Sex & Religion
Steve Vai
- Style
- Heavy Rock
- Label
- Epic Records
- Year
- 1993
- Reviewed by
- Aleksie
/ 100
Ken:
Killing songs: Here & Now, In My Dreams With You, Still My Bleeding Heart, Sex & Religion, Dirty Black Hole, Touching Tongues, Survive, Deep Down Into The Pain & Rescue Me Or Bury Me
Steve Vai is best known as one of the finest and definitely most famous guitar
virtuosos in history. His status as a highly acclaimed hired gun from working
with the likes of David Lee Roth and Whitesnake is also well
documented. His technical prowess is stunning throughout his solo material,
which is mainly instrumental. Sex & Religion however, is a different
beast, with a solid backing band on each track and vocals on most of the tracks.
The specialty of this album that makes it so dear to myself that it is the
major recording debut of then 19-year old Canadian wizkid, Devin Townsend, who
handles the lead vocals. Most of you (should) know what a diverse
and magnificent vocalist the grand madman is on his latest material, but by
God he was one at mere two decades old! This album justifies purchase by the
vocal performance alone, which goes from choir-like smoothness to epic wails
and enraged screaming in the blink of an eye. The backing band is quite impressive
as well with T.M. Stevens laying down massive basslines and progressive hired
gun virtuoso Terry Bozzio striking down brilliant beats on the drums.
The song material isn’t overshadowed in any sense, be it diversity or
quality. Here & Now and Sex & Religion are up-tempo
rockers that cause instant headbanging and singing along with their massive
choruses. Slower but quite heavy balladry is provided by the gut-/heart-wrenching
In My Dreams With You and Still My Bleeding Heart. Awesome
grooves and inisidiously funky twists are blasted out by Dirty Black Hole
and Survive, probably my favourites off the record. Touching Tongues
and State Of Grace feature more of the eastern flavours that Vai has
a considerable affection for.
The Road To Mt. Calvary is a quite peculiar song with it’s ominous
choirs and clanking noises that are topped with what can best be described as
the cries of suffering humans. Not a very relaxing piece, I can tell you. The
final pair of tunes, both clocking in at 8+ minutes are the most progressive
pieces on the album. Down Deep Into The Pain is a more frenetic, aggressive
piece with time changes that in the end morphs into a strange soundscape of
jangling that sounds like a children’s playpen toy and spoken words that
sound like random rants by the guys in the studio. Rescue Me Or Bury Me
is an acoustically driven ballad sung by Vai himself that turns into some signature
atmospheric guitar widdling. The noodling gets a bit overblown with this length;
a couple of minutes shaven off the song and the technical mastery would have
come across more effectively.
All in all Sex & Religion may not be Steve Vai’s best-known
or most appreciated album, but it is my personal favourite. Devin Townsend is
a total showstealer throughout the record. I love every second of his output.
Slap on one virtuoso unit of players, killer songs and solid production and
you've got a disc that is equally technical and catchy, but hard rocking all
the way. I would love to see Vai get this crew back together for a 15-year anniversary of the album or something similar to just play or even *gasp* make some new material. I don't believe it will ever happen, but just let me dream for now. Highly recommended for all!