with
by
Dan Grote
.
It’s been two years
since we took you into the pit but with the release of Speedealer’s new
album “Second Sight” from Palm Pictures it was the perfect time to bring
back the “In The Pit” series. One of antiMUSIC’s newest writers,
Dan Grote, will take you into the world of Speedealer’s new album (produced
by Jason Newsted). So here is your first dose of the newly returned
“In The Pit” and Speedealer's latest musical powerhouse!
.
Speedealer
- Second Sight
Label: Palm
Pictures
Produced by
Jason Newsted
Rating:
From the ProTools-ridden
studio of Jason Newsted comes Speedealer: anachronism or breath of fresh
air? The former Metallica bassist’s protégés assault the
ears with an album full of much missed speed metal that hearkens back to
the days when bands like Pantera, Corrosion of Conformity, and Faith No
More were the kings of the metal scene, shredding, thrashing, and pounding
all the way.
According to the
band’s official website, www.speedealeronline.com, Speedealer formed in
1994 and released several albums and EP’s through different independent
labels. Their early discography
includes an album called REOSpeedealer (the name for which has since been
self-titled for obvious legal reasons). An A&R man at the band’s current
label, Palm Records, sent Newsted ‘dealer’s demos after their 2000 release
Here Comes Death. Newsted is quoted as saying of the band, “Speedealer
is the first heavy band worthy of my 110 percent commitment since Metallica.”
Frontman Jeff Hirshberg
is painted as being the band’s driving force, given a bio wherein he makes
grandiose statements about his views on music: “One should listen to music
with one's full attention and that means no external stimuli. Period. I
feel that is the only way music in general will progress from its current
state of stagnation and nostalgia. Rise and demand quality...or suffer
the woefully out-of-tune fate set before us all.”
The band’s biggest
asset, however, is drummer Harden Harrison. Harrison lays down the rapid
bass and snare beats that force the rest of the band to step up their already
impressive game. If or when
Speedealer ever break up, Harrison will have a great career as a replacement
touring drummer; the Joey Waronker of metal, so to speak. Harrison’s beats
lay down the frame for pieces like “Infinitesimal” and “Blinded.”
Like any good metal
album, the first track, “Leave Me Alone,” begins with both thrashing and
deep-throated screaming. So far so good, everybody’s doing their job. However,
the band has yet to display its true talents. Then comes the title track,
“Second Sight,” which opens with a burst of the speed that will be evidenced
as their stock-in-trade. It isn’t until the third track, “All the Things
You’ll Never Be,” that the band starts kicking ass left and right, Hirshberg
brings both the rapid thrash and the attention-grabbing lyrics for one
of the album’s most potent songs. Hirshberg shares riffing duties with
fellow axeman Eric Schmidt.
Things begin to decrescendo
over the next few tracks until “Kill Myself Tonight,” the album’s other
heavy-hitter, completely different from “All the Things.” “Kill Myself”
carries more of a punk-metal influence, and, in truth, surpasses Drowning
Pool’s “Bodies” as one of the best party death metal anthems of all time.
The varied tempo
of the album as a whole leaves you to appreciate the faster tracks, as
songs like “Leave Me Alone” and “Days of Red,” if they are trying to be
singles, do not carry the power that the fast tracks have. Some tracks
attempt a combination of tempos. “Infinitesimal,” an instrumental track,
teases the listener by starting out with a slow beat and gradually erupting
into something beautiful.
VERDICT: While Second
Sight provides a mix of strong and mediocre tracks, metal fans should have
no problem bearing through the rough patches to get to the good stuff.
Speedealer at its best is a band that’s not afraid to get its licks in.
There are no signs of overproduction, and if there is any polish, it’s
used sparingly at best. Newsted has done just enough producing to allow
his band to fly free. Although ironically, for a bassist’s production,
there isn’t much bass guitar on the album, not that it would be appropriate
for the material. Regardless, Second Sight is one of the most refreshing
metal albums to come around in years. Granted, Speedealer’s speed metal
may seem like a retro throwback to the late 80’s/early 90’s, but it beats
the wave of retro-post-punk-art-noise-garage rock the record companies
are shoveling in our faces just because the
Strokes broke.
Footnotes:
The band has since replaced album bassist Rodney Skelton with Rich Mullins.
They are currently touring in support of the new album and will join Fu
Manchu on the road later in the summer.
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Dan Grote is an antiMUSIC
contributor
Photos
courtesy Speedealer and Palm Pictures
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Rights Reserved by the Copyright Owner
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