Brian F. (foliage) from BAYSIDE, NY Reviewed on 8/2/2013...
billy bragg, shelby lynne, lynyrd skynyrd, tony bennett sings ellington, freedy johnston
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CD Reviews
Coherent and captivating.
jazzy modes | Vancouver, Canada. | 01/22/2008
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Black Mountain - the most public face of the Vancouver-based "Army" of the same name, a collective of likeminded musicians with amps set to nerve-stun levels and guitars possessed by wailing blues ghouls - have been busy since the release of their self-titled debut in 2005.
Following the sleeper success of their debut Black Mountain - which saw them invited to support Coldplay on a North American arena tour - the band apparently cloistered themselves in the studio to record for 14 days straight, barely pausing to eat or see daylight.
The second album from the Canadian prog band continues to take the basic musical building blocks of duelling guitars and pounding drums to construct a rock monster.
This is a CD alive with tales of witches, demons, sun cults, and one 17-minute song, "Bright Lights", whose sole lyrics warn us of impending war, destruction and darkness.
Stephen McBean and his buddies don't hold back, with "Tyrants" - a 1970s metal moan against anonymous bad men - stretching over eight minutes in a face-shredding three-part epic, while "Bright Lights" - with its ambitious but unwieldy mixture of electroacoustic free noise and clumping rock grooves - clocks in at twice that.
Amber Weber's vocals add depth to the riffmungus workouts, ranging from Thin Lizzy-style repetition to more contemplative passages in "Wucan".
Through ragingly volatile highs and purposely sluggish lows - more ups than downs, literally and critically - "Black Mountain" surely show off their greatest recording achievement to date here.
It's captivating, cosmic stuff. The band (who all still hold down day jobs as mental healthcare and drug rehabilitation workers) switch between swamp and space with admirable grace, held together by singer Amber Webber's remarkably full-lunged vocals and Stephen McBean's bleak vision of the world.
Standouts : "Stormy High" and "Stay Free"."
Thunder mountain
Glennrock | ny | 02/06/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Great CD. Thundering drums, interesting and varied song arrangements. If you like led Zeppelin's song "no quarter" this CD is for you. Heavy, dark and ominous psych rock at its best."
WHOA!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Samuel B. King | Concord, NH | 03/31/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I heard this yesterday at the local record store and immediately grabbed it. This is one of those rare gems you infrequently get turned on to. Just one more reason to lament the demise of CD stores in favor of online downloading, eh? For everyone over 50, picture this: What if Grace Slick had been the lead singer of 70s era King Crimson? Great stuff!! A truly unique mixture of influences. Like the retro synth, B3 and acoustic sounds!!"
Esoteric, Retro Prog-Rock Psychadelia
Joel Israel | Cedar City, UT United States | 03/18/2008
(4 out of 5 stars)
"I was quite surprised at how much I enjoyed this album, after realizing how much it reminded me of many seminal '70s prog rock and psychadelic bands from my flaming youth....pages from the playbooks of Pink Floyd (especially in their use of vintage keys and synth sounds), Led Zeppelin, early Black Sabbath and Rush, and more surprisingly, Uriah Heep and Blue Cheer are liberally plundered, but Black Mountain more than manage to give it a style of their own. Very cool, relaxing and rhythmic rock music with some nice folk and prog leanings...you can practically smell the incense. Or IS that incense? (laughs)"