Here in the Deadlights
Wizard Rifle
- Style
- Sludge Rock/Metal
- Label
- Seventh Rule Recordings
- Year
- 2014
- Reviewed by
- Andy
/ 100
Killing songs: Psychodynamo
Hailing originally from my hometown of Portland, Oregon, though now relocating to New York, Wizard Rifle has a
sound that is hard to categorize, but bears some resemblance to the chaotic experimentation of The Melvins. Their
latest album, Here in the Deadlights, is just as hard to categorize, but it's messy; it's not a terrible album,
but it definitely requires repeated listens to get one's head around it.
Starting with an echoing but quiet mount of guitar noise, Crystal Witch never gets any less abrasive, even
though the melody is clear. Drummer Sam Ford does the vocal duties, roaring out atonal blasts of vocals to the sound of
Max Dameron's noisy, heavily layered guitar. At times the guitar work has clear sludge influences, but in between
everything just kind of devolves into a tide of background noise; somehow Ford's drums are miked in such a way that they
have the crashing, in-your-face punch that Led Zeppelin's John Bonham was always able to achieve. The song ends
quietly in the same way it started, leading into Buzzsaw Babes, which is somewhat of a retro mishmash of punk and
early experimental rock, played at a fast trot and with howling vocals at times. Paul the Sky Tyrant,
despite its initial swinging stoner-doom riff, definitely has a sound I'd associate with Portland; something about the
combination of the vocals and riffs, which move from clear and sharp, to grunting and confused, to an echoing set of
harmonies at the end.
Psychodynamo starts quietly and ominously with chanted vocals, but soon the guitars kick in. I liked the riffs
on this one, which have a groove reminiscent of a somewhat sped-up Crowbar, if they played with a trebly
overdrive on their guitars. The final track, Beastwhores, is oddly like slow, twisted surf music played with a
distortion pedal; the harmonized vocals clash grimly with the echoing song of the guitar, still with the same kinds of
groovy riffing heard on the previous track, but even faster until its final abrupt halt.
Despite the clear talent one can see here, I have to admit that it was hard for me to get into Here in the Deadlights. There's so much noise and
alternative-music experimentalism that it's often hard to
feel the same driving force many metal albums impart to both their music and the listener. After a few listens I kind of
got used to what Wizard Rifle is doing. It's interesting to listen to for a few spins, though after that, it
seems unlikely that it will end up getting back on my playlist.
Bandcamp: http://releases.seventhrule.com/album/here-in-the-deadlights