| フォーマット | CDアルバム |
| 発売日 | 2009年04月27日 |
| 国内/輸入 | 輸入(ヨーロッパ盤) |
| レーベル | Century Media |
| 構成数 | 1 |
| パッケージ仕様 | - |
| 規格品番 | 9978512 |
| SKU | 5051099785120 |
構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00
As they arrive at the third album of their erratic career, change (if not outright turmoil) has been the operative word to describe the trajectory of futuristic death metal band Daath: beginning with the independent obscurity of their first album, 2004's Futility; through to being anointed for potential greatness when their second, 2007's The Hinderers, was released by the world's most powerful heavy metal label, Roadrunner; and culminating in the lateral move of having their third, 2009's The Concealers, licensed to the more metal-focused Century Media. Thing is, the latter would be no cause for concern were it not for the preceding ejection of the band's founding keyboardist, major songwriter, and primary visionary, Mike Kameron. With him goes not only the group's daringly eclectic and oftentimes very innovative use of orchestrated synths and keys behind and betwixt their vicious death metal attack, but what was arguably Daath's single most distinguishing hallmark of steeping their lyrics in the mystical teachings of the Jewish Kabbalah. In their place, the reconfigured Daath have saddled their new songs with perfectly acceptable, but ultimately formulaic heavy metal topics of generalized negativity framed in violent imagery (all of them capably growled by new vocalist Sean Zatorsky). And without the symphonic flourishes, electronic beats, or industrial properties previously executed by Kameron, The Concealers projects a far less groundbreaking brand of modern death/thrash -- regardless of the insistently textured and still quite imaginative (relative to the competition) contributions of rhythm guitarist Eyal Levi, particularly "Self-Corruption Manifesto," "The Unbinding Truth," and "Wilting on the Vine." In fact, only the synth-driven interlude "Duststorm," the synthetic rhythms backing "...Of Poisoned Arrows," and the metronome-like precision of drummer Kevin Talley's hands and feet hark back at those once dominant industrial flavors. All this being said, if there's any one component still guaranteed to keep Daath in the American extreme metal game, it's the solo guitar work of Emil Werstler -- a human highlight reel who single-handedly rescues even the dullest song with his astonishing balance of taste and virtuosity, while pushing the aforementioned standouts (plus the semi-black metal flurry of "Day of Endless Night," where he ironically shows off jazz chops) to the next level. In the end, it will likely be his and Levi's formidable six-string interplay that will get Daath past this latest, radical shift of musical direction to the fourth stage of their so-far eventful career...whatever that ends up sounding like. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia
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