Дополнительный стиль: Stoner Doom Metal Общая продолжительность: 2 CD, 01:43:22 Albums / Альбомы:
2003 - Laments (320 kbps) Продолжительность: 00:52:27 Треклист: 01. Healing 02. Times 03. Suburban Boogie 04. Black Faced Witch 05. Sleepless 06. The Art Of Being Lost 07. The Coldest Day - The Story Of the Holy Drinker
2004 - The Coldest Day (128 kbps) Продолжительность: 00:50:55 Треклист: 01. Monday 02. Thursday 03. Tuesday 04. Wednesday 05. Friday 06. Saturday 07. Sunday 08. Doomsday 09. Hidden Track Review: Shepherd-The Coldest Day
Shepherd describe themselves as 70's riff-rock mixed with dark doom and apparently, The Coldest Day is their second and final release, after a break up due to artistic differences. Listening to this release, you'd never know that the band was on the verge of splitting up.
Built on riffs, but carried by the vocals, The Coldest Day manages to sound soulful and southern. The strange thing about that, is the fact that these musicians hail from Germany. I didn't think a German band could make me want to go throw rocks in the Mississippi River on a rainy day, but the cut entitled "Monday" makes me want to do just that. Distant, lulling, haunting vocals guide this song through its foggy atmosphere and as it enters its final minute, there is an outburst of rock n' roll and a painful scream reminding me of Kurt Cobain on the Bleach album. That is what makes this vocal performance so interesting for me, the variety from one song to the next. For the track "Tuesday" take James Hetfield(Metallica), cross him with My Own Prison era Scott Stapp(Creed) and you get an interesting doom voice. This selection plods along at a medium pace before "Wednesday" slows things back down, returns to the southern feeling vibe and releases vocals that would fit into the Bob Dylan stereotype category. Listen and you may see what I mean. Following up is "Thursday" and it features the most soulful vocal performance yet and well-timed drumming. The drums don't stand out and lead the way, but add to the overall effect and give the songs more power. "Friday" is a brief instrumental followed by, you might have guessed it, "Saturday" which sounds like a mix of the first two songs and is probably the most grooving this record has to offer. "Sunday" features the best leads on the album and the most interesting group of riffs. Clocking in at over 9 minutes it is also the record's longest song, next to the following cut, "Doomsday." This song measures in at 31:29, but I wouldn't waste my time listening to the entire thing, just skip to the final four minutes or so to hear an actual song. The rest is pretty much sludgy noise, spoken word passages, silence and strangely placed saxophone. If that sounds like your thing, go for it, if not, proceed to skip a good 28 minutes of this album.
Now, I'm not the most familiar with Doom Metal, but I do know that it revolves in large part around slower, powerful riffs and this album has plenty of that, though it is certainly at its peak when the pace quickens. A lot of parts remind me of Dixie Witch and their album, Into the Sun, especially the more southern rock styled pieces that grabbed my attention the most. I enjoyed the riffs and the vocal performance was interesting and added a lot of variation to the musical formula. The album really should have ended after “Sunday”, which would have cut the album time in half and made it a more cohesive unit. Opener “Monday” is also by far the album's best song.
As a note, this band has been compared to Electric Wizard by some, having never heard that band, I couldn't tell you whether the comparison is warranted, but if it will help you make a decision, all the better. It's a shame Shepherd had to disband after releasing so little material, I would have liked to see an album full of songs like “Monday”, but it doesn't seem that will happen. A good album that has made my interest in Doom grow slightly, but for the initiated, it may not be what you’re looking for.
7/10
Состав группы: Последний состав: Nico Kozik - Bass Tobias Engel - Drums (ex-Android Empire) Oliver Bojoski - Guitars (Android Empire) Milan - Vocals
Бывшие участники: Andreas Kohl - Vocals
О группе: Formed in Berlin, Germany 2001. Disbanded in 2004.
Germany's Shepherd, a brand-new doom outfit on the very eclectic Exile on Mainstream label, already has their cred down pat. I opened up the info sheet that came with the CD only to be greeted by the word DOOM in gazillion-point German Gothic font, with a quote about what a great band they are. No information on personnel, influences, gigs, nothing. Incidentally, the quote was by none other than riffing doom god Wino himself. Interested? I was.
One of Shepherd's co-founders is Andreus Kohl; he's also Exile on Mainstream's labelmeister and the artist who reportedly did the work for the elegant CD booklet, featuring doomy romantic graveyards, animal skulls, and derelict ocean liners. So far so good, but what about the music? Well, its old-school riffing doom with a taste of sludge for good measure. Shepherd is not about pushing musical boundaries; rather, they're updating trad doom for the new century. Lets put it this way: if the Hellhound label were still in business, Shepherd would be their latest signing. The songwriting is consistently good throughout the disc, with long, mid-paced songs emphasizing various elements such as stoner (вЂSuburban Boogie') or space (вЂArt of Being Lost') overlaid onto the solid bedrock of musical influences such as St. Vitus, Lost Breed, Obsessed, and Internal Void. The last two tunes on the disc come closer to newer Electric Wizard or Sons of Otis territory, steeped as they are in doom/sludge goodness.
Shepherd deserves to take their place alongside the newest wave of doom masters such as Orodruin, Thunderstorm, and Pale Divine, and yet they are clearly on their own program, not sounding quite like anyone else. Write the label site above and pick up on some sweet misery.
~ Kevin McHugh
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