Poland's Sautrus,
Weno
Winter (vocals, guitars,
harmonica);
Michał Nowak (guitars);
Cygi
Kondratowicz (drums) and
Krystian Papiernik
(bass, vocals, synthesizers), are somewhat of an enigma, there is no
other current band out there who sounds quite like them, and to add to their
legend no two
Sautrus albums are alike.
The band’s debut
EP "
Kuelmaggah Mysticism: The Prologue" saw the band
mixing their genres up right left and centre with passages of
prog metal
complexity vying for space with elements of
blues rock and fuzz heavy
stoner
metal which they then followed up with the swaggering
blues and
doom
tinted "
Reed: Chapter One". Next came the
70's heavy rock
flavoured "
Anthony Hill" an album that saw those still sitting on the
fence regarding
Sautrus' music start to
climb down and take a deeper interest. Two curveballs were thrown into the
arena next in the shape of "
M.A.P. and "
Stoner POP" the first an
off-centred
prog orientated conceptual album telling a story of a war
between two powerful historical figures, the second a quirky yet accessible
hard
rock/
psych hybrid fused with elements that bordered on the edges of
avant-garde
and experimental. This year (
2024) sees
Sautrus dipping their toes once more into the
conceptual pool with a collection of songs documenting the trials and
tribulations of an unwilling vampire struggling with his immortality, the album
is titled "
Lazarus Dilemma" and
if you are not a fan already you will be after hearing this!
Those listening to "
Lazarus
Dilemma" via the bands
Bandcamp
page will miss out on the opening track "
Intro",
a mood piece featuring spoken narrative (language unknown) set against a
backdrop of sparse and exotic sounding plucked/hammered strings. That out of
the way we get to the real meat and potatoes of this album with "
Revival", the song documenting our hero/anti-hero’s
transition from living to living dead against a soundtrack of galloping bass
and drum groove off set with ear-pleasing guitar motifs and licks, the songs
recurring lyrical theme asking "
Why the
hell you woke me up?" in
clean melodic tones. Things take a turn for the calmer with next track "
Cave of Knowledge", albeit routinely
interrupted with more caustic dynamics, with
Winter's clean. almost falsetto
vocal describing his surroundings over restrained steady drumming, thrumming chord
progressions and some deliciously throbbing bass that really comes into its own
in the songs hazy and trippy second third. "
Strange
Traveller Intro" serves as the prequal to its sister piece
"
Strange Traveller" both songs
tackling the realities faced by our reluctant vampire as he comes to terms with
his need for feasting on the living and his need for revenge on his "
saviour",
the former song a
folk-like dirge, the latter a laid-back
proggish
lament with occasional bursts into
doomic dankness. "
Cyber City" opens with
Kondratowicz beating out a steady drum tattoo
around which guitarists
Nowark and
Winter crank out a mixture of crunchy riffage
and tasteful licks all of which are anchored to earth by
Papiernik's highly impressive bass work,
Winter also adds a little harmonica into the
mix which given the songs quite heavy dynamic should not work but does. Next we
have "
Keep On Pushing" a song
we defy anyone not to fall in love with, its easy on the ear mix of lead and
expertly layered backing vocals, its catchy hard not to sing-along-to chorus
and its gradual evolution from lilting balladry into galloping
heavy rock
is a masterclass in songcraft. Next up is "
Hoodoo"
a song with a
rock opera feel not unlike that employed in parts of
Andrew Lloyd Webber
and
Tim Rice's groundbreaking "
Jesus
Christ Superstar" musical, a mixture of singing and tuneful
narrative set to a backdrop of bluesy prog. Next we get a moment of quiet
reflection with the appropriately titled
"Lament"
a short but beautiful instrumental piece written for synth and guitar. its onto
penultimate number "
Final Clash" next, a glorious mish mash of
chugging
heavy rock and soaring
prog/
psych decorated in a
strange but totally compelling blend of swooping high and semi-spoken vocals
and occasional shouted chanting that then brings us to closing song "
Anx" a
doom tinted and slightly
bluesy
finale boasting a mantra like vocal that repeats the phrase "
denn die todten reiten schnell", a
line from a
Gottfried August Bürger's poem "
Lenore"
which
Bram Stoker later inserted into his famous novel "
Dracula", a phrase which
Stoker translated as meaning "
for the dead travel fast".
Progressive metal, heavy psych, hard rock, folk
and even a little rock opera-like arrangement all shoe-horned into an
album with a concept that juggles the story of one of Christ's miracles with vampire mythology.
Thorny (excuse the pun) subject matter and something that could easily have
gone keel up in the wrong hands but to the bands credit they have pulled off
something really special with "Lazarus Dilemma",
it is an album that does not preach or take a religious stance it just tells a
"what if" type tale
against musical backdrops that are at times jaw-dropping.
Check it out ...
© 2024 Frazer Jones