Scottish sludgesters Void of Light try to label themselves as being on the more post side of things, but the vocals betray them. The band's debut full-length finds the vocals being howled with a throaty anger that overpowers some of the more ambient underpinings. But it works well for them, creating a layered approach not unlike what latter-day Neurosis used to do, but with some more overt metal riffing. With three guitars involved, there are more layers than most bands can summon. I have always stood by the fact that sludge is what happens when punks try to play metal, and this album is not proving me wrong. For an almost 11-minute opening track, they just sprawl things out , so one might surmise that punks who started smoking weed more than they drank is what fueled this genre of music.
Only two of the five songs are not 10-minutes long. With that said, "Silver Mask" is 9 minutes long. It is also driven by a pretty mean chug. Moving with more locomotion than doom, the momentum breeds tension, and they have the riffs ready for the payoff. Cleanly sung vocals fly up in the background, but the coarse bark is the narrative at the forefront. The softer vocals shift position midway through the song when it descends into a more melancholy atmosphere. "Ends" is a more aggressive shift to an in-your-face hardcore assault. Which tracks, as there is a great deal of crossover in the early sludge scene with hardcore bands. Miway into the song, things ebb down into a more melodic brooding, before hurling into a more blackened section.
"Still Night Skies" is darker, with the heavier sections being pretty catchy, though the song rides a stormy tension. The song touches on a great deal of different dynamic places over the course of its ten minutes, which I appreciate, as they at least use the time wisely if they are going to sprawl things out. The last song almost has a more Tool-like hypnotic slither that captures you with its serpentine groove. The vocals take on a more baritone croon midway through the song.This touches on the more progressive side of the band.I will give this one a 9.5, and see how it grows on me while it is a bit on the longwinded side when it comes to the songwriting style , there is enough going on to remain engaging, fans of sludge metal should make this a priority. Out April 3rd on Ripcord Records.
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