II Home II Forum II MySpace II YouTube II Contact Us II

 
 
 
MENU
Home


Heavy_Metal Album
  Best Heavy Metal Albums
  10 Top Heavy Metal Albums
  10 Classic Top Heavy Metal Albums
Heavy Metal Archive
Heavy_Metal Album Review
  Strapping Young Lad - The New Black
  Mastodon - Blood Mountain
  Slayer - Christ Illusion
  The Haunted - The Dead Eye
  Iron Maiden - A Matter Of Life Or Death
  Trivium - The Crusade
  Napalm Death - Smear Campaign
  Stuck Mojo - Snappin' Necks
  Suffocation - Self Titled
  Unearth - III: In the Eyes of Fire
  Nevermore - The Politics of Ecstasy
  Goatwhore - A Haunting Curse
  Hatebreed - Supremacy
  Helloween - Keeper of the Seven Keys Part II
  Hammers of Misfortune - The Locust Years
  Grave - As Rapture Comes
  Vicious Circle - The Art of Agony
  Dragonforce - Inhuman Rampage
  Cellaedor - Enter Deception
  Skinless - Trample the Weak
Hurdle the Dead
Heavy Metal Band
  List of Bands
Heavy Metal History
Heavy Metal Daly News:
News Archive
Heavy Metal Articles
Articles Archive
Resources:
Sponsors:
Contact Us:
Privacy Policy:

 
 
NEWS
 

Trivium Comment on Iron Maiden Tour
Two words that describe exactly what we are witnessing every night...

THE HAUNTED Kicks Off U.S. Tour
Swedish titans THE HAUNTED make their triumphant return...

SLAYER Winter Tour 2007 Press Release
SLAYER - Tom Araya/bass, vocals, Kerry King/guitars...

UNEARTH - Comments On Touring With SLAYER
UNEARTH singer Trevor Phipps has commented...

SEPULTURA U.S. tour starts toda
The Brazilian crew's first US tour in support...

New Korn album due
The group will issue a live "MTV Unplugged"...

EXODUS ON BRUCE DICKINSON'S ROCK SHOW
Iron Maiden front-man Bruce’s special guests on Saturday 25th...

Candlelight Records USA - New Signings
Candlelight Records USA confirms the recent signing of Throne of Katarsis...

[November 20, 2006]

 
ARTICLES
 

Bizarre Fantasy Rock
Rock music's development was influenced by fantasy-fiction literature...

The strange days (mostly nights) of Guns N' Roses
Kenny "Axil" Rose (Lead vocals), D.J. "Slash...

KORN and Deftones Deliver Epic Performances on Last Leg of West Coast Family Values Tour
Families have disagreements; that's life. KORN's resurrection...

Metallica St Anger
1. St.Anger
2. Metallica Reloaded...

Aerosmith Just Keeps On Rockin
For over three decades, Aerosmith have been one of rock's most revered and popular bands...

Greatest Underrated Guitar Players
Ask anybody who the greatest guitar players in the history of rock music are...

Metal Gods of Hope And Glory
Probably the most unlikely successful heavy metal band ever to come out of an unassuming Birmingham....

Heavy Metal
Heavy metal music is one genre that typically does not get as much attention as it reall...

[October 16, 2006]

The Haunted - The Dead Eye


01. The Premonition
02. The Flood
03. The Medication
04. The Drowning
05. The Reflection
06. The Prosecution
07. The Fallout
08. The Medusa
09. The Shifter
10. The Cynic
11. The Failure
12. The Stain
13. The Guilt Trip

What to make of this new HAUNTED album? It's hard to take it out of context and judge it on its own merits — on one hand, you have the band's formidable back catalog to measure it against, a smorgasbord of modern-day Swedish thrash that renders 95% of their colleagues obsolete. Tied to that is the reputation of the Björler brothers, late of the legendary AT THE GATES, whose "Slaughter of the Soul" grows in stature with each passing year as a milestone for modern metal. Throw in frontman Peter Dolving's recent penchant for crackpot blogging and riling up the punters, and you have a mixed bag of expectations no album should have to go up against.

Well, despite what some early reports would have you believe, there's no "stoner rock" on "The Dead Eye", nor are there too many moments that'll disappoint current fans. There are plenty of moments where the tuneful-yet-maniacal screaming and razorwire riffing are cranking at full thrash throttle, instantly recognizable and full of the piss 'n vinegar that made "The Haunted Made Me Do It" and "One Kill Wonder" such awesome records. The changes here are strictly of the organic and evolutionary variety — if you gave last album "Revolver" a fair listen, nothing on "The Dead Eye" will shock you.

There are moments of pensive clean singing, mellower interludes, and songs that don't rely entirely on the thrash-polka beat, but that's been the band's standard operating procedure for a while now. The dynamics of the band seem to be expanding (again, in a way that suggests creativity, not commerce, is the motive) — for instance, "The Flood" is a midtempo song with a cleanly-sung bridge that gets positively mellow, but it sets up "The Medication", an urgent and thrashy song, quite nicely. No matter what the speed of tempo, or the degree of phlegm and venom in Dolving's throat, the emphasis is on impressive songwriting and urgent, intense playing.

The most effective songs on "The Dead Eye", in fact, mix the dynamics up from moment to moment. "The Crowning" clocks in at under five minutes, but it's a friggin' mini-epic, with a seething doomy midsection, followed by a bridge where Dolving sings in his most gloomy, liverish clean vocal. The opening to "The Reflection" finds him in the same voice, over an acoustic part that'll make you wonder who snuck the PORCUPINE TREE disc into your stereo – but give it thirty seconds and he's screaming in bitter, heartbroken rage, bleeding into the microphone over a driving, inexorable metal riff. It may lack the simple, head-down circle-pit pleasure of "Bury Your Dead" (the SLAYER-tastic opening salvo on "The Haunted Made Me Do It"), but it's ultimately a more meaningful, personal, and effective statement.

Give "The Dead Eye" a few listens, especially if it leaves you cold (as it did for me) on its first spin. It takes a while to realize that THE HAUNTED are experiencing the simple growth process that so few bands deal with successfully. They're still the same band that rejoices in tossing out barrages of speed-picking riff mania, but they're finding ways to mature without wussing out, to express themselves without losing the 'bangers in the front row. We may not realize for some time how important "The Dead Eye" is to metal in its current state, but at the very least, we can thank the band for a killer slab of tunes that'll stick with us long after the latest paint-by-numbers brigades fade into the shadow of their influences and wither away.





 

II Home II Forum II MySpace II YouTube II Contact Us II

Copyright © 2006 About Heavy Metal Albums. All Rights Reserved.