Don’t miss
Chimaira
"Resurrection”
March 6,
2007 on
Ferret
Music!
Chimaira
reviewed in
Blabbermouth.net
CHIMAIRA is
a
rejuvenated
band and
they are
about to
release what
is sure to
stand as one
of the best
metal albums
of 2007,
"Resurrection".
Though I
have always
appreciated
the
quintet's
music,
particularly
the work
subsequent
to 2001's
"Pass out of
Existence",
I found
myself
shocked at
the
excellence
achieved on
"Resurrection".
When the
situation
with
Roadrunner
seemingly
began to
sour and the
band
released
2005's
defiantly
heavy and
decidedly
less
accessible
self-titled
album, one
wondered
where the
band would
go next. The
answer is in
a far more
confident
direction
that
combines the
best
elements of
all previous
albums and
that finds
CHIMAIRA
pinpointing
its true
identity,
that of an
immensely
talented,
fire-breathing
metal band
on
"Resurrection".
"Resurrection"
is a
complete
album in
every sense
of the word.
Unrelentingly
ferocious,
infinity
memorable,
and defined
by
remarkably
accomplished
arrangements.
The
album-opening
title track
is an
immediate
classic with
its
thrash-based
riffing,
catchy
chorus, and
a vocalist
in Mark
Hunter that
sounds as
though he is
exorcising a
lifetime's
worth of
demons.
"Pleasure in
Pain" and
"Worthless"
continue in
a
frighteningly
heavy and
rage-driven
vein, the
former
incorporating
effective
clean (not
crooning)
harmonies on
the
pre-chorus,
the latter
boasting one
of the
album's most
intense
solos. It is
on "Six"
though that
the group
truly
shines. The
nine-and-a-half
minute cut
perfectly
balances
thrashing
brutality
and
soul-baring
lyrical
hatefulness
with an air
of beauty,
compositional
majesty, and
seamless
tempo
variation.
It is also
one of
several
tracks,
along with
the
symphonic-laced
"Empire",
that shows
keyboardist/sampler
Chris
Spicuzza
taking a
more active,
though in no
way
disruptive,
role.
Andols
Herrick's
return to
the drum
stool does
nothing to
detract from
the band's
resurgence
either, even
following
the mighty
Kevin
Talley's
efforts on
the
self-titled
album. His
double-bass
work on
songs like
"The Flame",
one that
recalls FEAR
FACTORY for
the
syncopation,
is earth
shaking. As
for the
rest, it is
a matter of
take-your-pick,
as momentum
is never
lost and
quality
remains
consistent,
whether on
catchy
thrasher
"Black
Heart" or
the
spine-tingling
"Killing the
Beast".
That each
nearly
flawless
track
warrants
discussion
speaks
volumes
about the
fact that
the band has
created its
watershed
album.
"Resurrection"
is one of
those rare
discs that
beg the
listener to
return for
repeat spins
over and
over again.
It leaves me
wondering if
a rating of
9 is even
high enough.