REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Day: June 2, 2021

SKYHARBOR – Blinding White Noise

Hard to believe that this masterpiece will be 10 years old next year. Hailing from India, they are one of the high points of the djent bands that came out over 10 years ago. A very ambitious project for their first album as its huge conceptual piece of fours sides split into two parts: Illusion and Chaos. Illusion has Daniel Tompkins from Tesserract who had left the band at this point. Marty Friedman also makes a guest appearance on Catharsis.

Dots kicks things off in epic style and Tompkins voice fits the music perfectly. Order 66 is pure djent heaven as the tune flips from supreme heaviness to beauty in the flick of a guitar pick. Catharsis is next and starts with an epic drum pattern from Anup Sastry, who now bashes the skins for Monuments. Tompkins also shows the harder edge to his vocals as the song weaves its way through numerous phases. It drifts into the following piece, Night, with the beautiful refrain “When Will I Be Home Again”. Aurora is such a great piece of music, killer vocals and harmonies from Dan, and some really heavy chunk from Keshav Dhar on guitar. It flows into a very jazzy middle eight and the end screams of Everybody Dies. My favourite piece from Illusion is the next track, Celestial. I’m not sure I have the vocabulary to gush over this, it’s just an amazing piece that has everything. Absolute crushing guitar riffs and grooves, mixed with the beauty of Dan’s voice. Monster stuff. The first piece concludes with Maeva, a wonderful exercise in how to write a modern Prog/Marla epic. No Cookie Monster vocals in sight, just superb playing from all and the guitar solo here is other worldly.

Side 4 is given over to the second piece, Chaos, and Part 1 Trayus announces its arrival with crushingly heavy guitar and the return of the Cookie Monster with a change of vocalist in Sunneith Revankar. Aphasia starts with a very complex fast odd time groove, which carries the piece all the way through. Insurrection closes out the album and is as extreme as the title suggests. I’m at a loss to see how the drummer would still be alive after performing this live. Incredible drumming!

I do like the way they have split this up with different vocal styles that show a light and dark vibe. The other album I reviewed today was Manowar, and forty years apart there is no comparison. Metal has changed so much in that time it’s unrecognizable. I love this album heaps and it gets 10/10 from The Grooveman.

MANOWAR – Battle Hymns

“Death to false metal!” Anyone remember that mantra that the band used to peddle around at the time? They sure lived and breathed what they said, even though the music in the beginning was not that heavy and that metal if I’m honest…They hold the record for the world’s loudest band, which they have deemed “The Black Wind”. It’s really hard not to laugh out loud while I’m writing this, but the band were deadly serious about this way of life that they lived honouring the metal. When they toured Europe, they even openly encouraged women to be in their “harem” of sex slaves to tour with them. Ridiculous! Was it a PR stunt, or was it real?

Anyway, it’s the music what we are here for and opening track, Death Tone, is what the band were all about – both musically and lyrically. Pretty straightforward hard rock with a very metal singer. Metal Daze is next and it’s more of the same really. It’s worth pointing out that guitarist Ross The Boss came from the Dictators when they were a noise/punk hybrid band – they weren’t that metal at all. Fast Taker is quite an average tune. Last track on this Side, Shell Shock, is about war and the riff reminds me of one of Ross’s side project’s, the French band, Shaking Street – its an ok tune.

Side 2 starts off with the band’s theme song, Manowar, and it feels a bit Twisted Sister, which is quite ironic as they hated each other. Who remembers Dee Snider calling out Manowar for a fight outside Shades record store in London? It’s just a good hard rock song. The metal would be more evident later, especially with albums like Hail To England. Dark Avenger has the rather dulcet tones of Orson Welles as narrator, and is probably the most metal song here, both in sound and execution. Williams Tale is just a show off piece for bass player and band leader, Joey DeMaio. Final track is the title track, Battle Hymns, and we have waited for the best track on the album. Very medieval sounding, full of swords and sorcery – this is how the band garnered their reputation and image. The production is not that great as the band did it themselves, arrogantly thinking they knew best when a known producer would have given it the treatment it so needed. Not bad, but a fun listen anyway.

7/10 from The Grooveman.