Album Review

Score 5
Written by Ramar Pittance
Published on 11/8/2011
If you can stomach the idea that Sunlight-style death metal circa 2011 is less a living genre and a more a delivery system for interpreting Discharge or Entombed Dismember songs, then I think Bastard Priest has made an album you'll consider tolerable in Ghouls of the Endless Night.
 
Bastard Priest do Entombed 17 years after Entombed got tired of doing Entombed, minus the creative ingenuity that attends being among the first wave of bands to do something. More than a decade after the release of Bloodbath's Breeding Death EP, this is an increasingly less admirable mission statement. Bastard Priest doesn't invite the listener to invest in its compositions, so much as it begs admiration for a faithful adherence to form. To that end, it succeeds. The tone, created by producer Fred Etsby (ex-Dismember) is more rockslide than buzzsaw--a perfect conjuration of Left Hand Path, beefed up to modern standards. Bastard Priest employs that tone to hammer out knowingly knuckle-headed barroom hardcore, rounded out by scraggy, pointless solos. Though "Sacrilegious Ground" dabbles in melodic tremolo riffing, Bastard Priest predominantly deals in four-on-floor barre chord progressions. The selling point of these songs, it seems, is that that they were written and recorded on the fly--leaving the spirit of improvisation and bottle-smashing energy intact.
 
But for all the off-the-cuff spontaneity with regards to performance, Ghouls of the Endless Night lacks the pumping heart of artistic investment. Listeners don't need to be reminded of what Sunlight-style death metal sounds like (the canon of tribute albums is probably larger than the original crop, after all), but it might be nice to hear a band try to do something different with this enduring sound. By not venturing into that territory, Bastard Priest has created something functional but has failed to animate it creatively.



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Anonymous | posted on 11/2011 | Reply
Massive review fail.
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Anonymous | posted on 11/2011
Kill yourself.
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Anonymous | posted on 11/2011 | Reply
i loved their last album, but then again i'm a sucker for punked up metal, be it black, death or grind...i'll probably still give this a spin, simply because this review doesn't really tell me what the songs sound like, more just a general feel of the band, which anyone reading this would already know.. review fail!
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Anonymous | posted on 11/2011 | Reply
I think you're under-selling the amount of energy in this album. They certainly aren't breaking new ground, but hot damn does it have a strong pulse to it.
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Anonymous | posted on 11/2011 | Reply
Personally I love this album and Bastard Priest. But whatevz man.
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Anonymous | posted on 11/2011 | Reply
"but it might be nice to hear a band try to do something different with this enduring sound" --> 2 words: Trap Them
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Anxiety Hangover | posted on 11/2011 | Reply
This is one of the more honest reviews I've seen for any of the new OSDM albums. The Ghouls of Endless Night can keep this, I'm sticking to the Left Hand Path.
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hooter | posted on 11/2011 | Reply
This honestly sounds like something I'd enjoy a fair bit. Still, I probably wouldn't disagree with the score or the review because judging by their last album it's likely bang on