Thursday, June 23, 2022

October Burns Black - Two Worlds Collide album review

Within the first twenty seconds of opening track Divide and Conquer, it’s clear that Two Worlds Collide, the debut LP from goth “supergroup” October Burns Black will be a serious contender for trad goth rock album of the year. Pulsating eight-to-the-bar bass and a no-nonsense drumbeat drive the song forward, whilst Husseyesque duelling guitars and a strong baritone vocal complete a musical vision which is not dissimilar to a more muscular version of The Sisters of Mercy’s Train.




After a brace of EPs, the latter of which saw Rod Hanna replace Ger Egan on vocals, the multinational ensemble’s debut LP confirms that the project’s overall sound will incorporate musical elements from the members’ individual bands – American bassist James Tramel’s 90’s legends The Wake, Norwegian guitarist Tommy Olsson’s current band Long Night and noughties’ act The Morendoes, German fellow guitarist Lars Kappeler’s 2010’s trad goth stars Sweet Ermengarde and UK drummer Simon Rippin’s goth rock projects from Fields of the Nephilim to Grooving in Green in addition to Ulsterman Hanna’s 90’s band Return to Khaf’ji - to create a strong new development of the now four-decade-old gothic rock template.

If the opener Divide and Conquer acts as a straightforward statement of intent, second track Black Veil adds a subtler touch, with a slower intro, a more intricate arrangement and a more folky, goth lite vibe reminiscent of the middle eight of The Sisters’ First and Last and Always.

Keeping with The Sisters theme, Tightrope begins with Tramel’s Lucretia-influenced bass intro before developing into a more straightforward rocker, albeit with the acoustic folk goth embellishments beloved of The Rose of Avalanche.

A more menacing bass riff heralds the start of the genuinely angry Regress, with Hanna somewhat unexpectedly spitting his spite in a stream of invective, addressing a “Liar, cheat, fabricator … loser, coward, miserable fool” before telling his target unequivocally “You’re a waste of time and space and you’re a f*** liar” over galloping guitars and a steroid-enhanced rhythm section.

The first half of the album closes with a much-needed slower interlude, with Tramel igniting Fickle with a slow-burning bombastic epic intro which is not unlike Fields of the Nephilim’s Celebrate, before a more up-tempo section which sees a clearly still enraged Hanna berating his interlocutor’s “fickle, twisted, cruel intentions” which “kill the faith I have in me”. The song changes tempo again for the middle eight, in the style of Last Exit For The Lost, confirming Fickle’s status as a future trad goth classic.

The Nephilimistic vibe continues on The Grand Leveller, with a burbling Psychonaut bass drone and an almost prog goth backing, building beautifully to a fuller, busier arrangement with keyboard swirls adding a more atmospheric element, Rippin’s tribalistic drumming coming more to the fore as the song builds to a climax.

Blind Faith has a more straightforward structure, a low-key anthemic chorus showcasing the power in Hanna’s lower range, whilst Olsson effortlessly knocks out another of those classic goth rock No Time To Cry riffs.


 



The shimmering Missionesque guitars are also prominent in Consumed, one of the teaser tracks for the album, with Rippin bashing out a metronomic beat allowing Kappeler and Olsson’s duelling guitars to build a rich patchwork for another slab of melodic goth rock.

The up-tempo penultimate track All I Never Wanted begins with a no-nonsense riff and verse which are very reminiscent of 80’s German goth rock act Calling Dead Red Roses, leading to an understated chorus befitting the lyrically downbeat theme, with Hanna at his most vulnerable in a stripped-back middle eight.

The album is closed by the bombastic title track, Two Worlds Collide, which starts with the portentous couplet “Somewhere in time, lost in a void”. The goth cliché book is very much in evidence with “burning embers” leading to “flames”, “beautiful nightmares” that don’t last, and unrequited love which leaves the protagonist “dying all over again”.

All in all, in Two Worlds Collide, October Burns Black have created a perfect album of contemporary gothic rock, with a cosily familiar vibe, paying tribute to the legends of the 80’s scene whilst never straying into parody or plagiarism. The professional production values (with Simon Rippin on production and additional guitarist Gordon Young responsible for the pin-sharp mastering) which extend to the impressive occult goth sigils created for each track by Billyphobia, ensure that this release will remain a siren call to those who still yearn for the powerful yet beautiful melancholy of the traditional gothic rock sound.


 Two Worlds Collide is released today and is available via Bandcamp

 

 

Thursday, June 2, 2022

The best Goth/Post-Punk Releases of May 2022

May 2022 saw the Cruel World festival take place in California, certainly the greatest gathering of the alternative tribe this decade and arguably one of the strongest line-ups this millennium of bands from the original wave, with Bauhaus stealing the show with a stellar performance. The month also sadly saw the loss of some leading musicians of the genre, such as Depeche Mode’s Andy Fletcher and Cathal Coughlan of Fatima Mansions fame. In terms of new music, it was a particularly bountiful month for new releases in Europe, with most of this month’s top twenty new releases hailing from “the Old Continent”, and primarily from nations such as Italy, Poland, Sweden, Germany and France, where the alternative scene remains strong.


1.       Kill Shelter ft Agent Side Grinder – The Necklace

Edinburgh darkwave project Kill Shelter shot to the forefront of the current scene with debut album Damage in 2018, allying a strong set of songs which combined both the dark electro dancefloor trend with more traditional descending bassline guitar-based goth, with a stellar cast of guest vocalists from the current scene. Teaser single The Necklace from forthcoming album Asylum further refines Pete Burns’ musical vision, allying his own dark, syncopated rhythms with dystopian, distant vocals from Sweden’s Agent Side Grinder.


2.       Then Comes Silence – Chain

The second single pre-released from July’s sixth album Hunger sees Swedish post-punk giants at their most creative whilst retaining their essential drive and melody. Chain, which features Karolina Engdahl from True Moon on backing vocals, begins with a galloping whirlwind of a riff which brings to mind The Dead Cry For No-One from their breakthrough album Blood, but also features some fascinating modulations and dynamic switch-ups on a track which will only further whet appetites for one of the most eagerly-anticipated albums of the year.


3.       JE T’AIME – Kiss The Boys (and make them DIE)

Then Comes Silence mainman Alex Svenson also guests on one of the tracks on a new stand-alone single (with profits going to the Red Cross Ukraine appeal) from the French saviours of post-punk, JE T’AIME, who had already in 2022 released arguably the strongest contender so far for Album of the Year in Passive. Kiss The Boys features all the same features which made the album such a delight, strong high-pitched Cure-esque vocals from dBoy, jangly gaze guitars, wonky sequenced electro dancefloor riffs and an overall ambiance of effortless off-kilter dark pop cool that fans of bands like Actors will appreciate.


4.       The Doctors - Modern

Classic French post-punk from Bordeaux act The Doctors, with a driving bass backbeat, genius string-bending deathrock guitar in the style of Der Himmel uber Berlin (is there any higher praise?), and a spoken word vocal on Modern, the title track from the band’s first new album for six years. “Tout à fait mortel” is not only the key lyric, but a great one-line summary of this loud and in-your-face, killer track on a typically excellent Icy Cold release.


5.       Cabaret Grey - Cold Calculations

The opening of Cold Calculations by Poland’s Cabaret Grey takes me right back to the early 1980’s, when The Cure’s A Forest and the latest 4AD releases were all the rage. A simple backbeat, a busy guitar and bass backing and a strong female vocal recall the ambiance of that wonderful debut Second Still album of 2017. Classy driving coldwave post-punk at its best, Cabaret Grey’s wonderful new LP also features the three excellent tracks from 2018’s sold out Freezing Point EP.


6.       Tasen Tea Party – Fiction Turned Real

The prolific Norwegian act has released a plethora of tracks recently, all within the coldwave genre, of which Fiction Turned Real is arguably the most dynamic. Distant reverb guitar, atmospheric keyboards and low-key vocals all contribute to a powerful third generation post-punk vibe.


7.       Ghosting – The Order of Things

Ghosting, like London After Midnight and Suspiria, are synonymous with the slightly camp cheesy dark disco branch of goth which sustained the genre in clubs in the latter part of the second generation. Who amongst us hasn’t sucked their cheeks in and strutted slowly around the dimly-lit sticky dancefloor of a provincial basement dives to the earworm delights of The Lion King? Sascha Tayefeh continues his comeback with a new track which doesn’t stray far from that original blueprint, and although The Order of Things doesn’t quite have the same epic chorus as some of his earlier classics, the original dark dancefloor vibe survives intact.


8.       IC2 – Bad Moon Light

The one-man Italian project from Italy is back with an excellent EP which fuses the miserable cool of French coldwave crossed with a more tribal backing more reminiscent of a mellow Killing Joke. Title track Bad Moon Light canters along energetically with a strong hook and a well-developed sense of dynamics.


9.       Gallows’ Eve – Death Magic

The Red Lorry Yellow Lorry reminiscent intro to Death Magic gets Malmo goth rock combo Gallows’ Eve’s new Five Hexes EP off to a very strong start, and the trad goth vibe continues on the remainder of not only the opening track but the release as a whole. The languid vocal and driving chorus has the controlled power and brooding melancholy of early 90’s bands like The Catherine Wheel.


10.   Bells of Soul – Your Name in the Sky (single remix)

The Brazilian act’s latest release has a spooky intro motif which re-appears through this somewhat unsettling song, a sparse arrangement and a meandering vocal adding to the b-movie vibe of a song which in an earlier form featured on Bells of Souls’ debut album in 2005.


11.   Yakutian Cult – Downpour

Rough and ready deathrock punk from Poland that rumbles along in a vaguely menacing manner. Their Bandcamp strapline “gloomy people who make gloomy music for other gloomy people” is a perfect description of their stark sound, which features barked vocals over a distorted guitar and burbling bass backing, a metronomic beat propelling the song ever onwards.


12.   Air Midnight – Dance of the Vampires

More gloomy goth rock from Poland, this time with more trad goth rock vibes, with a baritone vocal intoning a tale of the “dance of the vampires at the masquerade”, one of the most derivative lyrics I’ve heard this year (and there has been plenty of competition). This track, and others including previous single Rise from the Grave (are you spotting a theme here?) are compiled on a new five-track from Air Midnight which is now available to pre-order.

13.   Cemetary Girlz – Eternal Night

Great occult goth guitars dominant the lush dark soundscape of the great new single from Parisian goth trio Cemetary Girlz. The haunted house claustrophobia of first-generation goth pioneers UK Decay combines with the gloomgaze deathrock of contemporary acts like Vazum on the seven minute epic Eternal Night, the first track to be released from this Autumn’s LP L’envol du Corbeau (“The Crow’s Flight”).


14.   Lords of the Northern Sky – Selene

The latest of a regular series of single releases, Selene combines the one-man Scottish project’s usual unashamedly retro atmospheric gothic rock with a more uplifting pop sensibility, giving the new release more of a Bunnymen vibe at times.


15.   Bleakness – Dancing with Darkness

The teaser track from the Lyon (France) band’s forthcoming album Life At A Standstill is a cracking slab of grungy gothic punk metal, with an energy not unlike that of The Wraith. Whilst some goths’ coping mechanism is to withdraw into moody introspection, others man the barricades with polemical fury, and Dancing with Darkness places Bleakness firmly in the latter category.


16.   Rammstein – Schwarz

I hesitated before including Rammstein in this month's round-up, as they are widely considered to be more metal than goth, but their latest album Zeit will surely once again be the biggest-selling goth-related album of the year, and musically-speaking, they feature here on merit. Despite the occasional frat boy lyrics, puerile videos and live show pyrotechnics, underneath the schlock horror Rammstein have delivered another varied but impressive album of dark, doom-laden gothic metal, of which Schwarz is arguably the most interesting track to the wider gothic community. As might be expected from the title, Schwarz is an ode to nyctophilian melancholy, with a suitably slow-burning epic gothic chorus, with Till Lindemann's trademark distinctive vocal delivery adding significantly to the overall impression.


17.   Christian Death – The Warning

The legendary West Coast death rock band’s latest album Season of Mist dropped this month, with The Warning the latest single from it. After a spookily chilling intro made all the more shocking by the Jimmy Saville footage in the video, the song veers through an impressive range of styles from full-on Manson/Ministry neo-industrial goth metal to more subtle, almost ambient passages.


18.   Red Moon Macabre – Ages

The latest single from Renzo Tellez’s one-man project is another powerful piece of doomy trad goth rock. A lolloping bass line, great guitar lines and a strong, deep echoing vocal intoning a tale of “paradise lost” make this a real treat for fans of occult gothic rock.


19.   Attic Frost – Happy Faces

Hailing from Bremen in northern Germany, “DIY-goth-wave” act Attic Frost create a real impression on Happy Faces, the lead track from new album A New Kind of Hopelessness which features an echoing vocal amongst an ambiance of melancholy claustrophobia, with the kind of disquieting soundscape twists and turns that fans of The Soft Moon and Vlimmer will probably enjoy.


20.   The Low Room - Nevermore

Formed by former members of the trad goth UK act The Hearse, who put out an excellent debut album on Oskar Terramortis’ Gothic Rock records in the mid-2010’s, The Low Room released their debut track Nevermore right at the end of the month. Fans of The Hearse will recognise the song as a different version of the closing track from that band's album, with the band’s guitar-based 90’s style Nephilimistic no-nonsense gothic rock sound slightly beefed up on a song building superbly through an extended opening sequence.