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LORDI Screem Writers Guild By Terry Martinson, Contributor Monday, April 10, 2023 @ 10:48 AM
As we move into the meat and potatoes of Screem Writers Guild, a tasty play on words for the “Screen Writers Guild”, one sees the wit, wisdom and theatrics that are the cornerstone of all things the band produces. Or maybe, just maybe it's the completeness of this latest release? Of which Mr. Lordi proclaims that it isn’t a concept album. However the movie monster “theme” is consistent throughout and pairs quite well with Lordi’s personas. And as I deliberate the band and their new release and ruminate on older albums, the silver screen of universal monster movies fits quite nicely and should with others who enjoy thematic horror rock music.
The record opens with an absolute literal monster of a song in "Dead Again Jayne", a song which begins with what can only be described as an homage to Danny Elfman and all his magically wonderful musical scores he’s written and produced. LORDI encants Danny’s flair for the whimsical with an ethereal, cinematic, carnival-esque orchestral piece quite suited for say Beetlejuice or any late late night retro drive-in monster movie program. The opener then slams into a hard rock riff not unlike how the car the actress the song is inspired from did so many years ago in her tragic demise. And let’s not stop there, let’s take that unfortunate reality, resurrect it a couple hundred times throughout the song. Quite gruesomely creative and oh so catchy. The solo, oh my. Recent addition Kone certainly knows his way around a fret-board and all though Amen was certainly no Slash, Kone brings a breath of newness and swagger. I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention the gang vocals, screams and ridiculously infectious chorus.
"Dead Again Jayne" will be tough to top, but… "SCG XVIII Nosferuiz Horror Show" is an album introduction, which is curious since it is placed after the 1st song, but the gist is a Svengali like character (it appears Lordi uses a Dracula-esque character named ‘Nosferuiz’ as the template for this character) discussing the upcoming record. "Unliving Picture Show" is a keyboard driven arena rocker with a very infectious chorus, again lyrically crafted around horror fueled content and specifically the Universal Monsters of the Golden Age of cinema and having your gal be scared into jumping into your protective arms. With another ripper of a solo, the song is quite centered around a quirky, catchy keyboard riff akin to many period specific new wave numbers and reminds me of the talent show number in Revenge of The Nerds.
"Inhumanoid" keeps the tempo with another riff-centric, yet keyboard layered rocker. Once again littered with monster fueled lyrical content, but with a curious twist, one that has the monster protagonist trying to acclimate to these new technologically enhanced times of which he is not familiar with. The musicianship continues to be staggering, and will have many musicians wondering why they bother. The liberal use of cowbell is a nicety that would please the Bruce Dickenson. The main riff is reminiscent of something played by LOUDNESS guitar virtuoso, Akira Takasaki and the pre-solo breakdown is well placed and hits nicely. "Thing In The Cage" treats the listener to an intriguing aboriginal influences guttural vocal harmonizing where Mr. Lordi (and others?) create an atmosphere that sets up this freak show themed number sung from the perspective of the geek. One can assume the film Nightmare Alley MAY have inspired this rock in roll song.
"Vampyro Fang Club" is another keyboard layered rock n roll number, heavily 80’s inspired and quite obviously vampire influenced in its content. Another solid addition into what is shaping up to be a great record. "The Bride" is next and it is an absolute cigarette lighter love song, equipped with slide (or maybe pedal guitar) and swelling keys, sung with incredible emotions and of course not reminiscent of a humorous punchline akin to the mantra of “if I can’t have you no one will”. The whole number screams 70’s radio rock and the effects on the guitar during the solo harken back to those placed on the epic 50’s SANTO AND JOHNNY song “Sleepwalk”. Well played LORDI and quite easily an album favorite.
As an interlude, let’s take a brief intermission to touch on the powerful performance Mr. Lordi, Kone, Hiisi, Hella and Mana have generated here. There is not one instance of a missed opportunity for a fill, trill, lick or harmony. The skill set of these musicians is a master class in how to generate infectious, thought provoking radio friendly rock n roll music, sure the band has a large stigma, but that only accentuates the obvious. And Mr. Lordi’s production is on the same level of say Butch Walker or Rick Rubin, another master class in what to do and how to do it. Moving on....
"Lucyfer Prime Evil" begins with a theatrical piece littered with demonic warbling’s and keyboards setting up the soaring guitar that slams you out of your revelry. "LPE" is a rocker telling a tale similar to The Exorcist. I know I have been fanboying over Kone’s guitar playing and "LPE" solo and outro bridge are nothing but stunning. The production is ridiculous. "Scarecrow" is simply another rock song, very 80’s, replicent with “Ooh oohs’” and very nice chorus and call back harmonizing vocals. This number could have easily been performed by say HALL N' OATES. "Lycontropical Island" quite simply is a werewolf arena rock song with an incredibly infectious chorus and a similar strong writing value stemming from the 70-80’s hard rock school of thought. And again the solo, good grief, this time as epic as anything Vai did for WYLD STALLYNS. The outro is a nice touch as well.
"In The Castle Of Dracoolove" maintains that guitar and keyboard driven mid 80’s radio friendly hard rock template that has been a very common theme throughout Scream Writers Guild. "Dracoolove" is layered with harmonies and guitar and keyboard fills and the tastefully styled solo just caps off another well played, written, produced song. "The SCG Awards" is just that, a highly comedic skit parodying many blockbuster films and the award shows that fawn over these celebrities. The skit is overflowing with film, actor, director, writer nods, comedic of course, and adds a nice break to the record, while still showcasing Mr Lordi’s creativity all the while maintaining the Screem Writers Guild thematic elements. "Heavengeance" rolls right back into where we left off, another guitar and keyboard rocksong, with soaring leads and catchy vocal harmonies all wrapped up in a tidy horror fueled package that asks the question “what if all the years of praise and worship of an almighty sentient being” maybe that individual isn’t forgiving like we are all programmed to think and maybe, just maybe “vengeance” is the flavor of the week?
5.0 Out Of 5.0
https://www.lordi.fi/
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