Cult of Luna: More Than Just a Metal
Band Review
[This month, I have cast aside my usual
offering of satire and blithe irreverence. I wanted to devote my column
to the role of "getting the word out", so to speak, for a band whose act
I caught in Worcester, on May 5th of this year, and whose live sound and
approach utterly knocked me over. Perhaps it is all of the numerous shreds
of mainstream entertainment idiocy we identify, arguably on a daily basis,
which make it THAT more refreshing for us, when we stumble upon those rare
gems of the musical underground. In this particular instance, the diamond
in the rough of which I speak is Cult of Luna.]
May 5th, 2005.
For a weeknight, the Worcester Palladium
would soon be impressively packed, wall to wall, with bodies--- scores
of metal heads on a pilgrimage of sorts, who were soon to pile in to catch
Mastodon work their insane musical rite.
Much fewer were present for the opening
act, perhaps 50 or so. The lights were soon brought down until the club
was black as pitch, and only the soft glow of LEDs could be seen from Cult
of Luna's equipment. The band took the stage, minus the vocalist--- but
the lights stayed out. I drank my beer down. They began their set--- a
warbling, spacey collection of delayed stringwork. Those ready to scrap
in the pit dropped their guard, and relaxed. The dynamism of strength and
volume built itself, until the band blazed out full throttle with a sonic
landslide of mid tempo rumble. The singer hollered out shots of words in
a manner that took me back to the late 80's hardcore shows of yore. With
nothing between the band and the audience but crushing riffage and a wall
of darkness, people stood there, confused--- no colored lights, no false
blood, no appeals to save the environment, no stage strippers--- my interest
was officially piqued.
Having emerged from the remnants (vocalist
Klas Rydberg and guitarist Johannes Persson) of a hardcore outfit known
as Eclipse, Cult of Luna recorded their first two-song demo in 1999. Their
first full length release hit the shelves in 2001, put out by UK label
Rage of Achilles, and a two-song, colored vinyl, 7-inch, put out by (legendary)
Hydra Head records, also saw the light of day.
Their latest offering, "Salvation" (Earache
records), is a remarkable effort, worthy of the attention and praise of
the most discerning lover of music's heavier tastes. Long have attempts
been made to find a certain musical Philosopher's Stone--- one that could
evenly blend not ONLY the (once) mutually exclusive realms of hardcore
and heavy metal, but also integrate the two with a veneer of the hard,
amplified rock-psychedelia of the 1960s and 1970s. The quest has been to
do as much, yet without compromising any of the three, taking care to insure
such distinct boundaries were fused evenly.
It would seem that Cult of Luna have evolved
their sound (on "Salvation") to a level of finesse where not only as much
is accomplished, but it is done so exquisitely. Taking into account the
thousands of recordings I own, and the hundreds of shows I have attended,
I can say with absolute certainty that Cult of Luna have clearly achieved
a harmony of stylistic extremities which few bands can boast of. In terms
of heavy music's ever expanding nature, its new directions, its innovations,
and its collective willingness to synthesize new ideas, "Salvation" should
be regarded as a novel and important release.
The sound and delivery walk in lock step.
The atmosphere waivers--- at times clean, distant, and airy; other times
it plummets into a mournful, distorted avalanche of melancholic mayhem.
The overall tempo never breaks past mid-rock format, but the sheer emotional
weight of the songs aims to bring the heaviness over by way of measured
intent. The musical metaphors employed by Cult of Luna swap razors for
caresses, typhoons for crawling fog, and brainwaves for heartbeats.
My greatest fear is that their record label
will proceed to market Cult of Luna along the lines of most middle of the
road metal bands--- an error which would be no less grave than if one flippantly
referred to Converge as just another hardcore act, or to Godflesh as just
another industrial act.
Cult of Luna are clearly onto something
that is all their own. They are an outfit which (experience tells me) will
inadvertently hatch dozens of imitators, years down the road, should they
hold together long enough, and without losing sight of the vision brought
to light in "Salvation".
If and when they are able to make their
way to the States, once more, I know at least one American who will be
there, knowing that what he is seeing and hearing is truly an underground
diamond in the rough.
Until next month
DS
Cult of Luna Links
Preview
and Purchase Cult of Luna CDs Online
Visit
the official homepage
More
articles for this artist
tell
a friend about this review
.
|