Monday 7 November 2011

Week 45: Argus - Durendal



The artist: Argus are a new metal band from America who fall between the traditional metal sound and epic doom metal (think Candlemass, DoomSword, etc). This month will dedicate to my best discoveries from this year and after picking up Argus' new album from the Slough Feg/Solstice show in London, I'm most grateful for seeing this album sold at the merchandise. For a doom metal band, they're very easy to get into so it's nothing too inaccessible for the most part. From what's been played for their first two albums, this band has a lot of potential and hopefully they serve more killer albums in the near-future.

The album: Boldly Stride the Doomed is Argus' second album only released this year. The album starts and ends with the same acoustic melody but in between has many doom-ish classic-esque metal numbers. With the album taking off with A Curse on the World right after the acoustic intro, the title track making some nods to traditional metal and some section changes with Fading Silver Light and the doom monster Pieces of Your Smile, you can expect Boldly Stride the Doomed to offer a lot to the listen while making it accessible (except for the challenging doom closer). This is one highlight for 2011 and we still have two months left.

The song: Once the war horns are played, the band kicks off with traditional metal-like twin guitars but with a spice of doom. The main riffs sound like something Mike Scalzi would cook up for Slough Feg. The solos are full of musical bliss with Erik Johnson and Jason Mucio passing the baton to each other. Each pass intensifies the duo on their guitar solo performances. Butch Balich on this song sounds like Hansi Kursch from Blind Guardian if he was the lead vocalist for Candlemass. He has strong emotional voices like how Johan Langquist and Messiah Marcolin executed on their representing Candlemass albums and the extreme power of his voice is something you'd expect from Hansi Kursch. The lyrics cover Roland, the paladin of Charlemagne and the legendary sword named Durendal. There is a war between the pagans and Roland swears to never back down, especially with the mighty line of "I will never go back, never retreat, rather that I meet death" Now THAT is how emotion in music should be done. Overall, Durendal is a highlight not just on the album but also for heavy metal in 2011. To have such grand guitars and a hugely powerful voice is a song that shouldn't leave your iPod anytime soon.

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