Anthrax - Worship Music review
Band: | Anthrax |
Album: | Worship Music |
Style: | Heavy metal, Thrash metal |
Release date: | September 13, 2011 |
Guest review by: | Iron Nostarion |
01. Worship (Intro)
02. Earth On Hell
03. The Devil You Know
04. Fight 'Em Til You Can't
05. I'm Alive
06. Hymn 1
07. In The End
08. The Giant
09. Hymn 2
10. Judas Priest
11. Crawl
12. The Constant
13. Revolution Screams
14. New Noise [Refused cover] [bonus]
Eight years have passed since Anthrax, the so-called "kings of mosh", last released a studio album. Although their heavy metal shift (from their thrash origins) wasn't causing much anticipation for this album at first, several announcements and the return of Joey Belladonna, as well as the online promotional release of the excellent track "Fight 'Em Til You Can't", caused this album to be one of the most anticipated metal albums of the year. A decent amount of people were expecting it to be a groundbreaking thrash metal album, including myself, and most others at least expected it to be a somehow solid release.
And as it turned out, this album is indeed a solid one, though it could have been much better. Empowered by some of the best production work in post-2000 metal, imbued with strong and catchy riffs and topped with Belladonna's ever-strong vocals, this album most certainly delivers as a metal album in general. However, it has two illnesses which considerably lower its reputation and waste lots of its potential:
First, there's the slight change of songwriting quality between some songs (think "Crawl" and "Earth On Hell"). Due to this, the first part of the album (from the intro to beginning of "The Giant") sounds like a masterpiece, while the rest of the album sounds roughly mediocre. And although there are memorable riffs and decent parts in the second part, and a somehow decent song ("Judas Priest"), you're bound to begin fast-forwarding when "Crawl" doesn't seem to finish. That introduces us to the Second Illness: the songs are too fucking long, longer than they should be. Even in great songs such as "Fight 'Em Til You Can't", the songs take too much time and the riffs repeat endlessly. For example, when you hear "In The End", the riff, while great-sounding, keeps repeating without vocals for almost the first minute and fifteen seconds of the song (and then goes to repeating in the background with Joey saving us from fatal repetitiveness, am I repetitively repeating the word repetitiveness too much? Sorry for being repetitive!).
By the end of the album, however, one might still feel good about it because the last track, "Revolution Screams", is actually not bad at all and has a somewhat funny silence of about 5 - 6 minutes before it continues in a different style. Overall, this album I would divide into two parts: one extremely good and the other repetitive and mediocre. It seems like most of the good parts were written after Anthrax's reformation back to thrash, and the bad parts (second half) were probably already written back when Dan Nelson was in the band and Anthrax were still on the heavy train. This album still shows that they can produce masterpieces, however, and it most certainly promises a return to form by the next record or two, so we can most certainly expect better.
Overall rating: Good.
Highlights: "Earth On Hell", "The Devil You Know", "Fight 'Em Til You Can't", "Revolution Screams"
Rating breakdown
Performance: | 10 |
Songwriting: | 8 |
Originality: | 7 |
Production: | 10 |
Written by Iron Nostarion | 21.09.2011
Guest review disclaimer:
This is a guest review, which means it does not necessarily represent the point of view of the MS Staff.
This is a guest review, which means it does not necessarily represent the point of view of the MS Staff.
Rating:
6.6
6.6
Rating: 6.6 |
I contracted my first case of Anthrax in '87 when a friend started blaring "I'm The Man!" in his truck one night. Was hoping for the best on this album? and went back nearly 25 years for the inspiration for this review. Hit play and sing along! Now they're Anthrax and they take no shit Over the last three years had eight vocalists Read more ›› |
Rating:
9.6
9.6
Rating: 9.6 |
Let us get this out of the way immediately: yes, it's true, Worship Music only has about three thrash songs on it. Yes, "Fight 'Em 'Till You Can't" bears some striking similarities to "Gridlock" off of Persistence Of Time. Joey Belladonna is overdubbed a lot. Most of the album is slow or mid-paced. Essentially, this album is different. It is not the same Anthrax that Joey left In 1992. If you hit 'play' expecting to hear "Indians" or "Time," you will be sadly disappointed. However, on its own merits, Worship Music is a masterpiece. Read more ›› |
Rating:
6.9
6.9
Rating: 6.9 |
"At last!" one might shout being finally able to lay hands on the newest Anthrax effort, Worship Music. Eight long years we waited for some new material. Well, alright, new material released officially on CD. It's easy to assume that the role of this album - apart from bringing some good music of course - was to prove that Anthrax didn't vanish and are still here to remind the youngsters what thrashing is all about. Did they manage to do it? Well... Read more ›› |
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