Showing posts with label Witchery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Witchery. Show all posts

Thursday, 23 November 2017

ALBUM REVIEW: Witchery - "I Am Legion"

By: Daniel Jackson

Album Type: Full Length
Date Released: 10/11/2017
Label: Century Media


What ‘I Am Legion’ boils down to is this: Witchery proves here that they’re a band still capable of greatness and creatively this is Witchery’s best album in sixteen years.
  


‘I Am Legion’ CD//DD//LP track listing:

1. Legion
2. True North
3. Welcome, Night
4. Of Blackened Wing
5. Dry Bones
6. Amun-Ra
7. Seraphic Terror
8. A Faustian Deal
9. An Unexpected Guest
10. Great Northern Plague
11. The Alchemist
12. Ragnarök (Bonus Track)
13. Apex Ghoul (Bonus Track)


The Review:

It can be a challenge for fans and bands alike whenever a band ventures away from the sound that earned them their fan base. Not all fans are willing to make that journey with a band, and the new sound very rarely ever has the same meaning or impact as what came before. The Crown is an example where their later material suffered from their shift toward down-tuned death metal, all but leaving their speed metal leanings behind, and their musical charisma and personality disappeared with it. Over the years, Witchery’s albums fell at a similar trajectory to The Crown, though the changes they’ve made in style are less severe.

It’s easy to forget just how brief Witchery’s original peak really was. They released three top notch albums and an EP, all within a two-and-a-half year window: October 1998 to February 2001. Since then, their output has been a lot less frequent and less noteworthy. All of the albums following ‘Symphony For The Devil’ have been missing something to one degree or another as they’ve struggled to find their footing.

That brings us to ‘I Am Legion’ and while the Witchery of old and the Witchery of now may not have as much in common as long time fans might like, they’ve clearly put themselves back on solid ground again. The album proper begins with its lead single “True North”, a deliberately-paced stomper, with a chorus that would have fit in nicely amongst Bathory’s viking metal material. The song is also something of a red herring, though nicely paired with “Welcome, Night”, another mid-paced, rhythm-centric track.

After that point, Witchery shifts into higher gears. “Of Blackened Wing” is a smorgasbord of riffs and styles, ranging from it’s Sabbathian opening riff, into crossover thrash, and even a pinch of recent Darkthrone in the song’s second half. As the album carries on, there’s a healthy balance of thrashing fury and fist-pumping mid-tempo heft. ‘A Faustian Deal’ even flirts with Satyricon’s black n’ roll feel, though they find a way to make it fit within their own established stylistic framework. All of this variety definitely counts for something, but really it’s the inspired songwriting that carries this album, whatever the speed. Creatively, ‘I Am Legion” is Witchery’s best album in sixteen years.

What ‘I Am Legion’ boils down to is this: Witchery proves here that they’re a band still capable of greatness. Getting back up to this level hasn’t been quick or easy for the band, and it’s hard to tell what changed during the brief period between this album and last year’s ‘In His Infernal Majesty's Service’. Whatever it was, they need to find a way to bottle it and save it for anything they do going forward because this is exactly where they needed to be, and it didn’t require reliving old sounds to get here. Witchery is a great band again in 2017, and it’s a joy to be able to say it.


“I Am Legion” is available digitally here and on CD/LP here.


Band info: Facebook

Thursday, 5 January 2017

ALBUM REVIEW: Witchery - “In His Infernal Majesty's Service”

By: Richard Maw

Album Type: Full Length
Date Released: 25/11/2016
Label: Century Media Records


The riffage is superb throughout, as is the production- being as it is raw and noisy and thus perfect for this type of music. “The Burning of Salem” is as fast as it is dark, while “Gilded Fang” is a short storm of riffs and blasts. Frankly, it is hard to pick stand-outs here. The album is uniformly good. Unsung heroes of Swedish metal to a large extent, I urge you to check this album out and then work back through “Witchkrieg” and beyond.


“In His Infernal Majesty's Service” CD//DD//LP track listing:

1). Lavey-athon
2). Zoroast
3). Netherworld Empire
4). Nosferatu
5). The Burning of Salem
6). Gilded Fang
7). Empty Tombs
8). In Warm Blood
9). Escape from Dunwich Valley
10). Feed The Gun

The Review:

Witchery, now nearly twenty years into their existence, return here some six years after the nasty and excellent “Witchkrieg”. The album finds the band still ploughing the blackened thrash furrow- and their efforts still yield an impressive crop of riffs and songs.

The punningly titled “Lavey-athan” kicks things off in thrashing style, while “Zoroast” takes a more rock n roll type approach- with effective results. Elsewhere, the thrash is firmly back; “Netherworld Empire” is the type of rampaging beast that The Haunted used to make before they lost their way. “Nosferatu” continues the underworld themes with a rather classic alt-Slayer pacing and flavour and a catchy (yes) chorus. Storming stuff, so it is.

The riffage is superb throughout, as is the production- being as it is raw and noisy and thus perfect for this type of music. “The Burning of Salem” is as fast as it is dark, while “Gilded Fang” is a short storm of riffs and blasts. Frankly, it is hard to pick stand-outs here. The album is uniformly good. Nothing lets the side down, nothing stands out for the wrong reasons. “Empty Tombs” is a concise thrasher, “In Warm Blood” is a mid-paced rocker... there are no holes to pick here. There is even a Lovecraft inspired track in “Escape From Dunwich Valley” (which is awesome, incidentally).

By the time of the two closing tracks of identical length, “Feed The Gun” and “Oath Breaker”, you will have been well and truly thrashed. Line up changes have not dulled this band's potency one iota. The macabre humour remains, the song writing is as sharp as ever. Witchery are most certainly back and have made yet another great record. Unsung heroes of Swedish metal to a large extent, I urge you to check this album out and then work back through “Witchkrieg” and beyond.

“In His Infernal Majesty's Service” is available now


Band info: facebook