
What happened to all the sweet riffs?
Witchery - Don’t Fear The ReaperPosted by Editorial Intern on 24-May-06 @ 02:34 PM
[2/5] After unleashing one of the most vicious debuts in metal history with 1998's Restless And Dead, and then following it up a year later with the equally merciless, mostly covers EP Witchburner, Swedish thrash masters Witchery fell off their collective broomstick with 1999's Dead, Hot And Ready and never fully recovered. Released in 2001, Symphony For The Devil kicked the shit out of its predecessor with catchier jams and smokin' black-metal 'n' roll riffs, but Don't Fear The Reaper sounds like the last gasp of a band who never really got their swerve on. Maybe it's a result of guitarist Patrik Jensen's membership in the Haunted; perhaps it's because of bassist Sharlee D'Angelo's commitment to both half the bands in Sweden (e.g., Arch Enemy, Spiritual Beggars, Dismember) and Mercyful Fate. Whatever the case, Don't Fear The Reaper is (mostly) a stylistic pantomime of records past, with none of the killer songs and about a third of the sweet riffs.
(CENTURY MEDIA) J. Bennett
Official Website: http://www.centurymedia.com
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Also in this issue:
- Aereogramme
- Controller.Controller
- Loose Fur
- Magneta Lane
- The New Amsterdams
- Placebo
- Theo And The Skyscrapers
- Yeah Yeah Yeahs
- Das Kapital
- Far-Less
- Love Equals Death
- No Trigger
- SoTheySay
- Voodoo Blue
- Bird Show
- MC Lars
- The Seconds
- Various Artists
- Cannibal Corpse
- Folly
- Lacuna Coil
- Sepultura
- Unearthly Trance
- Witch
- Yakuza
- The Appleseed Cast
- Band Of Horses
- Isobel Campbell And Mark Lanegan
- The Essex Green
- I Love You But I've Chosen Darkness
- Maritime
- Quasi
- Various Artists
- Anti-Flag
- From First To Last
- Mates Of State
- Morrissey
- Liars
- Streetlight Manifesto
- The Flaming Lips
- Taking Back Sunday
- Other sections...



























[2/5] After unleashing one of the most vicious debuts in metal history with 1998's Restless And Dead, and then following it up a year later with the equally merciless, mostly covers EP Witchburner, Swedish thrash masters Witchery fell off their collective broomstick with 1999's Dead, Hot And Ready and never fully recovered. Released in 2001, Symphony For The Devil kicked the shit out of its predecessor with catchier jams and smokin' black-metal 'n' roll riffs, but Don't Fear The Reaper sounds like the last gasp of a band who never really got their swerve on. Maybe it's a result of guitarist Patrik Jensen's membership in the Haunted; perhaps it's because of bassist Sharlee D'Angelo's commitment to both half the bands in Sweden (e.g., Arch Enemy, Spiritual Beggars, Dismember) and Mercyful Fate. Whatever the case, Don't Fear The Reaper is (mostly) a stylistic pantomime of records past, with none of the killer songs and about a third of the sweet riffs.
(CENTURY MEDIA) J. Bennett
Official Website: 
