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King Buffalo - Acheron review



Reviewer:
8.0

42 users:
7.76
Band: King Buffalo
Album: Acheron
Style: Psychedelic rock, Stoner metal
Release date: December 03, 2021
A review by: musclassia


01. Acheron
02. Zephyr
03. Shadows
04. Cerberus

For fans of stoner/psychedelic rock, 3 December 2021 was a stacked day for releases.

Not only did Elder and Kadavar join forces for a new collaboration album and Weedpecker return with their first new album in nearly four years, but King Buffalo released their second album of 2021. Now, that makes 2021 sound like a very busy year for King Buffalo, but it’s actually less than what was initially planned, with the band announcing in March that they would release three albums in 2021. Ultimately, one of those has been moved to next year, which is probably sensible, but they’ve still put out more music in 2021 than most projects, and what’s more, both records are actually pretty great.

I already covered The Burden Of Restlessness back in June, and admired King Buffalo’s approach on the record compared with the previous year’s Dead Star, but Acheron is, if anything, a step up from The Burden Of Restlessness. The first thing that distinguishes the two albums is the song composition, which is evident when one checks the track lengths; whilst The Burden was comprised of short-to-mid-length songs, every track on Acheron is around the 10-minute mark.

Now, when a band like King Buffalo loads a record with 10-minute songs, one expects them to either be prog adventures that jump over the place, or more gradual atmospheric journeys. Ultimately, the music on Acheron is closer to the latter; the opening title track swims by in a gentle groove, floating along for several minutes before sliding into nice stoner fuzziness. “Acheron” is a very fluid song, ebbing and flowing between calmer delicacy and noisier riffs in what is arguably a post-rock manner. It’s not something I’m too accustomed to hearing from King Buffalo; most of their recent songs have been a bit too short to play with dynamics in this way, and the very lengthy “Red Star” from Dead Star was more of a prog odyssey. Still, I really enjoy the way they employ this approach on Acheron.

The long-form, jam-like fluid composition that gradually transitions from soft to heavy (or vice versa) is the template for most of the album’s songs; obviously, the way in which things are arranged has some variety, but “Zephyr” and “Shadows” are songs that undergo subtle development across their lengthy runtimes. However, this is by no means a bad thing; each song is deftly crafted to keep the listener engaged through each transition and new idea. The subtle clean guitar leads early in “Shadows” and the keyboard solo later on, the sinister vocals from Sean McVay in the heavier parts of “Cerberus”, the bluesy guitar solos in “Zephyr”: each song has several excellent moments.

Another thing I really enjoy about Acheron is the tone that they’ve taken here. I was introduced to King Buffalo with Longing To Be The Mountain, and was really taken by its mellow, gentle vibes; as much as I’ve voiced mixed opinions about the ‘flower power’ retro-psychedelia in my review of the Elder/Kadavar collaboration, King Buffalo took that sensibility but placed it within a modern and alluring context on Longing To Be The Mountain. I’ve missed some of that tranquility on the two albums that followed it, but whilst Acheron doesn’t reach the same extent, it gets close to that vibe and balances that mellowness with the heaviness that permeates this record. Everything about this album, from the tone and the structure to the actual specifics of the compositions, works really nicely for me.

To be honest, going into last Friday, I did not expect Acheron to be my favourite of the trio; I’ve been a big fan of both Weedpecker and Elder for approaching a decade now, whilst King Buffalo are both a more recent and less world-changing discovery. However, whilst I’ve got gripes with both of those groups' latest efforts, I find Acheron to be a incredibly relistenable album, one that finds a perfect balance between heavy rock/metal and soft contemplation across a quartet of serene musical vistas.


Rating breakdown
Performance: 8
Songwriting: 8
Originality: 7
Production: 8





Written on 06.12.2021 by Hey chief let's talk why not


Comments

Comments: 8   Visited by: 95 users
07.12.2021 - 12:55
Rating: 8
tominator
At best deranged
Contributor
For me, the 2 records this year are very close in terms of how much I enjoy them. After my first listen to Acheron, I think I would give the slight edge to The Burden Of Restlessness (for now). It's really close, though.

I'd still put Dead Star above this year's records. Probably because I liked the extra energy on that record, which came from their more uptempo style on it. Still though, these guys know how to bring out some excellent music. And like you said very relistenable.
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07.12.2021 - 13:00
Rating: 8
musclassia
Staff
Written by tominator on 07.12.2021 at 12:55

I'd still put Dead Star above this year's records. Probably because I liked the extra energy on that record, which came from their more uptempo style on it.

Looks like we have the same basis for contrasting preferences; I rank Dead Star lowest out of the albums I heard from them, just because it is more uptempo and energetic and I find King Buffalo sound more appealing to me when they're mellower, but I can understand why one would think the inverse. If nothing else, Red Star was excellent on Dead Star.
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07.12.2021 - 13:30
JoHn Doe
Second album?! I'll have to listen to it, their last one was excellent.
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I thought the two primary purposes for the internet were cat memes and overreactions.
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07.12.2021 - 13:53
TheBigRossowski
I feel this part leads to what I was thinking in terms of the sound from the album's predecessor. There feels like there is much more sonic depth in this album. I appreciate the difference between the two already.

"The long-form, jam-like fluid composition that gradually transitions from soft to heavy (or vice versa) is the template for most of the album’s songs; obviously, the way in which things are arranged has some variety, but “Zephyr” and “Shadows” are songs that undergo subtle development across their lengthy runtimes."
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That rug really tied the room together, did it not?
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07.12.2021 - 22:57
Rating: 9
F* great stoner + sludge + psychedelic combo. A delicious one! The Burden of Restlessness was way too proggy for me, but this one is much better! Nice review.
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08.12.2021 - 09:28
Bad English
Tage Westerlund
Well i like your homework, better as Radu did, you just did 3 intros about 3 albums and wrote new text in each other.... Cool.
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I stand whit Ukraine and Israel. They have right to defend own citizens.

Stormtroopers of Death - "Speak English or Die"

I better die, because I never will learn speek english, so I choose dieing
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08.12.2021 - 09:56
RaduP
CertifiedHipster
Staff
Written by Bad English on 08.12.2021 at 09:28

better as Radu did

Hey!
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Do you think if the heart keeps on shrinking
One day there will be no heart at all?
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29.10.2022 - 11:46
Rating: 9
tintinb
Can't believe this band's ability to bring out superb albums. I haven't found yet one single album which is bad. All are of excellent quality.
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Leeches everywhere.
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