Darkest Day
Obituary
- Style
- Death Metal
- Label
- Candlelight
- Year
- 2009
- Reviewed by
- James
/ 100
Goat:
Killing songs: <i> List Of Dead, Darkest Day, This Life </i>
After the stellar Left To Die
EP, my personal introduction to Obituary,
I
was eagerly awaiting a new studio full-length from the band. Turns
out I didn't have long to wait, as Darkest
Day
has arrived just short of a year later. It's more of the same sludgy,
raw death metal Obituary
are
known for (Trevor Peres' hulking colossus of a guitar tone still
owes a great deal to Tom G. Warrior). I'm slightly disappointed to
say that although the riffs are still very much present, the
production job is a bit less filthy this time. And although Trevor
Peres always has a knack for a riff you can nod your head to, he's
definitely stepped that up a bit here .In fact, much of the time it's
downright catchy, the band appealing as much to newcomers as to
old-school fans.Lead-off single Blood
To Give
is possibly the most straightforward thing the band have cut to date,
rolling along on a riff that's only a few steps removed from prime
Pantera.
Not
that this is a sell-out, of course. Obituary
are
still very much the same band they've always been, and they can still
write a tune as heavy as anything. Opener List
Of Dead
is an absolute stormer, throwing downtuned thrash riffs at you left
right and centre, the track lit up with Ralph Santolla's solos (and
there are about five here). Indeed, Santolla seems to contribute a
lot more than he did on Left
To Die,
peeling off scorching licks with ease. At the other end of the
spectrum, the title track is a doom metal monster, sounding like
Hellhammer
at their most primal. Of course, it's all held together with John
Tardy's man-monster roar (one of the best death metal vocalists about
today, no question). Indeed, although the first half or so of the
album has some fairly hooky, accessible material along the lines of
the aforementioned Blood
To Give
and the monstrously pissed-off Payback,
the title track seems to mark a shift into a much darker, heavier
side of the band, This
Life
following Darkest
Day
in the same torturous sludgy fashion. It's almost as if the first few
songs were a primer, gently easing neophytes in before hitting them
with death metal at it's most savage. Obituary's
mission statement has always been about creating a dark, sinister
atmosphere rather than simply smacking you over the head with
relentless blastbeats. And in a world where so many bands race to be
the fastest and most “brutal” rather than, you know,
writing a memorable riff, an album as staunchly unaffected by trends
as Darkest Day
really is a breath of fresh air.
When
most legendary bands reunite, it's usually a short-lived affair, old
wounds reopening faster than before, and that combined with the fact
the band in question usually don't have the songwriting chops or the
energy they used to usually means reunions are a rather unneccesary
coda to the history of a once-great band. So for the Obituary
reunion to still be in full swing five years later, the band having
released three albums and an EP in that period, really is remarkable.
And for Darkest
Day to
be as good as any death metal album released this year is more
remarkable yet. Bands who claim to march under the banner of death
metal may be a dime-a-dozen these days, but few bands lead the pack
in quite the same way as Obituary.