voxmonster wrote:
If you guys haven't seen this, you should check it out. Hilarious!!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KsMKOx6fumc
What the heck does that have to do with this topic?
Anyway, thanks for the review Zad. I was pretty let down by this album, even though I'll score it about where you did. Like voxmonster, trapt, and you hinted at, Barghest was a monster of an ep. Kneel to Doomsday (the heaviest track on the album) was the preview track they released, and Andy Craighan (their guitarist) indicated this album would be similarly epic and feature the same mix of vocal stylings. But it turns out he was wrong: those heavier tracks apparently were pushed to an ep later this year. He also said this softer style would be the style of their full-lengths for the foreseeable future. And that is a shame, because the band has always been at their best when they maximize the dynamics between clean and harsh vocals. Barghest, Turn Loose the Swans, The Dreadful Hours, all these recordings are unparalleled in their subgenre of doom, unlike A Map of All Our Failures.
That said, it does resemble, in some of its best moments (I liked the title track's lyrical gloom and Abandoned as Christ's surprising minimalism most) the band's best clean vocal album, The Angel and the Dark River. The problem is this album usually refracts back through lesser recent clean vocal albums like Line of Deathless Kings or For Lies I sire to get back towards Angel and the Dark River. Furthermore, the impressive thing about MDB's first three full albums was the rapid progression in each: As the Flower Withers is basically slow death metal, and The Angel...is light, almost gothic doom, with Turn Loose the Swans serving as the bridge between the two. That stark change probably made Angel and the Dark River more memorable than it would have otherwise been.
And now with all those early albums long since past, and the clear strength of the heavier Light at the End, Dreadful Hours, Songs of Darkness trilogy in comparison to the weaker, softer albums before and after them, I don't have as much patience for another Angel and the Dark River, as great as that album was back in its time. The real strength of the band is the atmosphere and night/day dynamics demonstrated in Barghest, supported from by far the most talented drummer among their peers (Shaun Steels is so good in the studio that David Grey, formerly of Akercocke, now plays live for them). While A Map is extremely well executed, and worth several listens, it is not the album I wanted, nor is it the album that demonstrates their greatest potential. If you preferred Barghest like I did, hopefully the ep next year will deliver similarly.