Electric
Wizard have always been a hazy band for me - and maybe they want it to
be that way. I enjoy them and have no real idea why! Their fuzzy doom
has a way of seeping into my lungs and sticking to my red blood cells
thus entering every crevice of my flesh like a bizarre form of
radiation. The only clear defining characteristic of the Electric Wizard
sound that I have been able to collect is a garage-full-of-pot-smoke
jam style and though that may appeal to some, I've never been a smoker
or a real fan of "jamming." I don't like jam bands - not that Electric
Wizard are a jam band - or their "free-for-all" idea of "whatevaaaa man
just plaaaaayyyy."
This drugged out jamming style is
apparent from the moment the album lights up. "A Chosen Few" opens the
album with some background sound room voices gearing up before kicking
into Electric Wizard's 70's inspired doom. The whole album contains this
general laid back sentiment caked over with negativity and disdain and
yet the tone of the album still remains deeply ritualistic and darkly
occult. It is in my opinion the mysteries Oborn and his fellow sect of
doom priests have unveiled on this album have had some thick black
velvet cloaks draped over them. The album has an imbued sense of intense
soul, moving with to the ebbing and flowing riffs. There remains a
deeply personal meaning to every moment for each of the members
involved.
Electric
Wizard have never been afraid to get dirty in their career and a
natural approach to "Let Us Prey" is felt with the untouched feedback,
crisp burning smell of bass speakers at their brink of explosion and the
dynamic drums. Vocally Oborn is all over the basement like a snarling
angry dog barking, gnawing, groaning in frustration and generally
chasing the slow sweeping melodies in songs like "Master Of Alchemy" and
"The Outsider" like a giant steak tied to tail of a cat stapled to the
pants of the mailman tied up being dragged behind a bus.
My
only gripe with this album would be what I feel to be a stagnation in
ideas. Though the songs all sound different, some different textures
included in the heavier tracks would have displayed a bit more depth and
broken up what could be described as a muddying effect. All the songs
have the same styled solos, same styled riffs, same slow-mid tempos,
same phasing guitar effects... how about a fast song? How about a sound
with some clear up-front vocals? I know Electric Wizard have their own
sound and style and they do it well - many moments of "Let Us Prey" are
incredibly complex in the instrumental layering - but some variation
somewhere would be awesome. They are capable of doing this. They did it
on Dopethrone and they also did it on Witchcult Today, their newest
album but somewhere in between, they lost a bit of the spark it seems.
*WPSC
tag on the front cover from the radio station I work at. This disc was
found in their used bin. I had a pristine copy a while which I traded a
while back.
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