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Wednesday, 19 September 2018
ALBUM REVIEW: Cauldron, "New Gods"
By: Richard Maw
Album Type: Full Length
Date Released: 07/09/2018
Label: The End Records
If you want melodic traditional heavy metal with a
penchant for hard rock sensibilities, there are few bands better and you won't
hear a better album of that style than this one released in 2018.
“New Gods” CD//DD//LP track listing:
1. Prisoner of the Past
2. Letting Go
3. No Longer
4. Save the Truth – Syracuse
5. Never Be Found
6. Drown
7. Together as None
8. Isolation
9. Last Request
The Review:
Cauldron are back, close to three
years after “In Ruin” and are not straying too far from their original raison
d'etre: old school heavy metal, old school sounds, old school songs. Yep, Cauldron
are plugging away; on the road, in the studio, presumably in a less than
salubrious rehearsal room... Cauldron keep on keeping on.
“Prisoner of The Past” picks up where “In Ruin”
left off, with tight and crunchy riffage- plus a dose of melody of course. The
drums still thud like 83, rather than snapping like 2018 and reverb is present
on the vocals and, indeed, all instruments. “Letting Go” is a melodic and dark track as the title suggests; with
both of the first two tracks sounding like a wound down Accept, musically, if not
vocally. Nice chorus and anthemic riffs combine to good effect.
Truthfully,
I think the likes of “No Longer”
could stand to be a little shorter (oh sweet prescient irony), but these are
not thrashing and urgent tracks. They are hard rocking, but with quite some
emphasis on rock rather than metal this time out. Again, the spectre of early Leppard
is present at this feast- but it is a welcome apparition. The darkness of “Save The Truth- Syracuse” is well honed
as the band again find their mid tempo groove.
“Never Be Found” doesn't move things
around too much in terms of initial approach but the pre-chorus and chorus
really lift this up. Great song writing and hooks. “Drown” sounds like a prime Paradise Lost track at first- a turn up for
the books, but I was waiting for the tempo to lift and it did! This time, the
band rip out some more thrashy riffs and it is a welcome throw back to the “Chained
To The Nite” opus. Great cut.
“Together as None” is very light weight in
comparison- there is plenty of light and shade on this album, for sure, but
this particular track is a little too (bitter) sweet for my tastes and could
easily have turned up on any hair metal album you could care to name. “Isolation”, meanwhile, fulfils its
titular promise of dark sounds, being as it is an instrumental and a good one. It's
maudlin and brooding and one of the best things on the record. It sets thing up
nicely for the appropriate “Last Request”
which is another album highlight; a little quicker, a little heavier, a little
more bite.
“New
Gods” represents both more of the same for Cauldron and is also leaning a bit further
towards the melodic song writing present on all their releases thus far. For
me, I yearn for some of the crunchier riffage that was present on earlier
career tracks such as “Conjure The Mass”,
but no one can deny the quality of the songs here. If you want melodic
traditional heavy metal with a penchant for hard rock sensibilities, there are
few bands better and you won't hear a better album of that style than this one
released in 2018.