Saturday, August 28, 2010

SONIC SYNDICATE: We Rule the Night

Produced by Toby Wright
Released: July 30, 2010

In the cynical world of the music industry, it's more often the band that can fake it and look the best that gets the break. This is clearly the case for Sonic Syndicate. Nuclear Blast evidently saw the potential in the band's generic, crowd-pleasing metalcore mimicry with added eye-candy factor courtesy of bassist Karin Axelsson and quickly bankrolled them, talking them up as one of their next big things. The departure of melodic vocalist Roland Johansson has done nothing to slow the band down but it does seem to have delivered an opportunity to give their sound a pretty big overhaul, one that even Johansson seems somewhat bemused by. There's good reason for this, because We Rule the Night is pretty bad.


New English-born recruit Nathan Biggs has said that he likes singing melodies, and that's an admirable thing for a vocalist. But the band's grab for accessibility on this album is so contrived and obvious that they've actually crossed the line into the realms of pop-laced rock. That in itself wouldn't be such a bad thing if the results weren't so diabolical. Let's face it, as a metalcore band Sonic Syndicate was only ever average at best, no more than strictly generic second-tier tryhards that came across like In Flames by way of Bullet for My Valentine. As if that wasn't horrible enough, they've decided to add really bad melodic emo into the mix now as well. The end result of this is something like what would happen if Linkin Park had really bad sex with My Chemical Romance, and if you can picture that in your mind without going insane then you should take that as a warning not to subject yourself to We Rule the Night.

The melodies and hooks are pretty insidious, but the music as a whole is just hollow, boring and annoying. In the end, if this band didn't have Karin Axelsson, they'd have nothing.
  1. Beauty and the Freak
  2. Revolution, Baby
  3. Turn it Up
  4. My Own Life
  5. Burn This City
  6. Black and Blue
  7. Miles Apart
  8. Plans are for People
  9. Leave Me Alone
  10. Break of Day
  11. We Rule the Night
Rating: 15%

Friday, August 27, 2010

GAMMA RAY: To the Metal!

Produced by the Spirit of Freedom
Released: 2010

As the pendulum shifts further and further toward retro-sounding bands and more and more extreme forms of metalcore, that Gamma Ray suddenly find themselves struggling for relevancy is no surprise. Over the last few years, this once inconquerable band seems to have hit a few hurdles on their trailblazing path to true power metal glory. Since their late 90s run of four incredible albums in a row, the last decade hasn't been quite so kind: Majesty was hit and miss and Land of the Free II was an inconceived hodge-podge that almost ruined the legacy of the original. In amongst them there's been an almost inordinate number of compilations, boxed sets and double-live CDs and DVDs that always seem to point to the gradual demise of a once-great band.

On To the Metal! the German quartet fall back on Judas Priest and Iron Maiden worship to the point where  Kai Hansen adopts a Halford-like bark a good percentage of the time and the title track is little more than a shameless rip-off of "Metal Gods". It isn't that the album is totally without merit. "Empathy" with its uncharacteristic gentle opening is a great track and "All You Need to Know" has the erstwhile Michael Kiske adding his golden touch. But even here, the grabs from Maiden and Rainbow are just too obvious to ignore and too prominent to be accidental. On the tracks that Hansen doesn't write, Gamma Ray sound much more themselves, without the blatant thievery from their influences. Even so, they aren't exactly creating any real magic, just joyously catchy, triple-vocal melody power metal played at ridiculous speed like they have always done, and there is schmaltzy dreck like "Mother Angel" and oodles of cheese. For the completist, the "deluxe" edition contains a making-of DVD which shall remain unreviewed because, well, seriously why bother?

Even with the flagrant plagarism To the Metal! is at least much better than the last couple of studio albums. You can tell from the artwork that it doesn't break the mould as far as Gamma Ray albums go. While they are incorporating more and more classic metal influences into their music (as least with regard to Hansen's songs), they're still uncompromisingly melodic heavy metal. It ain't Land of the Free, but at least it's not Land of the Free II.

  1. Empathy
  2. All You Need to Know
  3. Time to Live
  4. To the Metal
  5. Rise
  6. Mother Angel
  7. Shine Forever
  8. Deadlands
  9. Chasing Shadows
  10. No Need to Cry 
Rating: 70%

Thursday, August 26, 2010

CITY OF FIRE: City of Fire

Released: 2010

Any project with the names Byron Stroud and Burton C. Bell attached tends to get people thinking about crushing grooves, dense, repetitive staccato riffing and bleak, apocalyptic visions of society driven by tight, mechanical timekeeping. So for those not familiar with their work outside of Fear Factory and Strapping Young Lad, City of Fire might come as a complete surprise; indeed, even those aware of the pair's less intense musical outlets could find this album something of an eyebrow-raiser.

For City of Fire has at its core a far looser, more raw heavy rock feel that draws inspiration from a more simple time and a basic sound that, it could be argued, seems influenced by one of the early 90s greatest bands. The shadow of Soundgarden's Badmotorfinger album looms over City of Fire like a colossus, from the way the guitars in "Carve your Name" mimic the warbling screech of "Jesus Christ Pose" to the overall feel of the entire album. This is in no way a bad thing, and Bell's idiosyncratic vocal style adds a different dimension to this collection of songs that would be lost in the hands of a more conventional singer. His alternating strangled croak and darker clean semi-croon aids in giving the band's brooding songs of despair, heartbreak and misery their necessary atmosphere. Sho Murray and Ian White's grubby guitar sound echoes the gloomy vibe of grunge rock but City of Fire adds a healthy injection of metal and groove to forge a strong and fairly diverse album. As much as it's a very different kettle of fish to anything Fear Factory has ever done, structurally City of Fire nonetheless follows a similar path to that band's classic albums by adding bleak introspection and atmospherics as the album draws toward the end, finishing off with a striking cover of "Rain" by The Cult.

City of Fire has delivered a strong and surprisingly consistent album of modern metal with their debut. One can only hope that the standard can continue in the wake of Bell and Stroud's Fear Factory workload.

  1. Carve Your Name
  2. Gravity
  3. Risig
  4. Memory
  5. Spirit Guide
  6. Coitus Interruptus
  7. Hanya
  8. Emerald
  9. Hollow Land
  10. Dark Tides
  11. Rain
Rating: 86%

Friday, August 20, 2010

BUCKCHERRY: All Night Long

Produced by Buckcherry
Released: 3 August 2010

Buckcherry seems to have recovered from the gloom and doom that overshadowed their last album and get back to basics with All Night Long, an offering more in tune with their endless partying vibe than the ponderous and distinctly un-fun Black Butterfly.

Once again making extensive use of the songwriting talents of Marti Frederiksen -- surely this generation's Desmond Child -- Josh Todd and the lads get straight down to rocking on the title cut and keep things on track for the next seven or eight, through the AC/DC stylings of "Oh My Lord", the Cinderella-esque "Liberty" and the pop-laced "These Things". Only the stock-standard power ballad "I Want You" interrupts the flow of the good time rocking out. Buckcherry do their best work when they're not thinking too much nor depending on their audience to do so, and for the most part All Night Long succeeds in this regard. So despite the earnest good intentions, chucking on a topical piece about the Gulf oil spill like "Our World" simply rings a bit hollow when surrounded by fluff pieces about partying down and getting loaded. It's like finding a song about spousal abuse on a Guns N Roses album.

Still, with the exception of a couple of sappy ballads, Buckcherry has put together a pretty decent hard rock release, with the deluxe edition also including another 25 minutes' worth of tunes in the shape of the acoustic "Reckless Sons" EP that sees the boys maintaining a distinctly rocking edge even without cranking the distortion. It's definitely worth adding to the playlist of your next night of alcohol-fuelled mayhem.

  1. All Night Long
  2. It's a Party
  3. These Things
  4. Oh My Lord
  5. Recovery
  6. Never Say Never
  7. I Want You
  8. Liberty
  9. Our World
  10. Bliss
  11. Dead
Rating: 75%

Saturday, August 14, 2010

BLACK LABEL SOCIETY: Order of the Black

Produced by Zakk Wylde
Released: August 10

Now eight albums in, Zakk Wylde has well and truly established Black Label Society as a band that can be relied upon for consistency. You pretty much know what you're going to get from BLS and Order of the Black doesn't disappoint. The shape of the band may change slightly every so often, but the style of the music rarely does. In all fairness though, while overall the album sounds the way you'd expect even after the four-year gap since Shot to Hell, Wylde does throw in a few surprises now and then, adding a nice little twist here and a touch there, to keep up the interest factor.

Rock-out opener "Crazy Horse" is a clear indication that all the standard Black Label Society factors are in place: the massive bottom-heavy grooves, pinch harmonic-infested sludge-ridden riffs and Wylde's bourbon-soaked gravel pit vocals. As stated, all is as you would expect, right down to the lyrical obsession with damnation and doom and there's simply no end to the amount of downright catchy, groovy riffs that Wylde can come up with. And of course his instinctively soulful soloing remains a highlight. Mix in the usual sprinkling of piano ballads like "Darkest Days" and "Time Wait for No One" and Order of the Black is as consistent as anything from the Black Label Society catalogue, with huge, booming drums from newcomer Will Hunt.

Yet Wylde can still manage to throw a nice curveball, as he does in "Godspeed Hellbound" when the viciously chopping riff seamlessly segues into a dark acoustic bridge augmented with strings and thunderous, rolling drums ahead of the solo. On "Chupacabra" he breaks out into a brief burst of multi-tracked Spanish guitar picking and the local release is rounded out by a surprisingly heartfelt version of "Bridge Over Troubled Water". It's moments like this that remind one what a remarkable talent Zakk Wylde is, an unapologetically old-school rocker who is nonetheless unafraid to show a more vulnerable side amidst all the overdriven bravado. Order of the Black is another solid and effective heavy rock album from a band that had rarely failed to deliver.
  1. Crazy Horse
  2. Overlord
  3. Parade of the Dead
  4. Darkest Days
  5. Black Sunday
  6. Southern Dissolution
  7. Time Waits for No One
  8. Godspeed Hellbound
  9. War of Heaven
  10. Shallow Grave
  11. Chupacabra
  12. Riders of the Damned
  13. January
  14. Bridge Over Troubled Water
Rating: 80%

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

VINCE NEIL: Tattoos and Tequila

Produced by Jack Blades
Released: July 2010

Vince Neil has obviously arrived at that point of his career where a covers album might seem like a good idea. His one-time mentor Ozzy tried it a few years back and the result was perhaps the best album he'd made in years. After all, a good song is generally still a good song even if it's put through the wringer a bit, and it just doesn't seem possible that Vince could fail as spectacularly as Bret Michaels, who no longer seems capable of even doing a decent cover of his own songs.

Tattoos and Tequila is essentially a collection of tracks that had an influence on Neil's career, plus a couple of newer ones possibly included only to extended the playing time beyond EP length. The title track isn't too bad to be honest, but the Nikki Sixx/Tracii Guns penned "Another Bad Day" is nothing other than another faceless power ballad that isn't worthy of their own bands. Elsewhere however, Neil plunders his classic rock albums collection to take on some less-familiar tunes by the bands that inspired him, and the results are rather impressive: his take on Aerosmith's "Nobody's Fault" is true hard rocking joy and Cheap Trick's "He's A Whore" and the ripper version of "Another Piece of Meat" are dynamite. Jack Blades' production strips the sound raw, echoing Neil's earliest recordings with Mötley Crüe and the dude even manages to add some real grit to "Viva Las Vegas".

On the negative side, "Who'll Stop the Rain" is one he probably should have left alone, but for the most part this is a surprisingly impressive slab of raw ass-kickery from a guy who still knows how to bring it.

1. Tattoos and Tequila
2. He's A Whore
3. AC/DC
4. Nobody's Fault
5. Another Bad Day
6. No Feelings
7. Long Cool Woman
8. Another Piece of Meat
9. Who'll Stop the Rain
10. Viva Las Vegas
11. The Bitch is Back

Rating: 70%