Bong - Stoner Rock review
Band: | Bong |
Album: | Stoner Rock |
Style: | Drone doom metal, Psychedelic doom metal |
Release date: | March 03, 2014 |
A review by: | Auntie Sahar |
01. Polaris
02. Out Of The Aeons
Heavy metal is a strange genre of music. As any devout fan could probably tell you, it's certainly a lot more diverse than the common layperson would be likely to believe, with bands that borrow influences from virtually any other genre you could imagine: Southern rock, electronic jazz, you name it. The Brits in Bong have come to follow along this line of thought quite well in recent years, crafting albums that have made people question what exactly metal is in its current incarnation. Stoner Rock, the group's 2014 effort, is certainly no exception.
If you're familiar with the sound of Bong by now, you'll know what to expect. Nothing about the band's formula is new on Stoner Rock, but in a way it really doesn't need to be, as a change would only be likely to undermine their established identity at this point. So once again, we're taken on a trancelike voyage through sonic soundscapes, with no real concept of melody or structure, just the monotonous droning of guitar and bass, and the ever-dreamy sitar work of Benjamin Freeth. The music is, as usual, mostly instrumental, but the vocals of Dave Terry do sneak in here and there, seemingly always at the right time. When the "I have failed in my duties?" pops in around the 7 minute mark on the massive opening track, the vibe created is nothing short of otherwordly.
To listeners first encountering the band, this repetitive delivery may come across as boring, but (as usual) Bong somehow make it work towards channeling a sort of ancient, ancestral type of vibe. In the more tribal-based eras of times bygone, when you had shamans and other spiritual leaders guiding their villages towards higher consciousness, music would typically accompany their rituals, at a steady, monotonous rhythm that, in some way or another, helped them plunge into their zones. Bong seem to exemplify this idea, and the music of Stoner Rock certainly "takes you places."
The title of Bong's recent album may strike some as ironic, as the music here has nothing whatsoever to do with stoner rock. But, as one of our more popular users previously suggested, this album actually bears a lot more resemblance to what would be thought of as a "stoner" type vibe than most stoner rock and metal might. It's transcendent and relaxing, the ideal music for a smoke session, and at plenty of points throughout it the mood created makes you feel not like you're not necessarily listening to a British drone four-piece, but to the trippy soundtrack to some sort of Vedic soma ritual. If this was the intention of Bong with this release, I'd say Timothy Leary would be proud.
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