Theme: Return to Fantasy - Gamma Ray
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| This dude shows up on all their album covers. I wonder if he has a name, like Vic or Eddy. In the meantime, let us call him Wes. |
There are two schools of thought when it comes to metal: one is that it should be characterised by safe-edgy fedoraisms, unreadable band name logos, and fat guys in corpse paint going horgy-porgy-porg into a microphone. The correct one, though, is that it should be van art in musical form: grandiose, unapologetic lucid daydreaming of ripped barbarians, distant mountains with nameless secrets, and evil sorcerers sacrificing busty hotties to Lovecraftian monsters, with wanky yet ineffably narrative guitar soloes and evocative, elevated lyrics like J.R.R.R.R.R.R. Tolkien and Clark Ashton Smith jammed out a literary Desert Sessions of a weekend.
Fortunately, this patrician understanding of the telos of the genre has survived and thrived long past the hallowed heyday of X Caliber and Medieval Steel, despite all efforts to replace it with rap-rock and deathslop. Utah's Visigoth has all the irony-free genre-love and epic sound you could shake a fist at, while Eternal Champion drops Howard references like they've actually read him. But for my money the crowning jewel in the dragon's hoard of retro epic metal must be Legendry's GOAT Time Immortal Wept. Not only does it boast straight bangers and transportive lyrics, but it's utterly unashamed to invoke every production flourish in its modest budget to set the cinematic scene: the album opens and closes to the crackling of a campfire, and instrumental "The Winds Between Worlds" features sound FX of steel sharpening and a forboding gong.
But still more revelatory is the lead guitar tone, which reaches back in time to the genre's ever-more-forgotten psych roots but maintains the muscle needed to power its momentous and frequent workouts. The climactic title track is an 11-minute powerhouse with all the vital velocity and majestic momentum of the best 3-minute single, while "The Prophecy" hits on a jubilant groove seldom heard in metal. But you might as well check out the whole album: it won't last half as long as you'll want to soak in its dungeoneering ambience.

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