Ghostlines
The Chant
- Style
- Melancholic Melodic Rock/Metal
- Label
- Shadow World Records
- Year
- 2008
- Reviewed by
- Aleksie
/ 100
Killing songs: Cold Comfort, Crown & Secret Societies
The Chant is a Finnish band that had been operating for almost
ten years and pushing out numerous demos before the warm bosom of a record company
offered a place to shoot forth their melancholic harmonies. The band is a mishmash
of several different degrees on the heaviness scale. The most driving moments
border on that oft-so-ambiguous label of dark metal, while there are plenty of
cleanly played moments which are pure pop. So I guess when the sides are brought
together the easiest way is to call this rock. The first band to namedrop that
came to me would be Charon, though not quite as heavy and gothic.
The absence of the gothic would especially apply to the vocals. Singer Ilpo
Paasela doesn’t plow those gut-rumbling low tones that many goth rockers
are known for, even though he does have a strong low register. I guess with
music like this paired with a male crooner in Finland, one should mention vibes
of HIM here and there. It’s by no means prevalent, just
a feeling. The band plays tightly throughout the album and the production is
nicely crisp with the atmospheric keyboards and twinkling sound effects just
right in the mix.
The song material varies quite substantially in intrigue. Songs like Ode
To The End (Thank You) and The Breakdown present the pop-rocking
side of the album that fits well for radio play, but sounds quite bland to me.
Whenever Paasela distorts it a little with his hoarser voice, like on the nicely
growing Crown or Secret Societies, the results are much more
satisfying. Cold Comfort is a great rocking tune with even slight folk
spices in the melodies – A direction that I would definitely recommend
the band explore further in the future. The over 9-minute closer The Only
Friend kicks off a little sluggishly, but manages to get quite epic with
the adding layers of synths and the varying vocal styles. Nice guitar solos
also splice through the song.
Overall, fans of this kind of “semi-depressed” pop/rock/metal should
really dig Ghostlines and can without hesitation add 10-12 points to
my personal scoring. I guess if you’d be looking for a lighter and mellower
sibling of Sentenced, The Chant would be something
to look forward to. The band has definite potential and the abilities honed
through several years are more than evident. The band itself has said in an
interview that “When the heart is aching, Ghostlines helps”.
Make what you will of that message and enjoy.