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Blood Mountain

 
Album Review: Blood Mountain

  • Artist: Mastodon
  • Rating: StarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: September 12, 2006
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

The two-year long wait is over, and those Mastodon fans encouraged but leery of the slicker production of Leviathan over Remission will be even more bemused, or downright bewildered, by Blood Mountain, the band's first foray into major-label territory since signing with Warner Brothers' Reprise imprint (after all, this was the label conceded to Frank Sinatra as his own when he threatened to leave it). Blood Mountain is everything fans both hoped for and feared. Mastodon has dug even deeper in its foray into prog metal, but without losing an ounce of their power, literacy, or willingness to indulge in hardcore punk, doom, and death metal. Like Leviathan, Blood Mountain is both melodic and downright raging in places. Matt Bayles is in the producer's chair once more and he's encouraged this Georgia quartet -- Bränn Dailor (drums), Brent Hinds (guitar and vocals), Bill Kelliher (guitar and vocals), and Troy Sanders (bass and vocals) -- to take it to the limit. And they have. Blood Mountain indulges and goes deep into the territory of prog metal beats and quests and spiritual revelations that have less to do with Tolkein-ism and more to do with Conan-ism. There are utterly beautiful melodic passages woven into the heaviness that are reminiscent of Thin Lizzy's dual guitar lyricism -- and the band has confessed to digging Phil Lynott and company. The vocals -- with guest spots from Neurosis' Scott Kelly, the Mars Volta's Cedric Bixler-Zavala, and Queens of the Stone Age's Josh Homme -- are mixed way upfront and the number of sheer stylistic changes is dizzying.

No, Mastodon should not lose their street cred over this. For every old fan alienated, a new one will step into the gap and there will be throngs of new ones, more than likely. Why? Simply because this band does the technical thing as well or better than Meshuggah without sacrificing a bit of the black blood which courses through their veins toward their dark thrash metal hearts. The set opens with the completely in-the-red thrashcore metal of "The Wolf Is Loose," complete with a chanted chorus. As the guitars twin and scream, bass and drums chop away at convention. Tempo changes, from fast to faster to a refrain that gives the listener time to shout along. The doubled leads and repetition in the verse are countered by the swelling, pulsating thud from the drum kit. Lyrically, it appears that Mastodon is trying to create a new mythological present. But the bridge goes into the netherworld with actual sung vocals and angular, elliptical phrases that defy elucidation. The echoey sound effects on the drums at the opening of "Crystal Skull" quickly give way to a plodding power metal riff. "Sleeping Giant" comes out of the gate, slowly, dreamily, seductively, there are digital delays on the guitars that gather tension as they (relatively) whisper by, and create an ambience that crosses early Black Sabbath and Opeth. It's the vocals that are most remarkable, however, sung cleanly to a slow tempo, each word is distinct and the effect is nearly hypnotic as the strange, self-created cultic myth is further woven into a web of dislocation, epic ambivalence, mystery, and power. Prog metal is made plain on "Capillarian Quest," where intricate patterns and bludgeoning guitar riffs vie for dominance but are authoritatively held in Mastodon's deafening balance. "Circle Cysquatch," with its bloodcurdling extreme thrash and burn, tips it toward a virtual creation idea born of pagan rites, blood sacrifice, the spirits of extinct species, and the hollow ring of organized religion, all given their freedom here to drift back to prehistory and the days of fire and rage in the rough and tumble founding of "civilization."

On it goes. Mastodon seeks no easy answers but poses dozens of questions about origin, and "culture." Forget "thinking man's metal," this is metal, period, and the guys that make it think. The music, as varied and tumultuous and, in places utterly beautiful as it is, place the band beyond the pale -- check the intro to "Bladecatcher" before it falls apart into pure chaos and cacophony where lyrics and themes are barely articulated in the hammering thunder of apocalyptic noise. Sound effects that perhaps are the voices of the spirits themselves make themselves heard in the din -- but indecipherably. "Colony of Birchmen" and "Hunters of the Sky" are both prototypically metal and act as the album's hinge pieces, where Mastodon completes its achievement and establish a new heavy metal. "This Mortal Soul," with its elongated beginning and utter lyricism may alienate those who live for heaviness alone, but it will attract those who can see outside the genre's subgenres. The set closes with "Pendulous Skin," a track that amounts to a densely populated power ballad with gorgeous guitar soloing, and a major/minor key chord progression (instead of riffs and a Hammond B-3) played by Bayles followed by a long silence, where at the very end, a "fan" letter is read and responded to. What does it add up to? Something old and something new, a heavy metal that's utterly gargantuan to wrestle with because it actually moves the style into brand new territory, an unfamiliar terrain which will accord it much name calling and crying of "sellout" by the unwashed masses who are more conservative about their steely brand of "folk music" than the Newport crowd was about Dylan going electric. Yet, for those daring enough to take this in, there are true bloody treasures to behold and receive. If Leviathan was a masterpiece, then this is too -- only more so. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
The Wolf Is Loose Mastodon Mastodon (3:34)
Crystal Skull Scott Kelly, Mastodon Mastodon (3:27)
Sleeping Giant Mastodon Mastodon (5:36)
Capillarian Crest Mastodon Mastodon (4:25)
Circle of Cysquatch Mastodon Mastodon (3:19)
Bladecatcher Mastodon Mastodon (3:20)
Colony of Birchmen Mastodon Mastodon (4:19)
Hunters of the Sky Mastodon Mastodon (3:52)
Hand of Stone Mastodon Mastodon (3:30)
This Mortal Soil Mastodon Mastodon (5:00)
Siberian Divide Mastodon Mastodon (5:32)
Pendulous Skin Mastodon Mastodon (22:15)

Credits

Craig Aaronson (A&R), Josh Homme (Vocals), Doug Hill (Engineer), Jim Keller (Engineer), Jim Keller (Mixing Assistant), Scott Kelly (Vocals), Matt Bayles (Producer), Matt Bayles (Engineer), Rich Costey (Mixing), Isaiah Owens (Organ), Isaiah Owens (Synthesizer), Bränn Dailor (Drums), Bränn Dailor (Vocals (Background)), Bränn Dailor (Group Member), Nobody (Engineer), Ben Verellen (Assistant Engineer), Vlado Meller (Mastering), Troy Sanders (Bass), Troy Sanders (Vocals), Troy Sanders (Group Member), Bill Kelliher (Guitar), Bill Kelliher (Vocals (Background)), Bill Kelliher (Group Member), Brent Hinds (Guitar), Brent Hinds (Vocals), Brent Hinds (Group Member), Pablo Arraya (Mixing Assistant), Omar Rodriguez-Lopez (Vocals), Eric Searles (Pre-Production), Chris Common (Drum Technician), Jennifer Ellison (Cello), Mark Santangelo (Mastering Assistant), Jonathan Debaun (Engineer), Alain Moschulski (Engineer), Nicola Shangrow (Violin), Michael Green (Pre-Production)
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Wikipedia: Blood Mountain (album)
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Blood Mountain
Studio album by Mastodon
Released UK: September 11, 2006
USA: September 12, 2006
Recorded December 2005 - April 2006
Genre Sludge metal, progressive metal
Length 68:09
Label Warner Bros. Records
Reprise Records
Producer Matt Bayles
Mastodon
Professional reviews
Mastodon chronology
Call of the Mastodon
(2006)
Blood Mountain
(2006)
Crack the Skye
(2009)

Blood Mountain is the third full-length studio album by metal band Mastodon. The recording of the album finished in April, 2006 and it was released on September 11 in the UK and September 12, 2006 in North America.

Like Mastodon's previous studio work Leviathan, Blood Mountain is a concept album. According to bassist Troy Sanders, "It's about climbing up a mountain and the different things that can happen to you when you're stranded on a mountain, in the woods, and you're lost. You're starving, hallucinating, running into strange creatures. You're being hunted. It's about that whole struggle."[1]

The album includes guest appearances by Scott Kelly of Neurosis on "Crystal Skull", Joshua Homme of Queens of the Stone Age on "Colony of Birchmen", as well as keyboardist Isaiah "Ikey" Owens and singer Cedric Bixler-Zavala of The Mars Volta on "Pendulous Skin" and "Siberian Divide", respectively.

Music videos for "The Wolf Is Loose," "Colony of Birchmen," "Sleeping Giant" and "Capillarian Crest" have been made. Although the video for "Capillarian Crest" is made up of live footage, the studio version of the song is played.

Guitarist Bill Kelliher considers this album to represent the earth element.[2] Vocalist/bassist Troy Sanders calls this "sonically the best album we have done."

The band's emphasis on clean, melodic vocals instead of the harsher vocals that the band used on their early work continues to grow on this album.

The album in full could be streamed at the band's MySpace page a few days prior to the release.

Blood Mountain debuted on #32 spot in Billboard 200 best selling album charts, marking the highest debut in the band's career. By December 2006, the album had sold more than 65,000 copies in the U.S. alone according to their website [1]. By March 2009, the album had sold 150,000 copies in the U.S. according to Nielsen Soundscan [2].

Contents

Critical reaction

Blood Mountain was largely well received by critics. Total Guitar magazine voted it its Number One album of 2006, and magazines such as Metal Hammer and Kerrang! have stated that it is every bit as good as the band's previous album Leviathan, if not better. The album has also charted in many websites and magazines 2006 countdowns. The band's first single off the album, "Capillarian Crest", was ranked #27 in Rolling Stone magazine Top 100 songs of 2006[3]. Blood Mountain was ranked 9th in Rolling Stone Top 50 Albums of 2006[4]/2, and 42nd in Pitchfork's Top 50 Albums of 2006.[5]

Blood Mountain was voted the best album of 2006 in the UK Metal Hammer magazine end-of year polls, as well as top in Total Guitar magazine's top 50 albums of 2006. It was also rated the 17th greatest metal album of all time by a countdown recently done by gaming website IGN.[6] However, the album is not without its detractors, as The Guardian states that the album is unorganized and feels as if the tracks are far longer than they actually are, which resulted in the 1/5 rating.

Track listing

All songs written and composed by Mastodon

# Title Length
1. "The Wolf Is Loose"   3:34
2. "Crystal Skull" (Feat. Scott Kelly) 3:27
3. "Sleeping Giant"   5:36
4. "Capillarian Crest"   4:25
5. "Circle of Cysquatch"   3:19
6. "Bladecatcher"   3:20
7. "Colony of Birchmen" (Feat. Joshua Homme) 4:19
8. "Hunters of the Sky"   3:52
9. "Hand of Stone"   3:30
10. "This Mortal Soil"   5:00
11. "Siberian Divide" (Feat. Cedric Bixler-Zavala) 5:32
12. "Pendulous Skin" (Feat. Isaiah "Ikey" Owens) 5:04

Story notes

  • The main character is in search of the Crystal Skull which he hopes to place at the top of Blood Mountain.[1]In the making of DVD, the Crystal Skull is supposed to remove "the reptile brain" causing its owner the ability to achieve the next step of human evolution.[7]
  • In an interview with bassist Troy Sanders it was revealed that a Cysquatch is "a one-eyed Sasquatch that can see into the future."[1] The Cysquatch warns the main character of the following dangers during the journey for the Crystal Skull.[8]

Track details

The album's last song, "Pendulous Skin", contains a secret "fan letter" from Josh Homme, who provided guest vocals on the album. At 21:25, he says: "Dear Mastodon: My name is Joshua. I'm a big fan from Southern Cal. Really diggin' on your new scene. That's why I hope you don't mind when I got your new demos for your new CD, I had to sing parts on them and send them to you as a tribute. I hope you're not mad about me also uploading them onto the Internet. But hell, it seems like you guys are so cool that you might dig something just like that. Sincerely, your fan, Joshua M. Homme. P.S., Keep it real...REAL (studio effects are used)....*laughter*....REAL." When asked about the message in a Pitchfork Media interview, Homme said, "I was just fucking with them. Then they asked if they could put that on the end of their record, and I was like, 'Yeah.' I did the vocal [for "Colony of Birchmen"] and sent it back to them, and that message was before the song started."[9]

The title "Colony of Birchmen" is a homage to the song "The Colony of Slippermen" by progressive rock group Genesis, whom the band's drummer, Brann Dailor, has been known to appreciate.[10]

The track "Sleeping Giant" is available as downloadable content for Guitar Hero III, and "Colony of Birchmen" is an on-disc track in Rock Band 2.

Credits

Band members


Guest musicians

Production

Billboard charts

Album

Year Chart Position
2006 The Billboard 200 32

Singles

Year Single Chart Position
2006 Colony of Birchmen US Mainstream Rock 32

References


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Blood Mountain (album)" Read more