Welcome to the LOUDEST DOT COM ON THE PLANET! | |
LYCANTHRO Mark Of The Wolf By Andrew Depedro, Ottawa Corespondent Monday, May 24, 2021 @ 12:56 AM
Granted, it would be something of a huge stretch to immediately place Mark Of The Wolf alongside the likes of Kill ‘Em All or VAN HALEN’s self-titled debut in that particular context even after a couple of listens, but the band – featuring James Delbridge (vocals/guitars), David Shute (guitars), Stew Everitt (bass), Nathan Shuman (drums), and Forrest Dussault (guitars) – with the average age of 20 exhibit a similarly firm drive to take advantage of further broadening their songwriting/playing skills to the hilt on this album which hasn’t a filler track on it anywhere. So, with
that said, would opening the album with the 7-minute number “Crucible” be considered maybe a bit too ambitious let alone following it up with similar songs of near-equal length such as “Fallen Angel’s Prayer” (featuring a professional chamber choir), “Enchantress” and the title track? Maybe – if this were any other debut album with similarly high expectations. Yet, LYCANTHRO, despite their affinity of the epic extended song prevalent in power metal and its begotten forefather known as progressive rock, can also scribe shorter tunes while adding some fantasy into their music, as “Ride The Dragon” and “Into Oblivion” will attest. And throughout the album, Delbridge’s vocals have surpassed notable perfection particularly on “Crucible” and “Evangelion”, his already powerful pipes from The Four Horsemen Of The Apocalypse ascending to the next level.
Recorded at Wolf Lake Studios in Lac-des-Loups, Quebec, evidently to keep the continuity of the album’s theme ongoing, and mastered by SEVEN SPIRES guitarist Jack Kosto, Mark Of The Wolf marks not only many criteriae for the consummate debut album but also marks LYCANTHRO’s own territory within the new breed.
5.0 Out Of 5.0
Facebook.com/Lycanthrokills
| |||||
|
Recent Reviews |