Showing posts with label Nevermore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nevermore. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

JEFF LOOMIS: Zero Order Phase


Produced by Neil Kernon
Released: August 25, 2008

As I think I've posted somewhere else, shred albums don't really do that much for me. Ordinarily I would have most likely not even listened to this, but Jeff Loomis is the guitar prodigy from Nevermore, one of my favourite bands, so the interest was there from the outset. Not to be left at a loose end or outdone by his singer's solo efforts this year, Loomis has unleashed a nice display of guitar mastery on Zero Order Phase.

The great thing about this that sets it apart from other ego-projects is that Loomis comes from a songwriting background in a successful band rather than just being some hired gunslinger who jumps from group to group between albums of self-important wankery. So instead of just leaping in with series after series of face-melting fretboard ejaculations from the get-go, Loomis lets riffing and structure tell his stories as much as the soloing does. It makes Zero Order Phase far more interesting and listenable than other albums of its ilk.

Loomis has long been lauded as a fantastic guitar player, yet while he's never exactly held anything back in Nevermore, it is here where he is at last given total freedom to show what he is truly made of. The influences from Malmsteen and James Murphy are evident, but more so is Loomis' own style and, as mentioned, he uses his songwriting power to back up his masterful and often breathtaking playing. Moreover, where Warrel Dane used Praise to the War Machines to sink further into the despair and misery of Nevermore, Zero Order Phase sounds righteously joyous. "Shouting Fire at a Funeral" opens the album well, featuring a typical Loomis-style riff that makes it sound like it could have been left off This Godless Endeavor. This is really the only Nevermore-like track on the album however, as the more expansive, shred-ridden "Opulent Maelstrom" is a clear departure from the man's signature style. "Sacristy" begins as a quiet but not melancholy piece, showing a side of Loomis that isn't usually seen in his usual role. On "JATO Unit" he trades leads with Ron Jarzombek in a display that will have guitar freaks busting out of their pants. Some of the best parts come when Loomis steps aside however, like producer Neil Kernon's jazz-inflected fretless guitar section in "Cashmere Shiv" and the team-up with former bandmate Pat O'Brien in "Race Against Disaster" is also something of a highlight, displaying both men in somewhat different colours than to be otherwise expected.

Zero Order Phase is quite a solid offering from Loomis, a nice departure from his Nevermore enterprises and a damn sight more engaging than a lot of guitar instrumental albums.



  1. Shouting Fire at a Funeral
  2. Opulent Maelstrom
  3. JATO Unit
  4. Azure Haze
  5. Cashmere Shiv
  6. Race Against Disaster
  7. Sacristy
  8. Devil Theory
  9. Miles of Machines
  10. Departure

Rating: 82%

Monday, June 30, 2008

NEVERMORE: Dead Heart in a Dead World


Produced by Andy Sneap

Released: 2000

Nevermore toured Australian about a year before this album came out; in hindsight as much fun as that tour was with Warrel Dane and Jeff Loomis stage-diving every night and Dane drinking himself into oblivion at every opportunity, the entire jaunt may have been a bit more successful for them had they come out on the back on this monster. Dead Heart in the Dead World is an absolute modern metal classic, an album that helped define the genre into the 21st Century. Before this, Nevermore was just a good band that made good albums. Afterwards, they were legends.

Some still critique Dead Heart in a Dead World for being less technical and less diverse than previous albums, but in place of those aspects Nevermore became darker, heavier and catchier. This was Warrel Dane's best vocal performance to date and stripping back the line-up to a four piece helped tighten the songwriting and gave the band more direction. "Narcosynthesis" makes an impact immediately, driving, heavy and so inimitably catchy that the chorus sticks in your head long after the album is over. Loomis adopted the use of seven-string guitars for this recording, lending a nu-metal edge to the band's bottom end. This led to a backlash from purists opposed to anything even remotely resembling Korn (and this is far from that), but the band had not forgotten their old-school melodic metal riffing. This actually gave Nevermore a unique style yet one that was reminiscent of that other great Seattle progressive metal band: Queensrÿche.

As dark as that band could be however, nothing compared to Warrel Dane's bleak tales of the human condition. His lyrics are stark, humbling and depressing to the point where they would be almost impossible to listen to much less enjoy if the music that frames them wasn't so good. Jim Sheppard and Van Williams are solid of course but the real star is Loomis, whose mastery of the guitar became truly apparent on this album. If there is a criticism, it is that some of the riffs sound rather similar to each other here and there, but this is only a minor quibble that can be overlooked by the strength of the material. "The River Dragon is Come" is perhaps the highlight, with all the pieces working together perfectly but in truth there isn't a bad song here. Their version of "The Sound of Silence" boasts a true menace, "Insignificant" is utterly humbling, "The Heart Collector" sounds like emptiness.

Through the rejection of all religions, to a dedication to an incarcerated friend, to the smallness of humanity, Nevermore produced a stunning journey of emotional metal with Dead Heart in a Dead World. They have yet to make a bad album, but this one is a true masterpiece.



  1. Narcosynthesis
  2. We Disintegrate
  3. Inside Four Walls
  4. Evolution 169
  5. The River Dragon Has Come
  6. The Heart Collector
  7. Engines of Hate
  8. Sounds of Silence
  9. Insignificant
  10. Believe in Nothing
  11. Dead Heart in a Dead World

Rating: 98%

NB: A lot of people seem to think that this album is called Dead Heart, in a Dead World with a comma, but the little comma-like serif on the toe of the t in the title is actually a quirk of the font and not a comma at all. Careful inspection of the rest of the booklet reveals the "comma" attached to every t, making "Narcosynt,hesis", "Evolut,ion 169", "T,he River Dragon has Come," etc. Therefore, it's not a comma. Stop it!

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

WARREL DANE: Praises to the War Machine


Produced by Warrel Dane
Released: 2008

Few songwriters in any genre write about the misery of the human condition like Warrel Dane. His first solo venture understandably allows him to be even more personal than before, and so it is that this is also the darkest thing he has done. That's bleak indeed when you consider that this is the man who wrote "Believe in Nothing" and "Evolution 169".

Musically, Praises to the War Machine is rather like a stripped-back Nevermore, melodic and thrashy but without the progressiveness. It is also somewhat less successful, particularly the heavier tracks. Dane's bandmates for this outing include Peter Wichers and Dirk Verbeuren from Soilwork so it isn't through lack of talent that the songs aren't always what they could be. None of them are bad by any means, but for the most part they lack that extra oomph that Nevermore usually delivers. With that said, this is not a Nevermore album in spite of the obvious presence of Dane's inimitable vocals and overlapping themes. "When We Pray" is a strong opener and only the lack of one of Jeff Loomis' spectacular guitar solos really differentiates it from a song by Dane's regular band.

"Messenger" (on which Loomis does actually play) isn't quite as strong although "Obey" is also a good tune. The spiteful and vindictive "Brother" and "Equilibrium" later in the piece are also stand-outs, but it's on the balladic tracks where Praises to the War Machine really shines and where Dane's power as a lyricist are truly displayed. Whatever the occasional weaknesses may be in the music department, the real power and beauty of this album lays in its lyrics. The themes he explores are his usual dark fare: the futility of religion, betrayals, human frailities. As previously mentioned, Warrel Dane's talent for evoking tales of pure humanity is remarkable and on "August" and "This Old Man" he surpasses himself, particularly on the latter, a tale about a lonely neighbour from the singer's youth.

Praises to the War Machine may not quite stand up next to Dane's other work with Nevermore on a musical level, but this is without doubt his most personal and darkest achievement.


  1. When We Pray
  2. Messenger
  3. Obey
  4. Lucretia My Reflection
  5. Let You Down
  6. August
  7. Your Chosen Misery
  8. The Day the Rats Went to War
  9. Brother
  10. Patterns
  11. This Old Man
  12. Equilibrium

Rating: 85%

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

NEVERMORE: This Godless Endeavor


Produced by Andy Sneap


Released: 2005


A few years back and it looked like the wheels had fallen off for Nevermore. Following up Dead Heart in a Dead World was never going to be easy but the task was made harder by a miniscule budget and Kelly Gray’s disastrous production that all but ruined Enemies of Reality and, in the process, almost destroyed the band’s reputation. The remix of that album proved that some great songs existed beneath the murk, but it’s clear that Nevermore needed something big to help them bounce back from 2003’s disappointment.


Things don’t get much bigger than This Godless Endeavor, an immense heavy metal album that lets you know right from the first note that it is simply going to rule and that the band that created it is one of the most supremely gifted acts of their kind. ‘Born’ launches the album in a truly malevolent style, fierce thrash riffs, violent drumming and near-death metal growling that almost doesn’t sound like Nevermore at all. It’s immediately clear that this is a force to be reckoned with.


From here, This Godless Endeavor begins to sound like classic Nevermore again, but at the same time there is a further progression into darkness and rage. The introduction of Testament guitarist Steve Smyth to the line-up is a masterstroke as he and Jeff Loomis seem to make it their mission to push each other towards higher and higher pinnacles of achievement: scathing riffs, spectacular lead breaks and stunning injections of melody. Then of course there’s the singularly distinctive voice of Warrel Dane striking a perfectly controlled balance of mid-range melancholic howls and higher-end shrieks. For a man who could once barely stay in tune, he has now developed a genuinely unique style and his songwriting abilities are close to genius.


There are no dud moments on This Godless Endeavor. It is as near to the perfect embodiment of a modern metal album as anything is likely to come.



  1. Born

  2. Final Product

  3. My Acid Words

  4. Bittersweet Feast

  5. Sentinent 6

  6. Medicated Nation

  7. The Holocaust of Thought

  8. Sell My Heart for Stones

  9. The Psalm of Lydia

  10. A Future Uncertain

  11. This Godless Endeavor

Rating: 95%