Rise Of The Tyrant
Arch Enemy
- Style
- Melodic Death Metal
- Label
- Century Media
- Year
- 2007
- Reviewed by
- Aleksie
/ 100
Killing songs: Blood On Your Hands, The Last Enemy, I Will Live Again, Revolution Begins, The Day You Died, Night Falls Fast & Vultures
The marvels of Swedo-Anglo-Germanic melodeath make a magnificent dent on the metal
scene with their seventh studio album, Rise Of The Tyrant. Personally,
I have always dug Arch Enemy in the sense that it has never been
one of my favourites in any sense, but the band has never left me cold and almost
without fault entertained me to the point of nonsensical moshing, both on record
and live on stage. With this latest slab, they have just made a more devoted listener
from yours truly.
The opener Blood On Your Hands begins with a foreboding siren that
quickly gives room for a thrashy riff, Angela Gossow’s murderous shout
and the battery-fury of Daniel Erlandsson. That starting-section with the guitars
grinding in unison with slightly a flanger-induced sound and the tom-drums beating
along with a hypnotizing pulse, just keeping the mood growing until bursting
to total rage in the verse is magical – in a brutally catchy way. The
track also establishes the utterly awesome quality and large amount of guitar
solos on the whole album. It’s like Michael Amott and his returning-gloriously-to-the-fold
-brother Christopher were having an album-length battle of one-upping each other
with speedy-yet-übermelodic -guitar leads and harmonies. I am loving it,
as it brings a really Maidenesque vibe to the whole package. Air guitarists should have a manic field day with this disc.
Gossow sounds as venomous and pissed-off as ever. Just check out the insanely
fast The Last Enemy for some oddly-lamenting-yet-frightening anger.
Compared to Doomsday Machine, where her vocals were mixed in with different
effects and such here and there, on this one she sounds much more organic and
pure. I think they captured the rawness that she has live on stage very well.
For a quick baffle and hopefully eventual answer from some of you: Gawddammit,
which Blind Guardian-tune has almost an exactly similar melody
line that is the main melody in I Will Live Again, the one played on
a synth in the intro and on the guitar in the choruses?? Is it Theatre of
Pain, during where Hansi goes “life had never existed”? No
it's not, is it? Aaaarg! I should just pop in Somewhere Far Beyond
in my player but I’m too lazy right now. Oh yeah, I Will Live Again
is a brilliant mid-tempo rocker.
As far as the rocking goes, I also think this album ups the catchiness with
the heavy rock -elements I find here and there in the riffs and melodies. Take
the opening guitar riff to Revolution Begins and put it on say, an
Accept-record. Fits like a glove, and makes the hair move so very well.
Thrashy riffing on the other hand is displayed in songs like Night Falls
Fast and Vultures, which make me think of the early days of Arch
Enemy and all that glorious guitar mastery.
The production on the whole album is stellar and I can’t say anything
bad about the cover art either. I find the connections between the imagery on
it combined with the title Rise Of The Tyrant very amusing. Anyone
seen those symbols, namely the eye of the Illuminati and legs that could be
those of an eagle, on some other artefact? Anyhoo, in my mind this is one magnificently
crafted piece of melodic (with a gargantuan M) death metal, that has hooks to
spare along with the technicality. I would even go as far as calling this Arch
Enemy’s best album yet, topping even Wages of Sin.