By: Richard Maw
Album Type: Full
Length
Date Released:
19/05/2017
Label: Rise
Above Records
It's impressive
that, only a year and a bit after their debut, Beastmaker have taken their
sound and improved upon it with sharper song writing and an impressive grasp of
what makes music of the trad doom genre tick.
“Inside The
Skull” CD//DD//LP track listing:
1. Evil One
2. Heaven To Hell
3. Now Howls The Beast
4. Of Gods Creation
5. Give Me A Sign
6 Nature Of The Damned
7. Psychic Visions
8. Inside The Skull
9. Night Bird
10. Sick Sick Demon
The
Review:
One year after “Lusus Naturae”, California 's
Beastmaker
return for more retro true doom. This time around, they have improved on all
elements present on their debut. Mixing Pentagram, Sabbath, Danzig
and a healthy dose of classic horror appreciation the band have struck on a
winning formula.
Once again, the sound is raw and live sounding;
the bass clanks, the drums pound and clatter and the vocals are a pleasing
mixture of melodic and sinister. Right off the bat, you know what the record
will be like: riffs, hooks and macabre atmosphere aplenty. “Evil One” sounds as the title implies
(great solo too), “Heaven To Hell”
is menacing and weighty in equal measure.
The album highlight for me is “Now Howls The Beast”, replete with
werewolf atmospherics and a riff that Victor Griffin himself would be very
proud of! It's impressive that, only a year and a bit after their debut, Beastmaker
have taken their sound and improved upon it with sharper song writing and an
impressive grasp of what makes music of the trad doom genre tick.
On a general level, there is nothing to pin-point
as a misstep on this album; it's uniformly heavy, sharply written and really
quite catchy in places. No twenty minute drone work outs here: this is doom
rock in the vein of all acts mentioned above. To make a lazy comparison, this
is perhaps an American equivalent (by dint of geography, but not in total
sound) of Uncle
Acid and The Deadbeats. The two bands plough a similar furrow and
will appeal to a similar set of fans, I suspect.
Whether it be the plodding drama of “Nature of The Damned” or the swing of “Psychic Visions”, the power trio work
as a tight unit and keep things stripped down and raw- exactly as it should be.
With the title track promising nine eternities in doom and the riffs making
good on that promise, the album goes into the closing straight very strongly.
Taking a nod from Sabbath by not going overboard on album length
has allowed the band to turn in a very strong set of focused songs- all nicely
uniform in terms of sound and content.
The short, sharp and sinister “Sick Sick Demon” is a very strong
finish to a very strong album. If you have any interest in Sabbath and/or Pentagram,
then this album will be for you. It's gritty, great and even gruesome in parts.
Their satanic majesties have returned.
“Inside The Skull” is available here
FFO: Black Sabbath, Uncle Acid And The Deadbeats, Pentagram, Orchid