Horndal - Lake Drinker review
Band: | Horndal |
Album: | Lake Drinker |
Style: | Post hardcore, Sludge metal |
Release date: | April 09, 2021 |
A review by: | nikarg |
01. Rossen
02. Horndal's Blodbad
03. The Uprising
04. The Black Wheel
05. Kalhygget
06. Ruhr
07. Growing Graves
08. Home
09. Thor Bear
10. Town Burner
11. Ormön
Time for some rusty metal for the hopeless generations forced to see the natural resources being sucked dry by big corp. Time for an ode to post-industrial towns that were drained, pillaged and raped, and then were left to ruin when they had nothing more to give.
Horndal is a small Swedish town that also happens to be the hometown of guitarist/vocalist Henrik Levahn and his younger brother, drummer Pontus Levahn. Hence Horndal, the band.
The three people reading my reviews know that I am sucker for interesting stories complementing my metal. The theme of Horndal's debut, Remains, was the abandonment and subsequent decline of their hometown when the steel mill that had employed local workers for decades shut down just before the '80s. Fast-forward to 2017, when Google offered hope for the local economy and for the rebirth of the area by announcing that they had purchased land in Horndal in view of using it as a potential data centre. A wolf in sheep's clothing, you say? Damn right. The server farm remains empty to this day but the location has been deforested anyway, despite the fact that it has not been decided yet if Google is going to use it or not. If it does kick off in the end, there is going to be a big need for water to cool those servers and the idea is to take it from the local lake, Rossen. Hence Lake Drinker, the album.
Lake Rossen gives its name to the album's opening track, which is a full-on sludge assault but with a thrashy, South Of Heaven-like twist. Horndal sound like High On Fire and Mastodon jamming with Slayer, Entombed, and Discharge. This is the best description I can come up with to give you an idea of the band's 'deathened' sludge hammering, thrash aggression, and punk attitude. Lake Drinker is a very riffy affair, mostly mid-tempo, and with melody often coming in the form of clean guitar passages; "Horndal's Blodbad", "The Black Wheel", and "Ruhr" are the ones that use these more memorably. The instrumental "Home" is a very nice acoustic interlude and along with "Thor Bear" which succeeds it, they have recordings of local protesters mixed in with the music.
As much as I loved blasting "Kalhygget", with its great mix of quicker d-beat pounding and heavier thrash stomp, my two favourite tracks are "Growing Graves" and "Town Burner". Both feature a heavier presence of lead guitar compared to the rest of the album, with the former being insanely groovy and the latter being a total barn burner with a post-punk edge. The whole album is a real banger though, it is riff town from start to finish with massive drums.
Lake Drinker is among the best sludge you're going to get this year. Urban decay is available over here.
"We bow our heads
You want, we'll make
First you took our trees
Now you drink our lake"
| Written on 07.05.2021 by Only way to feel the noise is when it's good and loud! |
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