Thursday 26 October 2017

ALBUM REVIEW: R.I.P. - "Street Reaper"

By: Richard Maw

Album Type: Full Length
Date Released: 13/10/2017
Label: Riding Easy Records


I don't expect it to usurp the likes of “Born Too Late” or Pentagram “Relentless” in my list of best all time doom albums, but if you want a modern doom rock album with lots of attitude and overdrive, then this is one you should check out.

Street Reaper “CD//DD//LP track listing:

1). Unmarked Grave
2). Street Reaper
3). Mother Road
4). The Dark
5). The Other Side
6). Shadows Fool
7). Brimstone
8). The Cross
9). The Casket
10). Die in Vain

The Review:

Portland's R.I.P. unleashed their debut on an unsuspecting public back in 2016. Since then, the press seem to have latched on to the quartet's “street doom” label as something new in the doom sphere. Truthfully, it is not. Street doom is as old as Saint Vitus and The Obsessed... maybe even as old as Sabbath! Any doom head knows the difference- fantasy vs reality, heroes vs heroin and so on.  Regardless of what genre tag has been ascribed, “In The Wind” was an enjoyable slice of Saint Vitus meeting Fu Manchu. With “Street Reaper”, the band have progressed their sound on by focussing it and tightening up the arrangements.

The one minor criticism I levelled at their debut was that it was a little on the long side. Well, the ten tracks here have solved that problem and the band have really delivered a muscular set of songs. Once again, the influences are there: Pentagram, The Stooges, Saint Vitus, Sabbath... and the aforementioned Fu Manchu. The spectre of the Californian state looms large in the sound and vibe, and gives the band a little something extra, a little uniqueness. A little of the desert and a little of the imagery shown on the album cover- four hirsute dudes rolling in a low-rider. It is clear that these guys are not from Barnsley, that's for sure!

The music is direct and punchy, featuring over-driven bass and fuzzed up guitars again. The riffs are simple and groovy and this really does have the feel of street level music. From the opening chug of “Unmarked Grave”, through the title track and beyond; this will get your head nodding. As noted first time around, it is great to hear a band with a singer and actual riffs. This isn't about playing really slow or being massively heavy but is instead more about the vibe and the flow of the record. There are nods to the gods via instrumental interludes like “The Cross”, grooving slabs of riffage such as “Shadows Folds” and even some more melodic playing here and there (the intro of “The Dark”, for instance, and the closing “Die in Vain”).

The wheel is not being reinvented here, but that isn't the point. R.I.P. bring a slightly more youthful swagger to the game- it's welcome as most of the really big players are knocking on a  bit now, to say the least. By the time of the seventh track “The Casket”, you will have made up your mind about the album. Personally, I like it. I don't expect it to usurp the likes of “Born Too Late” or PentagramRelentless” in my list of best all time doom albums, but if you want a modern doom rock album with lots of attitude and overdrive, then this is one you should check out.

With the last three tracks clocking in at around four and a half minutes apiece, the band close the show consistently, albeit using different tempos and approaches as they go- relatively up tempo, slower dinosaur riffing and melodic- respectively. The yowling vocals are more Reagers than Wino, the sound is never less or more than over-driven and fuzzy and the whole thing works well. It is an improvement on their debut and sets the band up very well for album number three and a possible rise through the ranks of doom. When are they coming to the UK?!

“Street Reaper” is available here



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