Path Of Thought
Forge
- Style
- Proggish Heavy Rock
- Label
- Self Financed
- Year
- 2006
- Reviewed by
- Aleksie
Killing songs: Liquid Relief
Forge is one of the up-and-coming Finnish metal bands that has
a history spanning over ten years back and has been raising their name on the
scene little by little. They have even taken care of the crucial step of many
metal bands – splitting up once and then reforming.
The Path Of Thought-demo was my first touch with the band aside from
some snippets heard live and it is a mixed bag of both styles and quality. The
music is mostly rocking and mid-tempoish with very much emphasis on the rhythmics
in the songs. The proggyness of the players’ influences (you can easily
hear the digging of Dream Theater and Meshuggah
that the band itself mentions on their site) is very clear in the off-beat riffage
that works very well in my mind. The drummer and guitarists have some wicked
chops, but they don’t overplay it at any point and keep the melodies in
mind as well. I can even sense some jazziness in the leads of Stream Of
Life. Some extraordinarily good hooks can be found here and there, especially
the tapped guitar licks at the end of Liquid Relief, that reminds me
of the two-handed stuff of Joe Satriani. I am willing to bet my bottom dollar
that they are courtesy of the skilled fingers of the bands other guitarist,
Jyri “Satriani” Kangastalo. I also love the groovyness in Liquid
Relief, courtesy of the powerful bass line. The band has had an excellent
sense of upping the bass frequencies to pounding levels throughout the demo.
Toni Pulkkinen has a strong, slightly deep voice that carries the tunes well.
Slight struggling is audible in the highest notes but nothing that healthy gigging
and rehearsals won’t fix. Some of the background harmonies remind me strongly
of Devin Townsend’s solo stuff. The band plays tightly and there is a
definite professionalism present with the technical abilities of these guys.
The production is solid and very well-balanced. For a demo, the sounds are great.
As already mentioned, much love for the strong bass.
Being a closet poet, I can get very picky on the lyrical sides of songs if
the time is right. And sad to say, the lyrics are the weak point in these tunes.
Just on the face, Sick Game Of Love is about as worn-out and hackneyed
as a title can get. It would be different if irony were present but at least
at this point I am not hearing it. The two first songs deal with pretty much
clichéd melancholy that doesn’t give me any mentionable vibes. Might be because
of my rock-hard cynicism, but that is a story not belonging here. Sea Of
Lies (no, not a Symphony X-cover) and Liquid Relief
handle themselves slightly better.
To summarize, Forge is a band that musically has explosive
amounts of potential and skills. Some elements in the songs scream even symphonic
ambitions that would only require better resources and more studio time. The
talent is definitely there, and with effort, along with dropping the “with
or without you”-lines, this band can reach bone-crushing powers.