Soulfly - Omen review
Band: | Soulfly |
Album: | Omen |
Style: | Groove thrash metal |
Release date: | May 25, 2010 |
A review by: | jupitreas |
Disc I [CD]
01. Bloodbath & Beyond
02. Rise Of The Fallen [feat.Greg Puciato]
03. Great Depression
04. Lethal Injection [feat. Tommy Victor]
05. Kingdom
06. Jeffrey Dahmer
07. Off With Their Heads
08. Vulture Culture
09. Mega-Doom
10. Counter Sabotage
11. Soulfly VII
12. Four Sticks [Led Zeppelin cover]
13. Refuse/Resist [Sepultura cover]
14. Your Life, My Life [Excel cover]
Disc II [deluxe edition DVD Live at the With Full Force Festival, Germany - July 3, 2009]
01. Blood Fire War Hate
02. Sanctuary
03. Prophecy
04. Back To The Primitive
05. Seek 'N' Strike
06. Living Sacrifice
07. Enemy Ghost
08. Refuse/Resist
09. Doom
10. L.O.T.M.
11. Molotov
12. Drums
13. Warmageddon
14. Policia
15. Unleash
16. Roots Bloody Roots
17. Eye For An Eye
+ Unleash [video]
Max Cavalera has traditionally been one of the most prolific people in metal, churning out new albums not only with his main bands Sepultura and Soulfly but also with numerous side projects and guest appearances. All of this activity really seems to be taking its toll - with Omen it seems that Max is really tired, worn out and devoid of new ideas.
Omen is a showcase of a band going through the motions, performing recycled riffs and compositions without any fire or conviction. Can anyone really argue that "Great Depression" and "Off With Their Heads" have rehashed Soulfly riffs or that "Vulture Culture" is a near carbon-copy of "Wasting Away"? Furthermore, Logan Mader's clinical production is entirely inappropriate for music as simple as this, draining whatever remains of the potency the performers might have had during recording sessions. It all sounds technically perfect but some more dynamics or even some mistakes would make these songs far less boring. Max's predominantly rather unimpressive vocals and simplistic lyrics don't help matters much either.
Of course, even a mediocre Soulfly album still has some things that are commendable - the heaviness and occasional fun excursions into speedy thrash are still here. Tommy Victor's guest appearance is appealing and his song sounds like decent Prong, while "Jeffrey Dahmer" and "Mega-Doom" contain slightly better songwriting and more varied riffs and melodies. The instrumental "Soullfly VII" is, as usual, fairly solid.
Nevertheless, in the grand scheme of things, Omen is a painfully mediocre and spirit-less album. Soulfly experienced a boost in creativity for Dark Ages; however, this fire has all but burned out by now. The slower songs drag while faster material simply fails to exude that trademark Cavalera sense of urgency and stomping speed. There is plenty of thrash out there during the current revival that crushes Omen in every way. Max probably needs to take a break. I know I will - from listening to Soulfly.
| Written on 14.06.2010 by With Metal Storm since 2002, jupitreas has been subjecting the masses to his reviews for quite a while now. He lives in Warsaw, Poland, where he does his best to avoid prosecution for being so cool. |
Rating:
6.7
6.7
Rating: 6.7 |
Eight albums and counting, [Band]Soulfly[/band]'s Omen sees ex-Sepultura main man Max Cavalera turn from musician into a music factory, producing music regularly like a machine, but with diminishing effort and human warmth put into each subsequent record. Omen would be Cavalera's third album in two years and the beginning of a run that would see him release six albums in five years between his various projects. Read more ›› |
Comments
Comments: 14
Visited by: 301 users
EzeKyeL |
Elyar S. Gud är Död |
pazuzuovbabel Pazuzu |
atrox |
BudDa Elite |
Athropos Burning inside |
Uirapuru Liver Failure |
Dani5050 |
The great lich |
Uirapuru Liver Failure |
Riscannon |
Sword_Chant Posts: 717 |
babylonandbeyond Posts: 1 |
sepulkisser |
Hits total: 9007 | This month: 12