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Soilwork
- Stabbing the Drama
By Mark Hensch
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Soilwork
- Stabbing the Drama
Label: Nuclear
Blast Records
Rating:
The strange Nordic metal traditions have
brought out a huge mix of heavy bands with unique and diverse playing styles.
There's the insane guitars of Children of Bodom, the calculus metal of
Meshuggah, and the seemingly impossible mix of melodic elements of rock
mixed with purist metal. The result of this has been the so-called "Gothenburg
sound," where airy keyboards and clean, soaring vocals soothe the ears
after butt-kicking metal breakdowns. The list of bands following this formula
have given us the seminal In Flames, the darkly majestic Dark Tranquility,
and Soilwork, a band that combines thrash metal breakdowns and gentle vocals
at a level that is almost uncanny.
This perfection of the melodic metal sound
has given the band many open doors other bands have not yet received. Signed
to the Nuclear Blast Records family, Soilwork has released to date (including
Stabbing the Drama) seven albums; earlier albums Steelbath Suicide
and The Chainheart Machine gave way to nearly universal critical
acclaim (most notably huge props from respected publications like Revolver
or The Alternative Press, who placed them in the "25 most important bands
of metal list" following their 2003 album Figure Number Five). So
successful has Soilwork been that at one point the act hooked up with Strapping
Young Lad's resident evil genius Devin Townsend (who to metalheads should
need little to any introduction) to produce an album.
Though Stabbing the Drama doesn't
have Townsend's fingerprints all over it, the newest Soilwork offering
is still finely polished, tuned, and arranged. I'd go so far to say that
if this album was marketed right and got a little lucky, Soilwork could
be a best-selling, rock radio act. "Stabbing the Drama" begins with a keyboard
sequence over machine-gun drumming and chugging guitars. Bjorn "Speed"
Strid, Soilwork's vocalist, earns his moniker laying down rapid-fire vocals
in a hardcore style, and the keyboards of Sven Karlsson switches gears
for the chorus as his spacey keys transition to a soaring and clean vocal
chorus. "One with the Flies" has a sinister intro riff and some explosive
vocals courtesy of Bjorn. The atmosphere of this song betrays quiet tension
that occasionally seeps into an full-blown mix of chaos and anger. "Weapon
of Vanity" is a straightforward rocker with grandiose choruses that are
passionate and catchy at the same time.
"The Crestfallen" is one of the most relentless
songs on the album; hardheaded guitars and searing vocals are replaced
by group laments that are pure and wholesome, meshing somewhat awkwardly
with the twin guitar assaults.
"Nerve" is one of the best songs on the
album; it represents the peak of Soilwork's style as dirty guitars mix
and match with science fiction keyboard effects and clean passages of dark
vocals. The riff-laden chorus starts and stops on a dime to Bjorn's vocals,
and the occasional pinch harmonic wails in the distance.
"Stalemate" is a thrash-leaning monster,
while "Distance" has a bouncy groove to it that should inspire some nice
pits. "Observation Slave" is somewhat forgettable, but "Fate in Motion"
redeems the latter half of Stabbing the Drama with some quiet melodic metal
that makes Bjorn's vocals sound so close to your ears it's almost claustrophobic.
The gutpuncher that is "Blind Eye Halo" hits you so fast and hard that
you wonder what hit you, and closing track "If Possible" soothes all of
that with a slowly-growing song that is laidback and subtle in execution.
Stabbing the Drama showcases the
best and the worst of a band like Soilwork. On the side of the best, Soilwork
(and I can say this as an In Flames/Dark Tranquility fan) totally whips
the melodic metal sound into shape that is catchy yet heavy beyond denial.
On the side of the worst, Soilwork's music draws perhaps too much from
earlier music within the same genre, and it can be argued that the formula
of "heavy verse into rising, clean, and anathemic vocals" gets a little
old and stale after an entire album of songs. Regardless of the flaws,
Soilwork hit hard with Stabbing the Drama, and the mix of heavy
and light should appeal to a whole range of music fans regardless of prior
tastes.
CD Info and Links
Tracks:
1. Stabbing the Drama
2. One with the Flies
3. Weapon of Vanity
4. The Crestfallen
5. Nerve
6. Stalemate
7. Distance
8. Observation Slave
9. Fate in Motion
10. Blind Eye Halo
11. If Possible
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