Ki
The Devin Townsend Project
- Style
- Progressive Rock/Metal
- Label
- InsideOut Music
- Year
- 2009
- Reviewed by
- James
/ 100
Killing songs: All except <i>Trainfire</i>
Devin Townsend
may have stepped outside the realms of metal before with his ambient
Devlab
and Hummer
projects, but those were closer to side-projects than anything else
than a new solo album proper. Ki,
on the other hand is Devin
Townsend's
return to music after the somewhat underwhelming (although apparently
I'm the only one who holds that opinion) Ziltoid
The Omniscient.
It's the first part of the Devin
Townsend Project,
a ridiculously ambitious four-album piece that is the product of a
year of self-reinvention. Metal's very own mad scientist has shaved
the infamous skullet that had become his trademark, quit the
hallucinogens that (he claims) inspired so much of his work, and
became a more mature figure. Ki
is
something of an introduction to the project, rather than being
representative of a whole, yet it's still likely to prove itself a
challenge to fans of Townsend's
work
in the uncompromisingly brutal Strapping
Young Lad.
Ki
is propelled by near-ambient guitars, warm, rich, rolling bass lines,
and subtle drumming from legendary session drummer Duris Maxwell.
Coast
lays down the template, which changes little throughout the album,
and for the next hour your immersed in not his usual ear-splitting
wall of sound, but something warmer, though just as thick, which a
poster over at the forums described as a “marshmallow of
sound”, which I think is as good a description as any.
Yet
for all the changes he's gone through in his career, Devin's
music always has a sound that's utterly unique to him, and Ki
is certainly no different. When all is said and done, it's not that
far removed from some of Infinity's
more
out-there moments (imagine if Unity
was expanded into a full album, although that doesn't quite cover
it). What is new however, is the addition of female vocals, which
adds a new dynamic to the songs in which they feature (although it
could be argued that a second vocalist detracts from the personal
nature of this album). Devin's
own
voice has come on in leaps and bounds, too. For whatever reason, he
sounds more melodic and powerful than ever (his high-pitched operatic
vocals on Coast
give me chills), Ki
perhaps
marking his most accomplished vocal performance to date.
What
should be noted when listening to Ki
is
that it's very much a mood piece. Devin
Townsend didn't
intend to make material with big riffs and catchy choruses here
(though apparently follow-up album Addicted
will
be just that) and the album spends much of it's 66-minute run-time in
hypnotic guitar lines (although moments of metal riffage do show up
from time to time). It could be argued that it goes on a bit too much
longer than it needs to for that sort of thing, especially as this is
only a quarter of Townsend's
planned output for the year. Indeed, the album is remarkably engaging
for something so low-key. We do get a couple of breaks from the
formula, but it's fair to say they're hit-and-miss. Trainfire
opens with a rockabilly pastiche that sounds jarringly out of place
with the rest of the album (Devin
has mostly reined in the zaniness this time), and comes off as a
little irritating, the only misstep on an otherwise remarkably
well-crafted release. Lady
Helen,
on the other hand is a stunning mostly-acoustic track and the most
tightly constructed song on here.
Ki
isn't entirely perfect, but it is a very welcome return to the fold
from one of metal's most beloved figures. The Devin
Townsend Project has
got off to a very fine start so far, and considering Ki
is
more of a scene-setter than anything else, I for one cannot wait for
the actual meat of the project, which happens to include, on album
three, “the heaviest music [he's] ever made”. Ladies and
gentlemen, we are in for a treat.