The Great Bear
Silencer (US)
- Style
- Heavy Metal
- Label
- Vanity Music Group
- Year
- 2012
- Reviewed by
- Olivier
/ 100
Killing songs: <i>1969, Great Bear, </i><i>Insignia, Star City Part I & II, </i><i>The Roar.</i>
American Silencer - not to be mistaken with the (pretty
good) Swedish grandmother-fronted Depressive Black Metal band - is
back with a third offering entitled The Great Bear, and
this is a very interesting one. It is a conceptual album about a
fictional space race between Americans and Soviets, pretty much
like the one that really happened but only with a different
development, and above all from the Soviet perspective. Now that's
interesting. Although unfortunately, the album is - while being
good - far from being flawless.
First of all, thirty minutes. This is how long the effort lasts.
Less than that if you take out the instrumentals and transitions
(although you should not, a word on them later). This is err... short.
Especially with that kind of topic for an album. You could easily
(so to speak) make it something long, epic, thoughtful and
profound. This is simply too quick, the album is over already by
the time you find yourself neck-deep into the voyage. Very
frustrating. Secondly, FIVE instrumentals/ambiance tracks over the
eleven the album proposes. I cannot help thinking: unbalanced,
friends. While I like all of five of them, they are overwhelming.
The album would need either more tracks, or longer tracks. Which
leads me to my third grudge: the tracks are too short. The longest
song here, Orders / Noble Sacrifice, is only 4'35 long,
everything thing else is (much) shorter. Again: this is really
frustrating.
But now, what are the pros? Well, all the rest, basically. The
music is good if not great, and features great moments. From the
aggressive loud rolling riffs of the speedy I Am Thunder,
to the slow, thick sound wall of Great Bear (those drums!)
and Insignia, the overall feeling of this album is really
enjoyable and can be pretty intense. My personal favourite would
be Star City Part I and its neck-crushing loud and fat
mid-tempo riff. Seriously, just pump the volume up to the top, and
let it flow. It almost has this stoner sounding, but ballsier. And
since they are a huge part of the CD, a word on the instrumentals.
As I said, I like them all, although they all are different. While
Sacred War is your traditional glorious introductory track,
1969 is an extremely tasty, badass and eerie ambiance track
(honestly I found myself reaching for the album only to hear this
little track, if anyone knows what the men exactly say in Russian,
please feel free to use the forum thread to enlighten us. You can
guess what the big picture is pretty easily with what you can hear
in the background of course, and with the rest of the album. The
lyrics were not provided with the promo I used for this review, and
doubtlessly (hopefully) everything is explained in the booklet).
The... roaring The Roar is another stellar instrumental,
and the spacey Star City Part II excels in making you feel
up there (that bass!). And finally, the fifth instrumental The
First, the Last ends the album with the blazing glory of a
good ol' Russian choir. An only fitting... and bitter ending
(you'll see).
Bottom-line: while it is too short and features too many
instrumentals (or more precisely not enough actual songs), The
Great Bear is a pretty good effort, well worth a listen at
the very least. Just do not expect fast-paced songs or insane
technique, because you will not find those here. Also, be aware that this album has nothing to do with the band previous releases. Silencer's
The Great Bear is all about majestic sound walls,
gloomy/spacey ambiance and loud riffs. And honestly, they are
damned good at what they do.
Official website