Morning Star Rise
The House of Capricorn
- Style
- Gothic Rock/Doom Metal
- Label
- Svart Records
- Year
- 2014
- Reviewed by
- Andy
/ 100
Killing songs: <i>Ivory Crown</i>, <i>Dragon of Revelations</i>
The House of Capricorn's often described as stoner doom, but Morning Star Rise, their newest LP, has very
little of the slow Sabbath-worship of its contemporaries in the genre. Imagine a Satanic rock act like The
Devil's Blood, but with more of a gothic flair to the music than 70s-style retro. The lyrics are dark, the vocals
are depressed, but the tunes are snappy and the album overall makes for an interesting listen.
The Road to Hell is Marked's post-punk riffs define the sound of the album. Despite vocalist Marko Pavlovic
and guitarist Scott Blomfield's other project, Creeping, which is heavily atmospheric, doomy black metal, the
songs here are just as "black" lyrically, but with a fast punk beat and mostly clear, though somewhat gritty, vocals.
Even In the Light of Lucifer, which sounds at first like the intro to a black metal song, goes into a fast beat
on the verse, even though the choruses are slower with more crushing riffs that somewhat explain the "doom" label I'd
seen. Pavlovic uses some deep vocals that are layered on the choruses, but has no problem shouting out the lyrics to
match the driving rage of the guitars on Our Shrouded King. There is the occasional guitar solo, but the solos
don't last very long, and feel mostly like they are an afterthought -- pummelling the listener with those riffs seems to
be the order of the day. Ashlands is slower and doomier, breaking and rolling with the thudding of the drum kit,
with Pavlovic's vocals getting deep enough to call to mind Peter Steele, or Woods of Ypres's David Gold.
Ivory Crown is a favorite of mine, not only because the melodic hooks stand out from the rest, but also
because even on an album filled with quick-time gothic rock pieces, there is a sinuous cleverness to every part of the
song -- even the solo gets an double dose of the energy contained on the album, and the chorus is magnificently powerful
without overstaying its welcome. Watching Angels Fall isn't quite as good, but still makes a good followup to it,
with Pavlovic enunciating the verses in a rough groan, while the final track, Dragon of Revelations, finally
gives us a 100% doom metal song, with the guitars playing slower than they have through the whole album and the vocals,
sometimes descending to whispers, becoming positively funereal -- the Type O Negative comparison is even more apt
here, given that the picked guitar bit played over the heavy backing riffs sounds exactly like something that band would
have done. But even on this song, the beat speeds up halfway through, if only for a minute or two.
Morning Star Rise is a strange combination of the depressive and the fast-paced, but somehow it works, and
the result is pretty unique. Fans of dark rock will probably like this one a lot, and anyone who enjoys The House of
Capricorn's influences should probably give Morning Star Rise a spin.