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Audio CD review:
Please note that the below review is the views of the authors, and authors only. You can get a complete list of all Electric Wizard reviews here, or go back to the Electric Wizard tabs.
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| Electric Wizard - Let Us Prey (+1 Bonus Track) |
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Band: Electric Wizard Title: Let Us Prey (+1 Bonus Track) Rating: Release Date: 2002-04-10 Media: Audio CD Tracks: 1: ... U Chosen Few 2: We, The Undead 3: Master of Alchemy: House of Whipcord/The Blact Drug 4: The Outsider 5: Night of the Shape 6: Priestess of Mars 7: Mother of Serpents |
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3.5 - Eclectic Wizard Electric Wizard's response, "Let Us Prey", proved to a bit of a damp squid. How to follow "Dopethrone"? An album widely regarded as a modern day classic in the stoner/doom genre. It was the last release from the seminal line-up of Jus Oborn, Mark Greening and Tim Bagshaw, the trio that created the bands best albums, "Come My Fanatics" and "Dopethrone". Divisions were reported during the making of this album, and unfortunately this came through on record. "Let Us Prey" is extremely hit and miss throughout, mostly due to some unexpected and out of place experimentation. "We, The Undead" sees the band surging into relatively lightning paced punk rock, and "Night of the Shape" surprises with some moody trip-hop dirge. I appreciate some artists need to re-invent their sound from time to time, but only if that sound is tired. Electric Wizard had just perfected their super-heavy, abrasive brand of 70s doom, and these experiments were not only unnecessary, but quite out of their field. The band sounds messy and confused playing punk, and as for trip-hop. . . well. . . just a weird choice. Frustratingly, amidst the unsuccessful experimentation is some bludgeoning classic EW. Opener "A Chosen Few" blasts in with a typically brutal lead riff, and you wouldn't be stupid to think another "Dopethrone" is on the way. One of my all-time favourite EW tracks comes after the muddled punk, the monumental "Master of Alchemy" piece. Purely instrumental, the song swaggers through two of Oborn's best ever riffs, psychedelic atmospherics and wailing solos. There's a sublime doom groove throughout both sections, making the clutter before it become even more frustrating. "The Outsider" and "Priestess of Mars" are both decent tracks, not brilliant but staple EW and enjoyable, and they keep a small level of consistency going. So with "Let Us Prey" you get two outstanding, classic Wizard tracks - two staple, slightly stock tracks and two dreadful, out of place experiments. A true mixed bag, and a frustrating release when compared to the mighty albums that preceded it. Those new to the band are best advised with "Come My Fanatics" or "Dopethrone". .
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