Hangover Music Vol. VI
Black Label Society
- Style
- Hard Rock Ballads
- Label
- Spitfire Records
- Year
- 2004
- Reviewed by
- Aleksie
/ 100
Killing songs: Crazy Or High, Queen Of Sorrow, Steppin Stone, Wont Find It Here, House Of Doom, Damage Is Done, Layne, Woman Dont Cry, No Other, A Whiter Shade Of Pale and Fear
One of the most magnificent guitarists on the planet and one of the hardest working
men in the metal business is here again with some more Black Labeled comfort. After
several records of mostly brutal, very powerful riffing and pure testosterone
with Stronger Than Death and The Blessed Hellride as the brightest
gemstones, Zakk Wylde returns to the stylings of his Book Of Shadows
solo record. For everyone wishing for another riff machine of an album, you wont
find it here. Instead, you will find some of the best ballads written within this
millenium in the metal scene.
Acoustic guitars and the piano are the main players here, with Wylde breaking
out the electric axes for some sparse background riffs and of course, his trademark
blinding solos which are found a plenty among the slow jamming. The opening
trio Crazy Or High - Queen Of Sorrow - Steppin Stone displays a great
mix of acoustic and electric guitar magic along with Wyldes unmistakable baritone.
I have seen many reviewers critisize Wyldes singing on the album and I can understand
that. His raspy, sometimes stretching high notes can be a bit tough on the ears,
but I find these parts especially awesome, along with his trademark deep and gravely bellowing. Bar Matthew Barlow and Freddie Mercury,
Ive never heard a man have such uniquely-styled charisma in his voice. True,
his range is nowhere near the likes of Halford or Sammet, but his voice has got balls of steel,
and a lot of charm and personality. Not many otherwise great singers can pull
that off. That’s why Wylde is one of my favourite singers too. Not that
well ranged, but he has more personality and touch than all of the Cans´ and Liones
out there put together in a bunch.
Takillya (Estyabon) is a short blast of acoustic soloing, followed
by the nicely U2-resembling Wont Find It Here. The Alice In
Chains-stylings of House Of Doom, the distorted power chords
and Zakks amazing solo make for a great and heavy song, that is arguably the
best here among many. Damage Is Done displays Zakks great mix of piano
balladering with acoustics and electrics. Zakks AIC-love is
again brought up in the form of Layne - another great tune from the
heavier side of the album - a tribute to the bands departed front man Layne
Stayley. Woman Don’t Cry is a piano-based song that has a more
soft-sounding Wylde singing more mellow in an almost Elton John-like voice and
throws a great emotional - but fast - solo in the middle. Zakk also covers Procol
Harums 1967 rock ballad classic A Whiter Shade Of Pale on sole piano very well, revs
a grooving southern-rock-mellower with No Other, and ends the album
nicely with Fear, a “once-again-nice-piano-song” that includes
– guess what? – a magnificent solo! Who could have known …..
Ive seen many sources say that this album is too mellow to hold the Black
Label Society moniker. Yes, it is mostly mellow cause it is full of
ballads, but these are about as heavy and stylish as ballads mostly based on
acoustics and piano can get in my view. Zakk throws just the right mix of electrics
and rough vocals to spice it up to miles above the over-saccharine ballads of
the radio rock-yanks like Third Eye Blind or The Calling.
Some have also critisized the production on the record. I cant get those claims
either. These are mellow songs! Its not supposed to blow your ears out with
the sounds. For that you’ve got Stronger Than Death from the
same band, ever heard of diversity? The sounds are just great and well-balanced
for this kind of material in my ears. Of course, many might claim that this
album doesn’t have much diversity either, but I disagree once again. Its
amazing how different simple ballads can actually sound, when you know how to
make good ones.
This break from the usual hard-blowing, concrete-mowing, all-destroying style of brutal rock
that BLS has specialized in works off magnificently. Unlike
In Flames with STYE, Zakk Wylde makes this change
of style work with big success for me. This album is great for hangovers, special moments,
think-work situations, jamming, lifting lighters, hallusinating, and just plain
relaxation. Also one reason why I name this album a masterpiece by quote despite
a few mediocre fillers (Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow and She Deserves
A Free Ride), is that Ive been searching for ages for a mostly acoustic
album in the vein of Book Of Shadows and Opeths Damnation
that would actually sound GOOD with excellent songs. With Hangover Music,
my search has been satisfied – for now, for a long time. If you know more,
please let me know about them. I still wish that the next BLS record
will return to the crunching rock style of Stronger;)
But till then,
lets mellow out for a while and pour ourselves another cold one.
This ones for
you, Zakk! * Pffft…GlugGlugGlugGlugGlug…Aaaahhh *