Psalm Zero – Stranger To Violence


Psalm Zero - Stranger To Violence cover ghostcultmag

What exactly is going on in New York? The city has a long musical history, of course, but in recent years it seems to have become a focus point for challenging, original and distinctive Heavy Metal. We’re not talking about some forced “scene” with three or four decent bands setting the tone for a horde of bland followers, either – though Psalm Zero share a certain spirit with their neighbours in Pyrrhon, Krallice and Artificial Brain, musically they’re as distinctive as those bands are from each other.

Not that the music on Stranger To Violence (Profound Lore) is especially easy to describe. The label blurb makes much of their Pop influence, but this is hardly the chorus-heavy cheese-fest that word may suggest – the song-writing somehow marries catchiness to a genuine sense of unease and strangeness. The Metal elements shouldn’t be overlooked, either – the use of synths often calls to mind the darker side of eighties Pop, but just when you think you’ve got them in a box they’ll shift to a surging bombast that has more in common with Emperor than Depeche Mode. The extremely sparse use of harsh vocals in the most aggressive sections create a real sense of dislocation, too, hitting with an impact that they lack in music which uses them more regularly. It’s Pop Metal, but nothing like any other band that’s been given that name before.

If the music is hard to describe, the aesthetic behind it is no less so. The artwork suggests urban dystopia, and though that is certainly present on tracks like ‘Real Rain’ and ‘Stolen By Night’, there’s also an undercurrent of dark fantasy and strangeness to it that can’t be described easily. It’s frequently as uplifting as it is sinister, as dark as it is catchy.

In a genre with so many offshoots and sub-types that it seems as though every possibility has been thoroughly explored, Psalm Zero have genuinely succeeded in carving their own little niche – and it’s a strange, fascinating little place indeed.

8.0/10

RITCHIE HR

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On The Road… with Life of Agony


Life Of Agony, by Jessica Lotti Photography

Life Of Agony, by Jessica Lotti Photography

If we accept the cliché that absence makes the heart grow fonder as truth, than fans around the world miss Life Of Agony in their lives like you wouldn’t believe. Unless of course, you saw one of the sold-out shows the band put on for two brief concert tours of Europe this past spring. Playing select shows and festivals the last few years, on stage their shows are the stuff of legend. Now armed with a new record deal from Napalm Records, 2016 will mark the return of the band as a studio entity with their new release entitled A Place Where There’s No More Pain. It will be their first new music in over a decade. At the Electric Ballroom on this night LOA played a set of mostly “hits” with a few deep cuts sprinkled in. It will be interesting to see how the band incorporates new tracks into future headline shows, after playing the old-school jams for so long. They were captured on this night for Ghost Cult by Jessica Lotti Photography. One thing is certain for the veteran act; the passion the band plays with is matched only by their fans intensity and love directed back towards them. If you missed them this time around , they will be back in Europe this summer for festivals such as Out And Loud in Germany and Dynamo Fest in The Netherlands.

 

Life Of Agony, by Jessica Lotti Photography

Life Of Agony, by Jessica Lotti Photography

 

Life Of Agony, by Jessica Lotti Photography

Life Of Agony, by Jessica Lotti Photography

 

Life Of Agony, by Jessica Lotti Photography

Life Of Agony, by Jessica Lotti Photography

 

Life Of Agony, by Jessica Lotti Photography

Life Of Agony, by Jessica Lotti Photography

 

Life Of Agony, by Jessica Lotti Photography

Life Of Agony, by Jessica Lotti Photography

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