Job For A Cowboy - Moon Healer review
Band: | Job For A Cowboy |
Album: | Moon Healer |
Style: | Death metal |
Release date: | February 23, 2024 |
A review by: | Auntie Sahar |
01. Beyond The Chemical Doorway
02. Etched In Oblivion
03. Grinding Wheels Of Ophanim
04. The Sun Gave Me Ashes So I Sought Out The Moon
05. Into The Crystalline Crypts
06. A Sorrow-Filled Moon
07. The Agony Seeping Storm
08. The Forever Rot
It would perhaps surprise certain users to see their Auntie Sahar (formerly known as “Apothecary”) reviewing an album of this nature. Yet would you all dare to believe that, prior to my coronation as Metal Storm Drone Empress in the 2010s, I was a thrash / tech death fiend in the late 2000s?
The explosion of emo and rave – influenced metalcore bands (which subsequently spawned an offshoot of screamo – esque deathcore) in the late 2000s was… pretty hit or miss. Arizona’s Job For A Cowboy, however, always stood out as one of the better bands from the period. Much like their contemporaries in The Faceless, the band originally started off as deathcore on their debut, before dropping that sound for a much tighter, highly nuanced brand of technical death metal.
2024’s Moon Healer now sees JFAC returning to reclaim their kingdom after a ten year hiatus, and picking up more or less where their last LP left off, 2014’s Sun Eater. Much like that album, the music herein is not “tech death” in the sense of old school pioneers like Death, Atheist, etc. It’s the more intricate, polyrhythmic brand that emerged further down the line in the late 2000s, taking more of a cue from prog metal, djent, and jazz fusion. At times this brand of tech death does indeed threaten to become overly wanky and have a certain air of pomp and arrogance about it, but thankfully this isn’t really a mood that’s conveyed that strongly (if at all) on Moon Healer.
Indeed, it’s not so much that Job For A Cowboy are really doing much all that different on Moon Healer that helps to sell the album. It’s the fact that, they almost appear to be doing it (dare I say?) better than they perhaps ever did (just give that second track, “Etched In Oblivion,” a whirl). Front man Jonny Davy’s vocals are as on point as ever. The pig squeal, screamo – ish days are long behind him, but the guy still belts out some pretty powerful grunts that would probably satisfy even the darkest Orc in Mordor. The guitar riffage is intricate, but has an underlying sense of groove and punch to it as well (think Converge or Botch) that keeps the music from descending into a total “look Mommy, I've got a 7 string!” - esque wankfest. And if any one member has really “stolen the show” as it were on Moon Healer, it’s definitely bassist Nick Schendzielos.This guy easily sounds like a bassist who originally came from a jazz background and then jumped to metal. Holy Hell, is that a fretless he’s going at there? Well, it sounds like it, but even if not, his lines are fat, audible, and incredibly smooth and bouncy throughout. “Into The Crystalline Crypts” is a definite highlight as far as his skills are concerned.
It almost feels a bit challenging to pinpoint exactly when Moon Healer was recorded. Considering its similarity in title to Sun Eater, one almost becomes tempted to assume that JFAC were merely sitting on this record as the follow – up to their 2014 effort, and only just dropped it now. Whatever the case, it is an extremely worthy successor and continuation of all the threads they last left dangling ten years ago, an achievement that not many bands can pull off without turning into absolute laughingstocks. A triumph for groovier, more bass – heavy tech death for sure, and thus far probably my Biggest Surprise yet for 2024.
10th Grade Nostalgia got me actin unwise!
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