Genre: Progressive Metal, Heavy Metal
Label Number: 543021-2
.FLAC via Florenfile
.AAC 256 kbps via Florenfile
© 2014 Reprise Records
AllMusic Review by Thom Jurek
.FLAC via Florenfile
.AAC 256 kbps via Florenfile
© 2014 Reprise Records
AllMusic Review by Thom Jurek
Given the title of its sixth release, it's fair to wonder if Mastodon is hinting at 2011's The Hunter or its back catalog. Many of the tracks on Once More 'Round the Sun
dig into the band's seemingly inexhaustible bag of monstrous riffs and
wonderfully fractured motifs. That said, as a collective, they
unapologetically explore the more polished and accessible songwriting
and performing craft found on The Hunter. This set marks a fork in the road where Mastodon
evolves once more, to cross over from metal's angular, sludgy power to
adrenaline-fueled, hook-laden, hard rock. The album was produced by Nick Raskulinecz, best known for his work with Foo Fighters and Rush. The sound Mastodon
pursues here draws inspiration from the '70s, without remotely being an
exercise in nostalgia. There is one notable exception; it's deliberate
and obvious: "The High Road" boasts unapologizing Thin Lizzy worship, albeit ambitiously updated. (Who better?) Its verse/riff structure weds Lynott's rhythmic sensibility to Mastodon's dynamic aggression. The anthemic chorus melody and harmonies, and twinned lead guitar roar, were trademarked by Lizzy's Brian Robertson and Scott Gorham
long ago. "Chimes at Midnight" is intense, fueled by a mammoth chugging
riff. It lets the "drop D" freak flag fly, with a near-shouted vocal,
harmonic chorus, and spacy six-string interludes. "The Motherload," with
its swaggering guitar heroics, is a wound-out yet nearly hummable prog
melody, with a relentless bass and snare attack. "Aunt Lisa," with its
knotty guitar intro, contains processed vocals, a series of rising and
falling key changes, and the Coathangers guesting -- cheerleader style -- in a chanted vocal chorus à la Faith No More's
"Be Aggressive!" There are also some substantive guitar pyrotechnics in
the extended solos in "Halloween" and "Ember City," which, due to their
imagination and focus, add dimension to them as songs. "Diamond in the
Witch House" is a sprawling, nearly eight-minute closing jam. Neurosis' Scott Kelly and his menacing growl guest as it lumbers, trudges, and lurches ever forward (longtime fans will likely dig this). Once More 'Round the Sun furthers what Mastodon began on The Hunter: expanding their music past metal's rigid borders -- toward an integrative sound that doesn't leave metal out.
tags: mastodon, once more round the sun, 2014, flac,
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