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The Bastard
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The Bastard
Current price: $49.99


Barnes and Noble
The Bastard
Current price: $49.99
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Hammers of Misfortune
spent several years writing this, the band's debut CD, and that work becomes more and more evident with each listen. Nothing less than a three-act
heavy metal
opera
with role-playing vocals sung by the band members, the album draws on a whole range of
metal
influences -- from
Thin Lizzy
and
Iron Maiden
to
Mercyful Fate
Opeth
-- and ties them together with some
Celtic folk
touches to create a sound that, while it does feel a little '80s nostalgic, is actually pretty original. (The plot, by the way, has to do with a child who grows up amidst the forest and later slays his father to become king, but it's a lot more complicated than that.) The vocals are a three-way arsenal of
black metal
rasps,
operatic
female singing, and deep-voiced male singing, respectively, and they're well done, but the group's real strength is in its songwriting and specifically its harmonized dual-guitar riffing. The riffs aren't just strung together; they flow smoothly within each song and in some cases even act as recurring motifs, a prime example being the dramatic dual-guitar break that shows up in
"You Should Have Slain Me"
and then again in
"The Witch's Dance."
This ambitious piece of work is even more impressive considering that it was made on a mere eight-track recorder in a rehearsal space. Recommended to open-minded fans of melodic
power metal
(this is definitely not standard '80s rehash fare) and of left-of-center
in general. ~ William York
spent several years writing this, the band's debut CD, and that work becomes more and more evident with each listen. Nothing less than a three-act
heavy metal
opera
with role-playing vocals sung by the band members, the album draws on a whole range of
metal
influences -- from
Thin Lizzy
and
Iron Maiden
to
Mercyful Fate
Opeth
-- and ties them together with some
Celtic folk
touches to create a sound that, while it does feel a little '80s nostalgic, is actually pretty original. (The plot, by the way, has to do with a child who grows up amidst the forest and later slays his father to become king, but it's a lot more complicated than that.) The vocals are a three-way arsenal of
black metal
rasps,
operatic
female singing, and deep-voiced male singing, respectively, and they're well done, but the group's real strength is in its songwriting and specifically its harmonized dual-guitar riffing. The riffs aren't just strung together; they flow smoothly within each song and in some cases even act as recurring motifs, a prime example being the dramatic dual-guitar break that shows up in
"You Should Have Slain Me"
and then again in
"The Witch's Dance."
This ambitious piece of work is even more impressive considering that it was made on a mere eight-track recorder in a rehearsal space. Recommended to open-minded fans of melodic
power metal
(this is definitely not standard '80s rehash fare) and of left-of-center
in general. ~ William York