Primordial - _Redemption at the Puritan's Hand_
(Metal Blade, 2011)
by: Pedro Azevedo (7.5 out of 10)
Since we started the CoC Album of the Year award in 2003, Primordial
soon became the only band that could claim to have won the award every
time they released an album. Such was the case with _The Gathering
Wilderness_ in 2005 and _To the Nameless Dead_ in 2007 -- the first of
which with considerable ease. Yet last year's _Redemption at the
Puritan's Hand_ failed so miserably to repeat the feat of its
predecessors that it didn't even feature in the choices of any of our
writers, which were otherwise generally consistent with the past.
Could this really be such a wretched effort by Ireland's finest metal
export?I consider _The Gathering Wilderness_ one of the three best albums
released this century, and that might go some way to explaining my
feelings about _Redemption at the Puritan's Hand_. This latest effort
falls prey to a relatively common foe: the band's crippling difficulty
to either outdo themselves or find new ways to communicate their art.
The best things on this record mostly remind you of their more
inspired moments of yore, while the rest falls meekly into a
predictable mould.None of this is really a problem if you analyse _RatPH_ in isolation.
Here is a thoroughly well written and performed album, with a unique
style and a potent mix of emotion and warlike spirit; I would
certainly prefer listening to this album than the vast majority of
what's been released lately. But does it stand out as an album you
would be driven to play over and over again if you already owned the
band's finest efforts? Do a fair proportion of these songs demand a
place among the band's finest? I don't think so. Solid and
competent as it is, I can't help the feeling that there's too much of
just going through the motions in this album for a band as supremely
talented as Primordial, which results in a comparatively forgettable
entry in their discography._Redemption at the Puritan's Hand_ is also a long album, with eight
tracks that average eight minutes each. Due to the rather uniform
nature of the songs, this tends to dilute its best moments (almost all
of which take place in the guitar department). As usual, long albums
require even more inspiration to maintain momentum, and this time
there's just not all that much.I still think the future will continue to bring us truly outstanding
albums from Primordial. For the time being however, _Redemption at the
Puritan's Hand_ serves only a temporary fix after four years of studio
silence from the band. For those who have been closely following their
career, I doubt it will cause anything close to the impact of its more
illustrious predecessors.
(article published 4/3/2012)
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