Plenty to be scared of in Fear's new release
Jameson Viens
Issue date: 10/27/05 Section: Arts and Entertainment
In the same way a book should never be judged by its cover, albums should be played in their entirety before they are determined to be good or bad-except in this case. The five-piece German band Primal Fear released its sixth studio recording this past Tuesday to high expectations, but unlike the group's flying eagle logo, this album does not soar.
Entitled Seven Seals after the biblical apocalypse in the Book of Revelation, Primal Fear's latest offering is a bit of a letdown. Rather than a continuation of the previous neck-thrashing releases, Seven Seals is a 10-track, mid-tempo project where all the songs sound painfully alike. As soon as the first song, "Demons and Angels," begins with choppy and distorted guitar riffs, it is clear that this album was, in fact, created by demons-and not in a good way.
In a recent press release from Nuclear Blast, the band's record company, Seven Seals is cited as "undoubtedly the most varied, epic and musically sophisticated album Primal Fear have released so far."
Unfortunately, the record comes up short, with what sounds like one long, tiresome song. While older releases such as 2001's Nuclear Fire and 2002's Black Sun hosted both fast and slow songs, Seven Seals drones from track to track with repetitive and textbook maneuvers.
Primal Fear is stylistically similar to classic hard rockers Judas Priest, right down to the infamous shrieking of Priest frontman Rob Halford.
Also, the sound of the driving dual guitars and up-tempo drums has been pulled out of heavy metal history, but this time, rather than sounding like an homage to classic metal, it comes off as stale and uninteresting.
What makes this album dull is not that the tracks are poorly constructed, but the fact that the album is full of songs without the thrash element of classic heavy metal, which aids in avoiding painful slow power ballads that plagued hard music during the 70s and 80s.
Vocalist Ralf Scheepers and company create tunes that will drive people insane with cheesy major chords and over the top melodies. Song titles like "Rollercoaster" and "Carniwar" are prime examples of the tacky and gaudy elements on this album.
Entitled Seven Seals after the biblical apocalypse in the Book of Revelation, Primal Fear's latest offering is a bit of a letdown. Rather than a continuation of the previous neck-thrashing releases, Seven Seals is a 10-track, mid-tempo project where all the songs sound painfully alike. As soon as the first song, "Demons and Angels," begins with choppy and distorted guitar riffs, it is clear that this album was, in fact, created by demons-and not in a good way.
In a recent press release from Nuclear Blast, the band's record company, Seven Seals is cited as "undoubtedly the most varied, epic and musically sophisticated album Primal Fear have released so far."
Unfortunately, the record comes up short, with what sounds like one long, tiresome song. While older releases such as 2001's Nuclear Fire and 2002's Black Sun hosted both fast and slow songs, Seven Seals drones from track to track with repetitive and textbook maneuvers.
Primal Fear is stylistically similar to classic hard rockers Judas Priest, right down to the infamous shrieking of Priest frontman Rob Halford.
Also, the sound of the driving dual guitars and up-tempo drums has been pulled out of heavy metal history, but this time, rather than sounding like an homage to classic metal, it comes off as stale and uninteresting.
What makes this album dull is not that the tracks are poorly constructed, but the fact that the album is full of songs without the thrash element of classic heavy metal, which aids in avoiding painful slow power ballads that plagued hard music during the 70s and 80s.
Vocalist Ralf Scheepers and company create tunes that will drive people insane with cheesy major chords and over the top melodies. Song titles like "Rollercoaster" and "Carniwar" are prime examples of the tacky and gaudy elements on this album.
2008 Woodie Awards
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