|
Former Nirvana drummer and current Foo Fighter frontman Dave Grohl has always had a secret musical passion. He grew up a hardcore-metal-loving DC teen long before his demo tapes had the good fortune to circulate in Seattle’s grunge scene. Probot return Grohl to his adolescent love, as he mans the kit behind the likes of Merciful Fate’s King Diamond and Cathedral’s Lee Dorrian. The disc is a torrent of blitzkrieg drums and stabbing guitars (handled on two tracks by former Soundgarden guitarist Kim Thayil) played with all the fervor of a gang of 15-year-old boys worshipping Voivod’s Dimension Hatross or Celtic Frost’s To Mega Therion. It even has the sound of a basement recording, from "Red War," a double-bass-drum slam fest featuring Sepultura’s Max Cavalera, to the road-rumbling headbanger "Shake Your Blood," with Motörhead’s Lemmy. Every song is instrumentally over-the-top and vocally histrionic. It’s an album filled with an almost vengeful glee — a genuine homage to hardcore-metal style and sweat. BY KEN MICALLEF
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Issue Date: March 5 - 11, 2004 Back to the Music table of contents |
Sponsor Links | |||
---|---|---|---|
© 2000 - 2007 Phoenix Media Communications Group |