Doom Metal and Occult Rock band Blood Ceremony show
absolutely no sign of stopping since their formation ten years ago in their
hometown in Toronto, Canada. With three albums in the can on the Rise Above
Records label, I always imagine what will they think of next with their follow
up. Alia O’Brien is brilliant with her vocals, keyboards and flute playing. And
with her fellow comrades including guitarist Sean Kennedy, bassist Lucas Gadke,
and drummer Michael Carrillo, she knows that she has got their back and never
letting them down.
She’s been very busy as she contributed to a film score with
a 2015 documentary film from Banger Films covering the historical origins of
Satan entitled Satan Lives which is
directed by the same people who did Metal:
A Headbanger’s Journey, Rush: Beyond the Lighted Stage, and Super Duper Alice Cooper. But let’s get
straight to their new album entitled, Lord
of Misrule. The traces of Psych, Folk, Doom, and Prog is still there with
the essence of Jethro Tull meets Black Sabbath meets Fairport Convention.
But thrown in The Electric Prunes, Jefferson Airplane,
Trees, and Forest, Blood Ceremony know their roots very in their cream of the
crop of Prog and Doom. And they know what to get when they shop around for new
songs and carrying the torch is showing how much they have come along and I’m
very blown away here.
The opener, The Devil’s
Widow, is a killer introduction with mid-tempo rhythms, blaring lead guitar
riffs and solo, and drums getting the shuttle making a jump to light speed
before Alia’s flute shows a bit of the essence of Thjis Van Leer. Flower Phantoms is like something
straight out of the first Nuggets compilation as they go into the ‘60s garage
rock-era with a hyper mood to jump into the groove with the VOX-like organ
sounds, guitars heading into a haunting area.
Lorely is Blood
Ceremony’s homage to the late great Harry Nilsson with a touch of British
Psychedelia approach capturing the line busy tone from the Rhodes keyboard
before to a swirling Beatle-sque ascending Mellotron ending. But I also love
their approach of the band doing a waltz. It’s evidential on The Weird of Finistere.
I can imagine both Roxy Music and The Moody Blues working
together on a composition like this as if they recorded this between 1969 and
early 1970. And it’s such a chilling
piece between Alia and Sean together. The double-tracking vocals,
echo-reverbed, laid-back percussion, and lyrics dealing of the last rite of the
character’s dying scenery.
Old Fires sounds
like a chugging yet crunchier roar thanks to Sean’s guitar with it’s pumping
riffs, blaring organs, and dramatic lead section in which he goes straight to
the sky with his improvisation as he plays both at the same time in the
double-tracking section that makes my head bang a bit more. Half Moon Street goes into Doom-Folk-Metal
as if Sabbath had teamed up with Comus to create a grittier version of Song For Comus.
The closing somber, Things
Present, Things Past makes the atmosphere melancholy to give it a look back
on what will happen when we look back on the memories and that remained and
either we fly into the previous chapters of our lives or play the last game to
decide to make that choice either way. Blood Ceremony have scored for me
another home run.
It’s great to see them going into a different direction, but
keeping the Doom and Prog approach and showing that it’s still there and with
the new album, it’s another classic surprise that makes me just jump for more
and here they unleashed it again. Highly recommended.
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