Tuesday, 15 April 2025
SWAMPLORD ~ WITCHLAND ..... review
Monday, 14 April 2025
ORDOS ~ FIRE .... review
Opening number "There is More" starts restrained and atmospheric with Magnus Stenqvist's eerie toned guitar textures accompanying a fairly lilting Emil Johansson vocal asking questions like "is this all" and "is this everything you've been searching for" with that last line the signal for bassist Martin Hagnell and drummer Max Sundberg to join the fray and take things into heavier climes, it is also the signal for Johansson to mix up those clean lilting tones with some of that distinctive throaty harshness that has become his trademark. Prog-metal and heavy psych fans should also also keep an ear out for the textures. tones and colours guitarist Stenqvist brings into play here, even injecting what sounds like a little jazz fusion into proceedings at one point. "Ferment" follows and sees Ordos hitting into one of those insidious and gnarly sludge/doom grooves we have all come to love them for, Johansson adding to the glorious mayhem with a vocal that mostly borders on feral but on occasions drops into a delicious deep croon. Maybe it is Sweden's Viking history, or its maybe its the stark and moody artwork gracing this album that is causing Desert Psychlist to constantly have images from writer director Robert Eggers "The Northman" movie running around in our heads while we listen to Ordos' "Fire". The most vivid of those images coming to our minds eye tend to be generated by the albums next song "Hell Has Come" a song with a thrumming stoner doomic dynamic that slowly increases in volume, intensity and depth as it progresses, a dynamic that is mirrored in its vocals which shift from clean and monastic to grainy, gritty and growly. If you have not seen "The Northman" do yourself a favour and go and see it and when you do make sure you have this song in your head when viewing the movie's iconic last fight scene. "IV" follows next and is a masterclass in how to blend dank atmospheric doom with elements of prog and sludge metal, the song throbs with malevolence and menace mainly due to Johansson's vocals which lean towards manic at times but also thanks to the thunderous and ever-shifting grooves Hagnell and Sundberg lay down beneath his vocals and the crunching riffage and textured motifs and solos Stenqvist weaves around them. Last song "Eyes of Fire" sits somewhere between a ballad and a lament in its initial stages, gentle arpeggios ringing out over shimmering percussion, but this is Ordos we are talking about so its not long before things start to get gnarly, both vocally and musically, and no one does gnarly better than Ordos as they prove when the crunching riffs and thunderous drumming come in to support Johansson's throatier warblings, to be fair the song does return to the arpeggios and restrained percussion in its final moments but by then the listeners ears have already been fried to a crisp.
Check it out ...
© 2025 Frazer Jones
Thursday, 10 April 2025
BLACK FIRE PY ~ PRIMAL ..... review
First song "Primal Intro" opens proceedings and is probably more a tone poem than it is an actual song as it incorporates just one line of narrative accompanied by droning effects, tolling bells, minimal percussion and samples. Things get underway properly with "Desert" an infectious little ditty boasting a nicely executed blend of lead voice and backing harmonies interspersed with earworm motifs and hooks, a great little rock song made even better thanks to a searing guitar solo. "Mental Noise" is up next and as with the previous song makes great use of the vocal interplay between Pereira's lead vocal and Bongiovi, Irrazábal and Murphy's harmonious backing, Villasboa's bass and Irrazábal's drums serving as the glue holding everything together. Despite its fairly stoner/hard rock groove there is a touch of post-punkishness about next song "Golden Supernova", especially in the songs shouty chorus, the song also serves as a great showcase for Storm's keyboard skills, her off piste flourishes bringing, at times, an almost Hawkwind-like feel to the proceedings. Things take a somewhat mainstream turn with the very radio-friendly "Full Moon Light", which sees Bongiovi handling the lead vocals, this is a song that sits out a bit like a sore thumb against the all the hard rock surrounding it, a pleasant enough diversion granted but maybe not quite the right fit for this particular release. Things return to a more rocking state with the excellent "Salvation", this is a fantastic shape shifting heavy psych/heavy space tome that gives everyone in the band a chance to shine with Villasboa and Irrazábal laying down a monstrous groove for Murphy and Storm to decorate with scorching lead work and whooshing keyboards, Murphy also lending his voice, with Bongiovi, to the songs wordless wailing backing vocals Pereira placing the cherry on this musical cake with a strong and powerful lead vocal that in places soars towards operatic. Last but one track "Into The Death Game" is probably this releases heaviest and most spacious tome, Pereira sings of a "virtual world" where "nothing is real" accompanied by a mix of swooning backing harmonies and whispered asides over a backdrop of thickly fuzzed psychedelic tinted groove that is taken to another level by Storm's keyboards and Murphy's guitar. Final number "Primal Outro" brings us full circle by somewhat mirroring "Primal Intro" bur adding into the mix some eastern flavoured, yet bluesy, guitar.
© 2025 Frazer Jones