Here is the most appropriate album title of the year. Metal by Annihilator is an anthology of different metal genres,
filtered through a unique brand of guitar rawk. It’s
an album that should have the makers of the Guitar Hero series salivating, with its blistering leads by band maestro
Jeff Waters.
The key track on Metal is “Army of One.”
Here, frontman Dave Padden alternates between a hard-edged
vocal style with what can best be described as pseudo-raps.
Don’t let that scare you because the lyrics pay homage
to the uniting power of metal, name-checking metal titans
such as Slayer, Metallica and Exodus. Many of the songs have
the kind of shout-along choruses made famous by Anthrax. In
fact, if you were to sum up a band that Annihilator sounds
a little like, it would be John Bush-era Anthrax, particularly
on “Downright Dominate.” There’s also a
little bit of social commentary in “Smothered”
and a cool ass opening riff on “Operation Annihilation”
that echoes Pantera’s classic “Walk.” The
album features a slew of special guests, including Arch Enemy’s
Angela Gossow (who sings on “Couple Suicide”),
Corey Beaulieu of Trivium, Jesper Stromblad of In Flames and
William Adler of Lamb of God.
Despite the all-star roster, the star of the show is Waters.
His guitar playing on this album is something to behold. Witness
the crazy fretwork he pulls off in the bridge of “Operation
Annihilation.” Drummer Mike Mangini also stands out,
particularly on the death metal intro and chorus to “Haunted.”
“Kicked,” the song with Beaulieu, shows that Annihilator
can adopt styles as well, as the song is reminiscent of Trivium’s
work, but with Annihilator’s signature thrash/power
metal stamp on it. Same with the power groove style of “Detonation,”
the beginning of which shows Mangini can stand up with the
black metal drummers in terms of furious double kick drums.
The whole album is chock full of awesome musicianship, but
the songs are also tight and always kicking ass. Metal is one of those albums where you don’t notice that any
of the tracks are over five minutes long and that is a good
thing. Metal is heavy music done the way it should
be. |