Monday, August 13, 2007

Nuclear Blast All-Stars - "Out Of The Dark" (Nuclear Blast)

An exercise in modern metal, blistering guitars, and melodic screaming…

This album took my pleasantly by surprise. Following the considerable success of Roadrunner’s All-Star Sessions, I was concerned this might end up being a cheap imitation. On the contrary, however, it is actually a highly accomplished and polished collection of modern metal – true, it’s populated mainly by Scandinavians, but modern metal is something they do oh-so-very well.

While the songs all feature different vocalists, they manage to create a cohesive whole that makes it seem as if this could really be an album from a single band – no small feat considering the eleven (!) vocalists who took part in the project. The first two opening tracks, “Dysfunctional Hours” (featuring the ever-excellent Anders Friden of In Flames) and “Schizo” (featuring multi-talented Hypocricy’s Pete Tatgren), start things off with two fast-paced, expertly executed slices of melodic death metal, with the most melodic screaming I have ever heard.

Clean vocals make an appearance on “Devotion” and “The Overshadowing”, while retaining the heavier, coarser vocals to ensure the songs don’t disrupt the overall feel and punch of this album. Having said this, the middle of the album features the majority of “cleaner” vocals (i.e. little or no screaming), with “The Dawn Of All” proving to be an excellent rock/metal song, and one of Bjorn Strid’s most accomplished vocal performances, as well as the biggest and most sweeping song on the album. The bruising follow-up track, “Cold Is My Vengeance” re-ups the ante by packing a wallop, and Maurizio Iacono’s harsh vocals over furious drums and staccato guitars leaves us in no doubt that this is first-and-foremost a metal compilation.

While I was only expecting to like the songs which featured my favourite vocalists (the aforementioned Anders Friden and Pete Tatgren; Bjorn Strid of Soilwork on “The Dawn Of All”; the boys from Sonic Syndicate on “The Gilded Dagger”), every single one of these songs offered something to keep me interested and listening again and again, and could easily act as singles.

If ever you needed an introduction to Nuclear Blast’s heavier bands, Out Of Darkness is your ideal album. True to each vocalist’s sound, yet a cohesive whole, this is an excellent album, and does an impeccable job of both providing an excellent showcase for Nuclear Blast’s leading male vocalists, as well as a collection of kick-ass metal music.

Incidentally, Nuclear Blast’s female vocalists were catered for with the preceding NB All-Stars collection, Into The Light.

Highly recommended for even the casual metal fan, and an essential purchase for Melodic Death Metal and Metalcore fans the world over.