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Voivod - Synchro Anarchy review



Reviewer:
8.5

141 users:
7.48
Band: Voivod
Album: Synchro Anarchy
Style: Progressive metal
Release date: February 11, 2022
A review by: Auntie Sahar


Disc I
01. Paranormalium
02. Synchro Anarchy
03. Planet Eaters
04. Mind Clock
05. Sleeves Off
06. Holographic Thinking
07. The World Today
08. Quest For Nothing
09. Memory Failure

Disc II [limited 2-CD edition]
[Live Return To Morgöth]
01. Post Society
02. The Unknown Knows
03. Ravenous Medicine
04. Psychic Vacuum
05. Obsolete Beings
06. Technocratic Manipulators
07. Fall
08. The Prow
09. Order Of The Blackguards
10. The Lost Machine
11. Korgüll The Exterminator

Yep, they're still kicking ass and quirky as hell 40 years later.

After Voivod proved they could carry on just fine post-Piggy with Target Earth and The Wake, expectations were a bit high for 2022's Synchro Anarchy. And the extraterrestrial, UFO - lovers have delivered again. This is, in many ways, the logical "next step" for the band after their two preceding albums, and it brings a bit of all of their various approaches to the table. There's some of the punchy, thrashier Voivod on tracks like "Paranormalium" and "Quest For Nothing." Mostly Voivod's signature groovy, midtempo sound dominates, as on "Planet Eaters" and "Sleeves Off". And there's even some of the dreamier, more abstract Voivod at work here on the longer tracks like "Mind Clock", the band possibly channeling influence from some of the weirder albums in their back catalog like The Outer Limits.

The most enjoyable aspect of Synchro Anarchy is really in how powerful a "new old" feeling it offers the listener. Make no mistake: the same band that recorded classics like Dimension Hatross and Nothingface is at the helm of this bad boy right here. Yet at the same time, this album also feels like noticeably different from any previous Voivod material. Most particularly, I can't ever remember the band's bass sounding this good. It's delightfully audible, and Rocky and Chewy (bass and guitar, respectively) have a wonderful chemistry here that honestly conjures thoughts of Tony Iommi and Geezer Butler, with respect to how well they play off each other and don't just mimic each other's riffs note for note.

Snake's vocals, much like the music itself, take a pleasantly diverse approach as well, alternating between shout-snarls, his characteristic, hypnotizing wails, and even a quieter, more whisper-like approach during Synchro Anarchy's more melodic moments. I cannot remember him sounding quite this good and wide ranged on either Target Earth or The Wake. And Away remains strong on the kit as usual, laying the rhythmic foundation for Voivod's prog/thrash shenanigans and also still blessing the band with his distinctly bizarre landscapes and alien beings via his artwork (see album cover).

Now into their fifth decade of recording, with Synchro Anarchy Voivod enter the 2020s on a significantly high note. Part of it is simple momentum, the band catapulting off the success of their two previous albums, but there seems to be some other element at work here, that gives the band an extra boost and makes this album sound like the most fun they've had playing music in years. There's something here for fans of virtually all the various approaches Voivod have taken over the course of their career, and with Synchro Anarchy Voivod succeed yet again at being what they've been for decades now: relevant, and not to be classed with contemporaries, past or present.


Rating breakdown
Performance: 9
Songwriting: 8
Originality: 8
Production: 9

Written by Auntie Sahar | 02.03.2022




Comments

Comments: 4   Visited by: 145 users
02.03.2022 - 21:45
Rating: 8
MetalManic
The production is sensational.

Man, I loved/love the band Martyr. In fact, I listened to them a lot in the past without not really looking into Voivod. Chicken or egg, knowing how much of an influence Voivod had on members of Martyr, it goes without saying that Martyr's former frontman/guitarist Daniel Mongrain's (yep, Voivod's Chewy) contributions to this album are paramount. I recall Martyr covering 'Brain Scan' on their album Feeding The Abscess, only to later find out it was not an original. Even then, I barely checked out Voivod. Hearing this album now, it is crazy how much of that Voivod sound is infused into that of Martyr.

Has this band's guitar sound changed much since Mongrain joined the band in 2008, or has his addition to the roster allowed the band to somewhat evolve into what we are listening to today?
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03.03.2022 - 15:45
Rating: 9
JayMo4
It's baffling how underrated this album is here. The only flaw in it I can find - if flaw is even the right word - is how heavily it borrows from previous incarnations of the band. Then again, how many other bands keep making the top 20 here year in and year out for records that sound like the same thing they've been doing for years? Start with about four or five of our more popular melodeath bands and go from there.

The execution here is perfect, and there are no down points in the album. Every song is a good one. This is a very enjoyable listen start to finish.
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05.03.2022 - 09:04
nikarg
Staff
I have never been a big fan of these guys but huge respect for still being at it and doing it really, really well. I am more fond of the earlier stuff - especially The Outer Limits, which is my favourite from them by far - but The Wake was a very good effort and this one is too.
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09.03.2022 - 13:19
Dylan 1974
Written by JayMo4 on 03.03.2022 at 15:45

It's baffling how underrated this album is here.

Totally agree - this is fucking brilliant. Not quite up to their 80s output but they're still crafting engaging and inventive music after all this time. Great band and totally unique.
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