Genre: Heavy Metal, Thrash Metal
Label Number: 9062-2
.FLAC via Florenfile
.AAC 256 kbps via Florenfile
© 2014 Century Media
AllMusic Review by Gregory Heaney
.FLAC via Florenfile
.AAC 256 kbps via Florenfile
© 2014 Century Media
AllMusic Review by Gregory Heaney
Although the band might have been breaking in new singer Stu Block on its last album, 2011's Dystopia, Iced Earth's 11th studio album, Plagues of Babylon,
finds the band returning as a tighter unit whose members know how to
play to each other's strengths with a more collaborative effort. Where
the previous album primarily featured music written by founding member Jon Schaffer with lyrics by Block, Plagues of Babylon shows the beginnings of a burgeoning partnership between the two, as well as writing contributions from guitarist Troy Seele,
with the trio oftentimes sharing the writing duties on both sides of
the fence in some combination or other. The collaboration is one that
pays dividends for the band, which delivers an album that manages to
sound appropriately epic without feeling aimless. Thanks to his time in Into Eternity (a group that can string riffs together with the best of them), Block is no stranger to songs that evolve and shift, and songs that he and Schaffer
worked on together, like the ripping Western epic "Peacemaker," move
with purpose. With the songs always moving toward something new and
different, Plagues of Babylon
never feels like it's dragging its heels -- a boon, given its running
time of just over an hour. Instead, the album showcases a new creative
partnership that should excite longtime Iced Earth
fans (who are also treated to more entries in the ongoing Something
Wicked story line), as the heavy metal journeymen head into their third
decade of rocking.