Just Before Dawn Precis Innan Gryningen 2013 Chaos Records It seems like everyone has at least one side band these days. In some cases, you can't even tell which is someone's main band and whichis their "musical playground." Just Before Dawn happens to belong to guitarist Anders Biazzi, who you might know from BloodMortized, or under the name "Anders Hansson," as an early member of Amon Amarth. Apparently, this was originally going to be a project with the Riffmaster General himself, Rogga Johansson -- who was only going to handle the lyrics and vocals, Anders would write all of the music himself. Somehow or another though, it turned into a more underground version of Fred Estby's Necronaut. If you missed that project,it featured Fred on most of the instruments, with vocals by the likes of Tomas Lindberg, JB of Grand Magus, Dread (better known as Andreas Axelsson), andErik Danielsson of Watain. Just Before Dawn however, features a bunch of vocalists from not-so well known great bands... Rogga, of course, as wellas Jonas Lindblood of Puteraeon, Mr. Hitchcock of Zombiefication, Ralf Hauber of Revel in Flesh, and Tony Freed of Godhate. Gustav Myrin, who plays guitar in Blood Mortized tried his hand behind the mic as well, as did one Dennis Johansson, whose other bands Plästerd and HeadstonedI'm unfortunately not familiar with. Personally, I'm more in favor of having a more regular lineup with just one vocalist, rather than going the"Probot" route. Still, it does more or less work out here, and for me, it's more about the fucking RIFFS. Holy crap. The short band bio describes the soundas a mix of Bolt Thrower and Asphyx. How many times have we heard that, only to be utterly disappointed and let down? Well, not this time! Each track managesto capture the massive sound of Bolt Thrower minus the "war feeling," which has been replaced with the morbidity of Asphyx. Although the album cover appears todepict a scene from World War II, I do not believe that the lyrics are specifically about that war or time period. There is a fascination with the machines of war though, withone song about a submarine and two more about tanks. Images of tank treads crushing fleshless skulls come to mind very quickly (like that scene in "Terminator 2"), as do recollections of thefirst twenty minutes of "Saving Private Ryan," with bullets flying, men dying, chaos abounding and death gods laughing. All of this... just before dawn.
Banished From Inferno Minotaur 2012 Metal Inquisition Records I was originally under the impression that Banished From Inferno was yet another of Rogga Johansson's many, manyprojects. I thought the mini-CD from a few years ago was brilliant, and now along comes "Minotaur" ... withoutRogga. I'll be honest, I was a little worried at first. You see, there was another band he was involved infor one album, called Sinners Burn. Their first album, "Pre-mortal Autopsy" was brilliant. Then he left, and the followup"Mortuary Rendezvous" came across as lacking (but I must say that their third effort was a raging beast). But it turns out that my fearswere completely misplaced. You see, Banished From Inferno was never exactly "his" project. He contributedvocals on the debut, but it was the Spanish members of the band that did all the heavy lifting, and they're notexactly lightweights themselves.Julkarn also does time in Graveyard, and Rober Bustabad is in Machetazo. Thenthere's drummer Phlegeton, also of Godus and Wormed. Can't say that I'm familiar with vocalist Balc's other bandsthough (Balmog, Scent of Death). But with guys in bands like those, it's not a surprise that Banished From Inferno sound like a moregrind-influenced Swedish death metal band. But from Spain. And don't let that mention of grind scare you off.There's far less of that here than there was on Napalm Death's "Harmony Corruption." But what there is of ithelps keep things from completely sounding Swedish, adding a bit of flavor to really give the band it's ownidentity. So yeah, Banished From Inferno is in good hands. But then, it always was.
Bombs of Hades The Serpent's Redemption 2012 Pulverised Records Yep. A new album from these "old school is the only school" Swedes. In their short existence, Bombs of Hades hasmanaged to become one of my favorite bands of recent years, and I can't praise them enough. At times, I wonderwhat would have happened if they'd stuck with their original idea of playing crust punk, and then I start thinkingthat it would be cool if they brought in more of that influence to their sound, kind of like what Bones doeshere in the USA. Well, I don't have to wonder any more. On "The Serpent's Redemption," they've done that... but in a different way.Bones focuses more on the crust aspects. Bombs of Hades go back to the origins of d-beat (yes, I mean Discharge),and do a death metal oriented version of it. Anyone worried about this, don't be. There is no question that this is a death metal album.Both the title track and "Skull Collector" are concrete proof of that. This mixing of influences is what bands used to do, rather than simply copy what has gone before. If you need an example from the past of that, I would recommend you listen closely to Metallica's "Kill 'em All." They took elements of the NWOBHM, mainly from Holocaust, Blitzkrieg and Diamond Head, and put a new spin on them... that spin being the fledgling sound of thrash metal. You can absolutely hear those influences, but you can't say that Metallica sounded exactly like those bands. Bombs of Hades moreor less do the same thing, by taking d-beat, pulling in some Slayer-esque parts (check the solos on "Incubus Descending")and spinning it all into death metal. I should point out that just like with the previous album, "Chambers of Abominations,"this is not a "retro-band" in any way. This is true for two main reasons. First, you can't be a "retro-band" ifthe band is comprised of members who were there for the original scene. Second, Bombs of Hades do not try torecapture, imitate or emulate the sounds of 1989 to 1992. The foundation may be the same as what the retro typesare doing, but the music constructed upon that foundation is not. Put simply, Bombs of Hades do not sound likesome kind of recently exhumed "lost" band of two decades ago. That is why they stand well above a lot of other bands.They're doing their own thing and taking the classic sound forward... rather than living backwards.
Howling A Beast Conceived 2013 Razorback Records Right from the opening riff of "As Man Becomes Lycanthrope," you can tell that Howling is not like most death metalbands you've heard before. It's a full on early "Metal Blade Records" type riff, more akin to something off an Omenalbum. Get used to it, because there's a lot more where that came from, along with others that might well remindyou of early Iron Maiden. Definitely not your typical death metal fare. I mean, check out the soloing that comeshalfway through "Demented Debauchery." When's the last time you heard something like that on a death metal album?The lineup here is 2/3 of the much missed Beyond Hell (well, missed by me at least), with Tony Proffer on guitars (and writing all the music) and Elektrokutioner on drums. Handling the vocals and all lyrics is VanessaNocera (who while not as prolific as Elektrokutioner is well on her way to being there). Lyrically, Vanessa takesall of her inspiration from late 70s and 1980s horror movies, with the earliest being "The Fog" and "Tourist Trap" from 1979, and the most recent as "Pumpkinhead" from 1988. A whole gamut of ghoulish nasties is covered, fromwerewolves to murderous mothers to supernatural entities intent on gore and dismemberment. Based off just the title,I was a little surprised that "When the Hills Ran Red" wasn't inspired by "The Hills Have Eyes," but there's always next time. So yeah, this is cool little album of terror, although things aren't completely perfect. "A Night in theCrypt" has a riff more suited to maybe newer Entombed, and "The Hills Ran Red" starts with something that soundsvaguely familiar... kind of reminds me of some black thrash album? It'll probably come to me right after I publish this.