Genre: Doom Metal
Style: Death Metal
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© 2009 Peaceville Records
AllMusic Review by Thom Jurek
It's hard to imagine that after 2006's brilliant A Line of Deathless Kings, it took three long years for Great Britain's My Dying Bride to issue a studio follow-up. True, there was a great live offering in the interim in 2008's An Ode to Woe, but For Lies I Sire,
the goth and doom metal outfit's ninth studio offering since 1990,
showcases a rather startling evolution in the band's sound. While it's
true that A Line of Deathless Kings
was brutally gloomy and depressing, it only pointed the way toward the
shades and shadows of loss and darkness found here. Nearly 20 years
after the band's inception, vocalist Aaron Stainthope
is singing better than ever, and his lyrics are beautifully poetic and
streamlined. Gone are the wordy tomes of the early years, replaced by
the pointed, poignant, grief-stricken, utterly lost reflections of
hopelessness and despair, the kind that come from the human heart rather
than the goth music scene. Musically, the riffs have been cut to the
bone as well. While the Sabbath-styled
guitar and basslines are still there, they've become simpler, more
straightforward, and textured with a lush yet devastatingly effective
layer of violins. It's there in the reflections on ruined tenderness
that inaugurate "My Body, A Funeral," the set's opener, which gives way
to something eerie, plodding, and multi-dimensionally heavy as guitars,
basses, snares, bass drums, and violins all seek to crescendo together.
It's there in the more chant-like, metallic, malevolent bitterness of
"Bring Me Victory," where ringing basslines meet keyboards and violins
atop roiling tom-toms and a more insistent tempo (which is the greatest
sideways resurrection tune about Jesus ever). It's also there in the
lithe, languid drift that is "Shadow Haunt," and the sprawling doom
metal suite "Death Triumphant," that closes the set with washes of taut
riffs, atmospheric waves of sound, ambience, and dirge-like strings.
What "it" is, is the elemental discovery by My Dying Bride
of a sound that pushes the doom metal attack of yesteryear toward the
margin where it entwines sensuously -- and inseparably -- with gothic
rock, in a meld that bears no signature but the band's. MDB
has so seamlessly metamorphosed, lyrically, musically, and sonically,
that they've effectively created their own subgenre of goth while
retaining enough of their earlier M.O. to keep old fans, while no doubt
gathering to themselves a legion of new ones -- who have little to no
use for doom or goth metal -- in the process. For those veterans who've
enjoyed A Line of Deathless Kings, The Angel and the Dark River, and even Turn Loose the Swans, this is for you. For the curious, For Lies I Sire
is an excellent place to begin to investigate one of the most genuinely
enigmatic bands to have emerged from the 20th century more inspired and
visionary than before. And for the veteran fan, who will in no way be
disappointed, this is brilliant work.
tags: my dying bride, for lies i sire, 2009, flac,
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