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Kindred Spirits
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Kindred Spirits
Current price: $7.99
Barnes and Noble
Kindred Spirits
Current price: $7.99
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No,
Waylander
haven't heard of you either, but that doesn't mean you don't exist, right? Believe it or not, the release of 2012's
Kindred Spirits
album highlights the fact it's been nearly 20 years since brothers
Ciaran
and
Dermot O'Hagan
formed this Celtic metal ensemble in their native County Armagh, Northern Ireland. And you could say the long and harrowing misadventures they've endured might inspire a few legendary yarns of their own. Alas, on this, only the group's fourth proper full-length release over all of these years, it merely inspires a series of competent, but largely interchangeable, blackened thrash workouts adorned with savage shrieks and spidery folk melodies performed on a synthesizer (what, couldn't afford a friggin' flute player?). Think a latter-day
Skyclad
, only not nearly as eclectic or straight-up batshit crazy enough to entertain. The best
can offer by way of variety is to narrate certain story lines amidst tamer tempos and momentary respites from the reigning fury -- e.g. "Twin Fires of Beltine," "Grave of Giants," and "Erdath." But it's safe to say that a lyric sheet is almost de rigueur if listeners are to dig deeper for distinctions between these tracks, among which "A Path Well Trodden" (buoyed by unusually inspired riffs) admittedly represents a rare standout. Now, they say variety is the spice of life, but meat and potatoes will do just fine most of the time, so if one's particular musical tastes happen to be attuned to the very narrow furrow
are ploughing, song after song, then
they will be. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia
Waylander
haven't heard of you either, but that doesn't mean you don't exist, right? Believe it or not, the release of 2012's
Kindred Spirits
album highlights the fact it's been nearly 20 years since brothers
Ciaran
and
Dermot O'Hagan
formed this Celtic metal ensemble in their native County Armagh, Northern Ireland. And you could say the long and harrowing misadventures they've endured might inspire a few legendary yarns of their own. Alas, on this, only the group's fourth proper full-length release over all of these years, it merely inspires a series of competent, but largely interchangeable, blackened thrash workouts adorned with savage shrieks and spidery folk melodies performed on a synthesizer (what, couldn't afford a friggin' flute player?). Think a latter-day
Skyclad
, only not nearly as eclectic or straight-up batshit crazy enough to entertain. The best
can offer by way of variety is to narrate certain story lines amidst tamer tempos and momentary respites from the reigning fury -- e.g. "Twin Fires of Beltine," "Grave of Giants," and "Erdath." But it's safe to say that a lyric sheet is almost de rigueur if listeners are to dig deeper for distinctions between these tracks, among which "A Path Well Trodden" (buoyed by unusually inspired riffs) admittedly represents a rare standout. Now, they say variety is the spice of life, but meat and potatoes will do just fine most of the time, so if one's particular musical tastes happen to be attuned to the very narrow furrow
are ploughing, song after song, then
they will be. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia