that everyone seems to like (hint: it's cause they're really good).

If you've heard a Revocation album before, you have a good frame of reference for what Deathless is all about (Skeletonwitch is acceptable substitute). Revocation's songs tend to be longer and proggier than the 'Witch's, but both bands produce material in a grab-bag style of genres including thrash, black, death, tech, prog, and more, culminating in a kind of metal melting pot that defies easy classification, although I will risk over-simplification and just call Revocation technical death-thrash for now (really rolls off the tongue, eh?).

You may have heard rumors of Deathless being "simple" or "straight ahead" compared the Bostonians' earlier efforts - and I would say those rumors are mostly true. There aren't any banjos or horn sections, and what the disc lacks in experimentation it makes up for with sheer polish and songwriting flair (plus enough sweet guitarmonies to make Tom Scholz jealous). From the title track's blues-infused guitar solo to the filthy riffage (and wrist-snap-inducing drumming) of "Scorched Earth Policy", to the instrumental "Apex" (think "YYZ" if it had been written by Kerry King) and the powerful closer "Witch Trials" and its sublime outro.

With Deathless, Revocation make it clear to everyone within earshot that even after 4 albums, that they don't plan on slowing down or phoning it in anytime soon. A truly committed outfit with a talent and work ethic that the rest of the genre could stand to learn from -- these guys are well worth your support.