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Blood Mountain
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Blood Mountain
Current price: $9.99
Barnes and Noble
Blood Mountain
Current price: $9.99
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The two-year long-wait is over, and those
fans encouraged but leery of the slicker production of
over
will be even more bemused, or downright bewildered, by
, the band's first foray into major-label territory since signing with
'
imprint (after all, this was the label conceded to
as his own when he threatened to leave it).
is everything fans both hoped for and feared.
has dug even deeper in its foray into
, but without losing an ounce of their power, literacy, or willingness to indulge in
,
, and
. Like
is both melodic and downright raging in places.
is in the producer's chair once more and he's encouraged this Georgia quartet --
(drums),
(guitar and vocals),
(guitar and vocals), and
(bass and vocals) -- to take it to the limit. And they have.
indulges and goes deep into the territory of
beats and quests and spiritual revelations that have less to do with
-ism and more to do with Conan-ism. There are utterly beautiful melodic passages woven into the heaviness that are reminiscent of
's dual guitar lyricism -- and the band has confessed to digging
and company. The vocals -- with guest spots from
's
-- are mixed way upfront and the number of sheer stylistic changes is dizzying.
No,
should not lose their street cred over this. For every old fan alienated, a new one will step into the gap and there will be throngs of new ones, more than likely. Why? Simply because this band does the technical thing as well or better than
without sacrificing a bit of the black blood which courses through their veins toward their dark
hearts. The set opens with the completely in-the-red thrashcore
of
complete with a chanted chorus. As the guitars twin and scream, bass and drums chop away at convention. Tempo changes, from fast to faster to a refrain that gives the listener time to shout along. The doubled leads and repetition in the verse are countered by the swelling, pulsating thud from the drum kit. Lyrically, it appears that
is trying to create a new mythological present. But the bridge goes into the netherworld with actual sung vocals and angular, elliptical phrases that defy elucidation. The echoey sound effects on the drums at the opening of
quickly give way to a plodding
riff.
comes out of the gate, slowly, dreamily, seductively, there are digital delays on the guitars that gather tension as they (relatively) whisper by, and create an ambience that crosses early
and
. It's the vocals that are most remarkable, however, sung cleanly to a slow tempo, each word is distinct and the effect is nearly hypnotic as the strange, self-created cultic myth is further woven into a web of dislocation, epic ambivalence, mystery, and power.
is made plain on
where intricate patterns and bludgeoning guitar riffs vie for dominance but are authoritatively held in
's deafening balance.
with its bloodcurdling extreme
and burn, tips it toward a virtual creation idea born of pagan rites, blood sacrifice, the spirits of extinct species, and the hollow ring of organized religion, all given their freedom here to drift back to prehistory and the days of fire and rage in the rough and tumble founding of "civilization."
On it goes.
seeks no easy answers but poses dozens of questions about origin, and "culture." Forget "thinking man's
," this is
, period, and the guys that make it think. The music, as varied and tumultuous and, in places utterly beautiful as it is, place the band beyond the pale -- check the intro to
before it falls apart into pure chaos and cacophony where lyrics and themes are barely articulated in the hammering thunder of apocalyptic noise. Sound effects that perhaps are the voices of the spirits themselves make themselves heard in the din -- but indecipherably.
are both prototypically
and act as the album's hinge pieces, where
completes its achievement and establish a new
.
with its elongated beginning and utter lyricism may alienate those who live for heaviness alone, but it will attract those who can see outside the genre's subgenres. The set closes with
a track that amounts to a densely populated power ballad with gorgeous guitar soloing, and a major/minor key chord progression (instead of riffs and a Hammond B-3) played by
followed by a long silence, where at the very end, a "fan" letter is read and responded to. What does it add up to? Something old and something new, a
that's utterly gargantuan to wrestle with because it actually moves the style into brand new territory, an unfamiliar terrain which will accord it much name calling and crying of "sellout" by the unwashed masses who are more conservative about their steely brand of "folk music" than the Newport crowd was about
going electric. Yet, for those daring enough to take this in, there are true bloody treasures to behold and receive. If
was a masterpiece, then this is too -- only more so. ~ Thom Jurek