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Cathedral |
| by:
Vinnie Apicella
I'll first go on record
as saying I agree wholeheartedly with the final statement of the press
release-"classic Cathedral moments. perhaps the most well-rounded
album of their careers." Okay, that sounds like me-dance around the
definite, skirt slightly to the side, and throw around the "perhaps" or
"potentially" and all that. It's hard to argue that listening to the
doomsday practitioners seventh record-clever blokes they are-that it
ranks atop their many latter day visionary exploits where the doom and
gloom saw breaks in the clouds to allow in a little color and break
beyond the barriers as a more complete band. And I was probably one of
the few that really gunned 'em around the time "Caravan Beyond
Redemption" made its way and what's with this circus act going here?
Next thing you know it was in heavy rotation in my then college Metal
show and damn near in the other DJs' that I nearly managed to tear away
from their ICP shit but to no avail. Cathedral began life over a decade
ago, following in the footsteps of bands like Sabbath, Pentagram, St.
Vitus, all those age old cross burning, path marking models that sold
their soul years before anything closely resembling Dorrian made his
original descent. But years later, Lee and the band remain one of the
most revered groups within a tightly contested genre. which says a lot
when we look at final step of fellow forerunners found floating
somewhere amongst memory's garden. pun intended, not to mention the
"rise above" variety that Dorrian himself has helped groom through his
popular label. Upfront, we find "Phoenix Rising" making a bold return to
the earlier path where we first entered the "Forest," riding a sinister
riff that's a step above plodding and blackened as you first remembered;
""Skull Flower" is the "sleeper" hit of the early going, again traipsing
slowly down memory lane with an extra ounce of down tuning, a few
sequential breaks and driving bass; "The Empty Mirror" features a
mid-range stomp and grind, dousing Dorrian's voice in a denseness of
distort and catchy verse that's easy to latch onto and dare sing along
with-since the title's about all yer granted; "Iconoclast" is the
mid-'90s version combining hook and groove with "Left Hand" era
Entombed; For pure power "Congregation Of Sorcerer's" is hard to beat.
While up to this point, the songs have matched or surpassed the sinister
intent of darker days with the trademark time change and north/southward
tradeoffs prevailing upon the largesse of low-E's and atonally sour
theme impressing the magnitude of not just another here we go again
arrival. "The Seventh Coming," after all, why go there if you don't
mean it? At times we're driven to Blackened extremes in very close
proximity to where we were at the dawn of Black Metal and Thrash where
names like Venom and Frost first torched the underworld throne; So
returning back to the beginning, which Cathedral effectively does only
with a decade's worth experiential history and skill in tow, it's a
record that raises the intensity and deals the death blow to one
dimensional up and nowhere types who thought they might finally steal
thunder from the second wave of the original kings of evil. Not on
this day.
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