Lozen - Enemies Against Power Review
by Dan Upton
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Okay, so, two piece female band that's drawn comparisons to Heart. Sounds totally reasonable to me, early Heart of course being excellent and some of their later material falling under the "guilty pleasure" heading. But wait, lest I get too far down that track, this review obviously focuses less on Heart and more on Tacoma, Washington's Lozen. And to start it, let's just say that this, like many other CDs I've reviewed recently, is an example of something you shouldn't make up your mind about just based on the first song. In this case, the CD opens with "Breech," which has a promising beginning with a nice moody piano intro and Hozoji Matheson-Margullis's passionate vocals. About a minute in the music has drifted to guitars alternating between a higher pitched riff and power chord grinding; everything still sounds okay, although the vocals have started to drift from passionate to more strained shouting. Around the 3 minute mark is when things start to go downhill though, as the song starts to drift through random ideas and wailing and only a few highlights to really grab onto. If the song were condensed a bit I'd probably like it better, but 6 minutes of what might as well be stream of conciousness grates on me a bit. (Yes, that's right, a 9 minute stream of conciousness track that wasn't written by a prog band...) Fortunately, the CD turns itself around with more cohesive structures, cool grooving riffs, and tighter drumming--really, look no further than the next two tracks, "Made With Love" and "Unspeakable Truths" for some pretty solid music with a way bigger sound than you might expect from just two people. Hozoji still spends a bit too much time screaming for my tastes, but maybe it's more a matter of the production values. The CD has a raw, very unpolished feel, a bit like they just set up a few mics in their basement and hoped for the best. (Incidentally, I seem to recall that one song actually was recorded in their basement, although I don't have the liner notes in front of me to check.) The best comparison I can think of for the sound and production quality is Chevelle's debut "Point #1." Don't get me wrong, it gives a different tone to the instruments than the slick production of stuff on major labels (or even indie labels who want it, for that matter), but somewhat at the expense of the vocals. From a personal standpoint, this isn't really my cup of tea, or at least the sort of tea I would chug. From an objective standpoint there are several solid tracks, well-constructed pieces of heavy rock. To the band, I would recommend keeping the more cohesive format and dropping tracks like "Breech" in the future, but my guess is they're making the sort of music they want to and won't really care what I have to say. To the listener, I'd say check out the tracks on their MySpace page and rest assured that if you like those, the CD will give you more of that. Meanwhile, I'll go back to grooving to "Crazy On You"...
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