REVIEW

Music Review: Nevermore - This Godless Endeavor

Written by Aaron Fleming
Published April 19, 2007

A sage used to keep the neighbours up all night, his vociferous mind sprinting relentlessly over all the matters of the day worth contemplating. His favourite pastime was coining neologisms. One fateful insomniac night he closed his ears to the dawn birds philandering outside and came up with the word rifferama. Surprised by this assortment of syllables he got to work imposing meaning upon the semantic destitution poking its letters. Hours of meditation brought the conclusion that rifferama referred to an array of musical passages known as riffs and conjured via a guitar, all of equally high calibre, linked together under the rubric of a single song.

It remains to be seen whether the sage had just been listening to Nevermore’s sixth album, This Godless Endeavor, when he sat down to explicate what this nascent word signified. I don’t know what a sage might listen to during the early hours, perhaps something a bit mellower to help ease those adrenaline glands into slumber, a bout of Azure Ray or, staying within the rock/metal sphere, some early Lacuna Coil (before all that horribly banal newfound heaviness). Regardless, one word fills my mind to capacity when considering the work of Nevermore, especially this 2005 album, and that is rifferama.

Intent is declared from the off as ‘Born’ rockets out of the speakers. Veering close to death metal during tremolo-picked ecstasies overlaid on pummelling drum-battery, the opening suggests that this album is upping the ante in terms of viciousness, giving a bludgeoning blow of 7-string brutality to the more melodic aspects of the band’s back catalogue. But no, how wrong we were, for the thick fury gives way initially to an eastern-themed break, then a chorus overflowing with melodies as vocalist Warrel Dane sings a paean to humanism and how despite the fascistic enterprise of religion (my own choice of words) we are born equal. It’s this marrying of ferocious heaviness and melodic hooks that make Nevermore one of the best metal bands to emerge in the last decade, and this synthesis is no less apparent on This Godless Endeavor.

‘Final Product’ opens with the sort of harmonious riffing that wouldn’t seem out of place on a mid-90s Swedish melodic death album – I could just envision In Flames weeping upon hearing it and despairing over their own musical trajectory. ‘My Acid Words’ also brings to mind the dense juggernaut riffs of At The Gates, dynamic and fast, but delicately harmonised at the same time. Yet these riffs quickly segue into other vibrant displays of power-chord melees, the never-ending progression of weighty chunks of guitar potency is indeed unending. Jeff Loomis, shredder extraordinaire, has not balked at packing each and every song with as much guitar-laden content as possible – and does it without things descending into a dull collage of ideas birthed during a late-night jam. There is enough variation and multifariousness to lead to the creation of a wonderful set of dynamics; witness the manoeuvres of ‘Sentient 6’ as it starts with a slow, clean intro, advancing to a soaring chorus, switching to a lead break of smooth harmonies, flowing into a succinct Loomis solo, and finally finishing with a double-bass led, chugging outro.

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Aaron Fleming is a waster and an idler - prone to pomposity - forever enchanted by the filmic and the sonic, words and the aesthetic - given to the most ludicrous appraisal of Culture's finest icons and compositions. He resides in London.
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Music Review: Nevermore - This Godless Endeavor
Published: April 19, 2007
Type: Review
Section: Music
Filed Under: Music: Hard Rock, Music: Metal, Music: Progressive Rock, Music: Rock
Writer: Aaron Fleming
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Comments

#1 — April 20, 2007 @ 19:55PM — DukeDeMondo [URL]

This is quite possibly the best musicologically minded piece you have written, Sir Fleming. dear god, how i cheered with glee and jealousy upon reading this, particularly the first paragraph, which i read, i G.McLaughlin you none, six times before proceeding, so blinding was it's comedic and structural and literary genius. fantastic.

#2 — April 20, 2007 @ 20:27PM — snore

zzzzzzzzzzzzz...

#3 — April 20, 2007 @ 20:30PM — Aaron Fleming [URL]

Well thank you Duke, much appreciated and I love the obscure reference to an old, battle-scarred academic!

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