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Earthly Delights
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Earthly Delights
Current price: $33.99
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Barnes and Noble
Earthly Delights
Current price: $33.99
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After a four-year hiatus and a few bailed attempts at recording a proper follow-up to
Hypermagic Mountain
,
Lightning Bolt
returns in full force. Here, on
Earthly Delights
, the thunderous Rhode Island duo's riffs are explosive and punishing as ever, as drummer/garbled vocalist
Brian Chippendale
and bassist
Brian Gibson
do what they do best: play incredibly loud and incredibly hard. Their technical proficiency and kinetic energy is still dizzying, and as always, their style is entirely their own. Call it metal, call it post-rock, or call it intolerable noise, there still isn't any other band that quite compares to the glory of
.
isn't a huge departure from
Wonderful Rainbow
or
Hyper Magic Mountain
, but even so, this is forgivable when
Gibson
and
Chippendale
's music is so unique to begin with. Most of the album is made up of the classic
"Crown of Storms"
"Assassins"
types of pummeling thunder -- songs specifically made for popping the eardrums of any parking lot attendants within a 50-yard radius.
"S.O.S."
"Transmissionary"
fit into this category. Elsewhere,
"Sublime Freak"
is a furious endurance test, built on a hyper-tribal rhythmic repetition set to an acid-house tempo, the exasperating psychedelic insanity of
"Flooded Chamber"
weeds out the casual fans from the diehards, and
"Funny Farm"
finds
tackling some country-metal chicken pickin' that could be a distant cousin of a
Jimmy Page
solo (think
"Bron Yar Stomp"
on a distorted bass), before the riffage nearly bashes itself to shambles. Aside from these sidesteps, the most significant change from early albums is in the production, which is extra fuzzed-out and blown apart. It's an exhausting, aneurysm-inducing experience, but with an adrenalin-fueled duo like
, the fact that they aren't showing any signs of maturity can only be viewed as a good thing. Fans of spastic and difficult music, take heed. ~ Jason Lymangrover
Hypermagic Mountain
,
Lightning Bolt
returns in full force. Here, on
Earthly Delights
, the thunderous Rhode Island duo's riffs are explosive and punishing as ever, as drummer/garbled vocalist
Brian Chippendale
and bassist
Brian Gibson
do what they do best: play incredibly loud and incredibly hard. Their technical proficiency and kinetic energy is still dizzying, and as always, their style is entirely their own. Call it metal, call it post-rock, or call it intolerable noise, there still isn't any other band that quite compares to the glory of
.
isn't a huge departure from
Wonderful Rainbow
or
Hyper Magic Mountain
, but even so, this is forgivable when
Gibson
and
Chippendale
's music is so unique to begin with. Most of the album is made up of the classic
"Crown of Storms"
"Assassins"
types of pummeling thunder -- songs specifically made for popping the eardrums of any parking lot attendants within a 50-yard radius.
"S.O.S."
"Transmissionary"
fit into this category. Elsewhere,
"Sublime Freak"
is a furious endurance test, built on a hyper-tribal rhythmic repetition set to an acid-house tempo, the exasperating psychedelic insanity of
"Flooded Chamber"
weeds out the casual fans from the diehards, and
"Funny Farm"
finds
tackling some country-metal chicken pickin' that could be a distant cousin of a
Jimmy Page
solo (think
"Bron Yar Stomp"
on a distorted bass), before the riffage nearly bashes itself to shambles. Aside from these sidesteps, the most significant change from early albums is in the production, which is extra fuzzed-out and blown apart. It's an exhausting, aneurysm-inducing experience, but with an adrenalin-fueled duo like
, the fact that they aren't showing any signs of maturity can only be viewed as a good thing. Fans of spastic and difficult music, take heed. ~ Jason Lymangrover