Bog Wizard – From the Mire
Come for the Dungeons & Dragons. Stay for the didgeridoo.
Come for the Dungeons & Dragons. Stay for the didgeridoo.
It makes sense that music about said reality should have some edge to it, and this does. In the end, this album is magnificent and majestic, while still directed and aggressive, a pitch perfect balance and a masterful release.
It’s as if Derhead has distilled rage and pain, beauty and misery into a concentrated form.
The riffs are chunky and the grooves have a good momentum to them, but this kind of music is usually all about the lyrics and the emotion behind their composition and delivery.
Listening to Putrefying Cadaverment is more like actually being present for the kill.
They have created symphonic metal which is subdued enough to accent the essential darkness of their sound, instead of overwhelming it.
It races forward like a thoroughbred on the hunt, but has so many interesting and unique flourishes, time changes, and unexpected twists that it is clear the band are thoughtful composers.
…it’s low-fi powerviolence in the style of California bands like Despise You but done up Detroit style, with all the added filth, fury, and weirdo tech-y sounds that the Dirty D would bring to such a table.
While the band is musically ugly, confrontational, and catastrophic, it is ultimately just the Mad Max vehicle for their message.
The whole album is bleak and hopeless, yet incredibly, viscerally powerful.