CANDLEMASS: DEATH MAGIC DOOM (2009)
1) If I Ever Die; 2) Hammer Of
Doom; 3) The Bleeding Baroness; 4) Demon Of The Deep; 5) House Of 1000 Voices;
6) Dead Angel; 7) Clouds Of Dementia; 8) My Funeral Dreams.
Death! Magic! Doom! Is there anybody out there
who could resist? I mean, you have death and
magic and doom, three in one — not
just death, you know, which is too brutal, and not just magic, which is too
infantile, and not just doom, which is kinda corny, but all three going on at
the same time. And no punctuation signs, either, meaning that you can have a
lot of fun with your syntactic analysis. Is it "The Doom of Death
Magic"? Or "The Magic Doom of Death"? This album is nothing but
a living enigma.
The song titles are awesome in their own
rights. ʽIf I Ever Dieʼ, for instance, presupposes that for the protagonist,
death is only one of several remote possibilities, implying the supernatural
trans-essence of his being. On the other hand, ʽDead Angelʼ signifies that
supernatural trans-essent beings may indeed go through the procedure of dying,
analogous to mortal beings. In fact, the supernatural trans-essent protagonist
does seem to be entertaining morbid thoughts of death far more often than a
layman could suppose — ʽMy Funeral Dreamsʼ shows that he is not above making
plans and arrangements for the potential scenario of his demise. And what about
ʽThe Bleeding Baronessʼ? In describing mysterious female entities of the
necrotic persuasion, our protagonist shows himself a true master of poetic
alliteration — and if you were not stunned enough, this is immediately followed by ʽDemon Of The Deepʼ, just so you know that
this is no boring act of coincidence. Death! Magic! Doom!
Now if only the songs themselves happened to be
at least as entertaining and fun as the ones on King Of The Grey Islands, we could all go back happy and relaxed.
Unfortunately, they are not. Most of this material is really slow, really
tedious, really predictable, and
while I still insist that Robert Lowe is the single best vocalist that
Candlemass ever had, not even Lowe is able to pull the album out of the mire.
ʽIf I Ever Dieʼ does start the record on a promising note, with a set of
fast-paced riffs and crazy solos, but when ʽHammer Of Doomʼ comes along and it
is ʽBlack Sabbathʼ time all over again (come on, just how many times can one exploit the same Devil's Chord in the exact
same way?), they simply crash into a wall, and spend the rest of the album
wandering aimlessly among the rubble.
As usual, it all boils down to the question of
whether the record has its share of impressive riffs or not. Opinions may
differ, but I vote a firm «no» on this particular occasion. They seem to have
slipped back into their «classic Candlemass» skin instead of directly aping
Sabbath, and so it all sounds like a better produced, but even less inspired Nightfall. Sludgy, unmemorable riffs;
ponderous verses; non-catchy choruses; and, above all, the incomprehensibility
of whether we should take this shit seriously (for which it is way too
cartoonish) or continue to treat it, as we always did, with a good helping of
popcorn — for which it is, frankly speaking, just way too lethargic. If early
Candlemass was third-rate Sabbath, then Death
Magic Doom is essentially second-rate early Candlemass. And on the whole, King Of The Grey Islands had more
tricks up its sleeve than this album, where almost every song sounds the same.
Even ʽThe Bleeding Baronessʼ, instead of trying to sound at least a little bit
spooky and lascivious, just ends up like everything else — a slow warning of
impending doom, whose efficiency, now that it finds itself in the context of
seven other same-sounding warnings, is now comparable to the efficiency of spam
messages in your mailbox. Thumbs down.
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