Drear - Hope is the Opiate of the Masses
A postulate: If Drear is correct, and Hope
is the Opiate of the Masses, that what is Drear? If a band openly spits
on the foolishly grinning face of blind faith in good luck (i.e. hope itself),
than how does Drear, the band, nay the concept, relate to the Masses in
question? An answer: Drear is not an opiate, it is a detox. If one is addicted
to hope, listening to Drear is quite simply the antithesis to that addiction;
it is more like the process of vomiting up all the joy, hope, and bliss
in life with as much violence and force as possible. Like a nasty state-sponsored
trip to rehab, Drear has you facing the worst parts of life, and coming
through laughing at them.
As horrible as that made Drear sound, this
is by no means a bad demo. In fact, if grim, desolate, and soulless doom
metal is your bag, Drear will fit like a glove. The sounds on offer here
could only come from an industrial, modernized England; the seemingly "dreary"
British outtake on life, combined with urban sprawl and the soulless autonomy
of modern existence in big cities, has led to many bands attempting to
capture the sound of "progress." There is definitely a very "production-line"
aura on Hope, the sounds of factories grinding people one after the other
into early graves. Combining gothic funeral doom, noisy ambiance, and soul-crushing
industrial age black metal, Drear have molded for themselves a unique take
on the doom cannon, and they have great potential for future tidings of
apocalypse. Comparable to few bands I can think of, I attempt to draw on
references as varied as French automatons P.H.O.B.O.S., Zaraza, and maybe
even the blacker works of Sunn-O))). The sounds of Godflesh are also a
definite vibe I get at certain points. Despite their influences (or lack
thereof), Drear have a undeniably unique sound that despite a few flaws,
proves to be exceedingly captivating.
In keeping with the highly inhumane miasma
of this demo, half of the tracks are instrumental, and the ones featuring
any kind of lyrics have little of them at all. I feel this presents a grand
statement about how technology as a whole consumes even the strongest man,
as for every human being to have existed, it seems more important progressions
and innovations outlive them and take their places. "The Breaking of Nations..."
is no exception to this rule, and in my opinion offers the best hint of
Godflesh and P.H.O.B.O.S. on the entire disc. Wholly instrumental, the
song churns with deliberate, grinding purpose, almost like pistons and
cogs in a factory. The wavering stomp of industrial noise eventually lightens
with a withering trace of funeral parlor piano keys, almost like the last
trace of graceful humanity succumbing to the onset of mechanical might.
"The War to End All Wars" is one of my
favorite songs, and it definitely shows the doomier side of the band. On
this track Drear smothers the listener with grim realism in the face of
warfare and blackened doom riffs with soul-splitting vocals. When vocalist
Glen howls "people fought with life itself, to give some sort of meaning
to their insignificance," it will send chills down your very human spine.
The song's mid-paced tempo shift will leave the rest of your ashes solidly
pissed upon, and the disc's end only gets better.
"Trembling Beneath the Sky" is some meandering
ambiance that didn't make too much of an impression on me, but "The Weather
Report for Judgement Day" rectifies this with some of the bleakest doom
ever to be recorded on either side of the Atlantic. I debated about whether
or not to call "The Simplicity in Dying" the best track here, as it's stark,
beautiful, and monotone mix of ominous rumbles and eerie piano is a masterpiece
of funeral ambiance. The song is gracefully cinematic in scope, and it
is simply one of the most alluring instrumentals I've heard over the last
year (at least by a band that isn't purely instrumental like say Pelican).
"Dismal Autumn Skies on an Anglican Eve"
is probably the strongest track on offer, as nothing but cold, bleak, and
most importantly black metal is elongated into the plodding hypnosis of
sludgey doom. A freaking fantastic song.
Throughout my first few listens, I didn't
like this demo too much. However, as time wore on, I found myself getting
pieces of it embedded in my skull, and returning to a piano chord here,
a crushing riff there. Like all good doom metal, patience is a virtue.
I promise you'll need it for Drear, but with enough listens it will warrant
some mighty devotion. If you like rain, grey skies, and urban decay, give
Drear a few spins; after all, resistance is futile!
Rating:
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