Below Zero
Waltari
- Style
- Quirky Heavy Rock/Metal
- Label
- Stay Heavy Records
- Year
- 2009
- Reviewed by
- Aleksie
/ 100
Killing songs: Below Zero, In The Cradle, Without Lies, Dubbed World, Syntax Error, My Own Satisfaction & Travel On
Two years removed from the delightfully space-metallic and out-there Release
Date, Waltari has simplified their stylings for the latest
offering, Below Zero. The opening title track begins with some heavy
groovy guitar riffage accompanied by some bass-heavy piano and a subtle electronic
beats. Yeah, leave it to Waltari to make that mix actually work.
A very catchy chorus ensues with singer Kärtsy Hatakka displaying his skills
in the clean department. As usual, the man goes through great smooth vocals, hoarse
grunts and wacky tones that would fit somewhere between Ian Andersson and Mike
Patton as the songs keep churning. He’s still got a damn impressive range.
The proggy leanings of the previous record have been replaced with much shorter
song structures and a, shall I say, punky vibe that is reminiscent of Waltari’s
earliest days when fast and short was their forte. These guys have also never
been afraid to groove in mighty fashion and this album really plays into that
as ass-kickers like Without Lies and My Own Satisfaction (awesome
chorus on this one as well) bring some funkin’ into the mix.
The most metallic offerings are blasted out with Syntax Error (gang
shouts made for a live setting) and the album closer Travel On (until
the keyboard-laden chorus, I’m getting visions of Finnish speed-legends
Stone). Even beyond these tunes, my favourite tune here is
In The Cradle, a fabulous piece of driving metal-n-rock with a brilliant
guitar solo by Sami Yli-Sirniö (yes, of Kreator-fame).
It bears redundant repeating that I’ve never been a fan of rock bands
using electronic sounds but this track alone perfectly shows (again) how Waltari
makes them work, especially when combined with keyboard layers for a superb
atmospheric mix.
The band’s playing is super-tight throughout and the production doesn’t
leave anything to be desired, as it does an impressive job of keeping all the
different elements punchy and in balance. The only things hindering this album
are a few mediocre tracks (I Hear Voices, Endless Highway)
and my inability to forget about the utter awesomness of Release Date.
What I really adored on that record was the progginess and grandiose song structures
in the Cityshamaani-epic specifically. While the soundscape can get
really big on Below Zero as well, the songs overall are more bare bones
and simplified on a Waltari-scale. Still, fans of the band
should be very much into this material. For people not familiar with them, this
might actually be a more easily accessible album and thus a good choice if introducing
yourself to Waltari.