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1. JACOBS DREAM - BENEATH THE SHADOWS CD SEALED

REVIEW
Why are many of the better metal albums concept related?  What is it that often inspires a group to create its most notable work when it has a message to convey or story to tell?  Perhaps it is the added motivation that comes with knowing you have the opportunity to not only impact your environment musically but to make a relevant lyrical statement as well.

Critically acclaimed concept albums from Queensryche (Operation Mindcrime), Blind Guardian (Nightfall In Middle Earth), Shadow Gallery (Tyranny) and Pyramaze (Legend Of The Bone Carver) mirror this best.  The Christian metal scene has produced its share of quality concept releases as well, as is demonstrated by Saint (The Mark), Seventh Avenue (Terium), Thieves And Liars (When Dreams Become Reality) and the Legend series from Saviour Machine.

Columbus, Ohio based Jacobs Dream is the latest act to record its “magnum opus” from a conceptual standpoint.  Beneath The Shadows, the group’s fall of 2009 release on Retroactive Records, details the life of a man who falls into drugs and loses everything he loves in the process.  The subsequent emotional roller coaster leads him to look beyond himself to find meaning in life, with the end result a story based not just upon addiction but also loss, consequence and ultimate redemption.

Musically, Beneath The Shadows finds Jacobs Dream continuing to head in power metal territory but with a bit more emphasis on melody this time around.  Melody is the key word here in that this is perhaps the most “song orientated” album from the group to date.  Now, what I mean by song orientated is that each of the albums tracks brings the type of gripping presence – in the form of a pronounced chorus hook or notable melody - that would allow it to hold up under repeated play.  The end result is a work that is nothing less than stellar in showcasing a front to back musical (and lyrical) journey of excellence and inspiration.

To understand my point, check out the joining of catchy hooks and heaviness characterizing the three opening tracks, “Welcome To My World, “Minds Will Burn” and “Stain”.  The two that follow, “Illusive Dream” and “Hand Full Of Dust”, reflect a more technical/progressive edge and “The Hell That I Breathe” a melodic based feel.

It also must be noted the amount of acoustic guitar making its presence felt on Beneath The Shadows.  You will find two very well done acoustic pieces in “The Darkest Hour” and “Reborn In Fire” while an acoustic guitar laces up the haunting “All Of My Fears”, the albums anthem-like title track and stately “Blessing And The Curse”.

Again, from front to back there is not a weak moment on Beneath The Shadows; every song is great, an accolade I rarely (if ever) give out.  It is obvious Jacobs Dream spent a significant amount of time perfecting its material before entering the studio, with all the hard work paying off in that this is destined to be a classic.

Vocalist Chaz Bond represents the glue that holds everything together.  Bringing a low key but versatile vocal delivery often described as a joining of Jimmy P. Brown II (Deliverance), Eric Clayton (Savior Machine) and Geoff Tate (Queensryche), Chaz finds himself in his natural element on a concept releases.  He instinctively knows, for instance, when to add to the emotional scene with his trademark resonant touch but can reach down low for an element of aggression when need calls for it.

Backing Chaz is the capable guitar team of John Berry and Jon Noble.  The two impart to the project just the right amount of catchy melodies, riffs and harmonies but can delivery a more hard hitting touch at a moments notice.  Lead guitar is done with taste and tact (and skill) but not to overabundance so as to avoid taking away from the song orientated environment.

Production wise, this is Jacobs Dream’s best effort since Theater Of War (2001).  The guitars are raw and in your face and the drum sound spot on.  The only complaint is that there is a slight hint of thinness permeating the project, the only particular standing in the way of a perfect final score.

Album opener “Welcome To My World” is a three and a half minute scorcher.  Driven by a crunch heavy guitar sound but put over the top by its big hook chorus, the song proves signature Jacobs Dream and would sound right at home on previous releases Drama Of The Ages and Dominion Of Darkness.  Chaz closes things with one of his trademark growls.

One has to appreciate the contrasts presented on “Minds Will Burn”.  This one jumps out of the gate fast and heavy, crashing through its verses in aggressive fashion only to gently smooth out upon obtaining its catchy – almost mesmerizing – chorus.  A transition from the driven to the melodic is made in the process.

“Stain” is testament to the maturity of Jacob Dream’s songwriting.  A song played with so much emotion it will send shivers down your spine, “Stain” finds Chaz at his low key best while the intricate chorus, for a lack of better words, is done to perfection.  Is this the best track ever from Jacobs Dream?  If not it certainly comes close.

“Illusive Dream” brings some understated but tastefully done time changes.  The songs verses, weighty, tough as nails and bordering on the prodigious, are perfectly set apart by a flowing chorus with a subtle persuasiveness you will struggle to get rid of.  Impetus abruptly picks up for an instrumental interlude carried by a fiery lead guitar.

“Hand Full Of Dust” rates with the albums heaviest.  With a face first rhythm guitar dominating the mix, this might not be the catchiest of pieces but the all out power to the songs delivery and gut-level feel is more than enough to put it over the top.  A brief but punchy chorus blends well with the gritty milieu here.

A touch of the melodic is delivered on “The Hell That I Breathe”.  A lush setting is put into place as accentuating keyboards and piano lighten things during the songs verses, the heartfelt leanings sustained as a chorus of a near sweeping capacity – once more, the hook here is quite pronounced – is obtained.  Topping things off is a stretch of razor edged lead guitar.

The first of two acoustic pieces, “The Darkest Hour” might be the albums shortest (2:58) but proves essential with its melodic flavorings and Chaz hinting at Geoff Tate with his pure delivery.  If anything, “The Darkest Hour” plays an essential role in separating the albums first six tracks from its brilliant final four.

Pyramaze comes to mind on “All My Fears”.  Why?  It has to be the superlative chorus that stops nearly dead in its tracks for an amalgamating of pounding drums and crisp acoustic guitar (the overall effect reminds me of something you might hear off Legend Of The Bone Carver).  The songs verses, as one might expect, carry a bit more weight but flow well with the graceful setting.

“Reborn In Fire”, the second acoustic track, brings some of the same elements as Kansas’ “Dust In The Wind”.  Yes, the emotion and heart are there but so is an abundant hook – I can see this being successful if given the chance on FM radio – while the mandolin solo is unexpected but complementary.

The pace picks up for the albums title track.  “Beneath The Shadows” is certain to command your attention with its poignant sensibilities and anthem-like presence- all the while exuding quite the bountiful melody.  Driven by runs of tight as it gets riffing backed by pounding drums, the song culminates past its halfway point to a run of torrid lead guitar that gives way to a quieter acoustic based passage.

“The Blessing And The Curse” proves a fitting album closer.  Keyboards make their presence felt throughout the song, particularly for its commercial driven chorus, while a lacing of acoustic guitar occasionally rounds out the mix.  A piece that flows perfectly from start to finish, “The Blessing And The Curse” challenges “Stain” for the best track on an album overflowing with great material.

What else can you say except that Beneath The Shadows is destined to become a classic.  Its material breathes of inspiration while the emotional elements throughout align themselves with the concept at hand.  My experience is that every song here brings just the right riff, hook or melody that would allow it too stand out above the rest, with the outcome a work that will allow Jacobs Dream to reach a lot of people.

Review by Andrew Rockwell

Track Listing: “Welcome To My World” (3:36), “Minds Will Burn” (4:22), “Stain” (4:45), “Illusive Dream” (5:14), “Hand Full Of Dust” (4:58), “The Hell That I Breathe” (5:33), “The Darkest Hour” (2:58), “All My Fears” (4:21), “Reborn In Fire” (3:49), “Beneath The Shadows” (5:00), “The Blessing And The Curse” (5:39)
 
Musicians
Chaz Bond – Lead Vocals
John Berry – Guitars
Jon Noble – Guitars
James Evans – Bass
Gary Holtzman – Drums

2.  RIVERA BOMMA - INFINITE JOURNEY OF SOUL CD SEALED

ANGELIC WARLORD REVIEW
Read any review of Infinite Journey Of Soul, the January of 2013 Retroactive Records third full length album from New Jersey based Rivera Bomma, and you will see the same list of compliments and complaints: Strong songwriting and first-rate band performance, but production leaves much to be desired.  Yes, some variations thereof will be found - at least dependant upon the reviewer - but after repeat listen I cannot help but share similar sentiments.

Rivera Bomma, consisting of guitarist extraordinaire Rod Rivera and professional vocalist Johnny Bomma, maintain their penchant for American power metal and traditional heavy metal merged with the occasional progressive overtone.  The two present with a couple of calmer, ballad-like moments as well.  It adds up to a musical continuation of the group’s 2006 sophomore album I Am God but with the variety of its 2001 debut Invisible Force mixed in.

The heavier Infinite Journey Of Soul material touches upon its better I Am God counterparts.  Remember the albums anthem-like title track (with its panoramic view of creation and the Creator), stunning “Help” (and its exciting, falsetto driven refrain) and “Revelation/Midnight Sunlight” (ranking with the best ever songs about the Second Coming)?  This is the type of quality delivered by “Empty Desire”, joining of the bottom heavy with full on energy, “Angel And Demons”, a heavy hitter hinting of classic metal, and “Infinite Journey Of Soul”, highlighting a symphonic and epic based presence.  The same holds true of the ominous doom-ish tinctures to “The Maker” and progressiveness of seven minute pieces “In Blood” and “Horizon’s End” with their intricate time signatures.

It is the albums four remaining tracks in that that previously referenced variety comes into play.  In addition to “intro” and “outro” pieces “I.J.O.S. Intro” and “Before The End”, you will also encounter ballads “Via Dolorosa” and “The Maker”.  The former, a Sandi Patty cover (off the 1984 album Songs From The Heart), brings a luxurious feel with a fitting edge of rhythm guitar, while the latter gives rise to a Latin flair not unlike some of the mellower moments to Invisible Force. 

The Sandi Patty cover is far from bad, but I would much rather have Rivera Bomma pay tribute to the past by re-recording a song from one of their contemporaries instead.  I’m sure you can agree a rousing cover of the Leviticus classic “The Suffering Servant” would have worked better.  But that is not the point, particularly in light of the fact the album has just 8 full length songs and two are ballads I rate above average to good at best.  The overall impression being that at least two additional quality heavier rocking pieces are required to produced the more well-rounded effort.

Rod Rivera and Johnny Bomma continue to represent one of the better guitar and vocalist combinations this side of Rob Rock and Chris Impellitteri.

Rivera remains a monster player, showcasing a style that brings to mind Richie Blackmore, Michael Schenker, Yngwie Malmsteen Carl Johan Grimmark rolled into one.  As with I Am God he literally steals the show with playing that can touch upon the neo-classical and hammer-on driven in one instance but make a transition to a more aggressive or bluesy direction the very next.  At this point it must be reinforced that one aspect I appreciate about Rivera Bomma is how they are not afraid to extend a song into five to seven minute range by emphasizing their instrumental sound, as they do throughout the albums heavier material (and give Rivera the opportunity to unveil his delectable playing in the process).

Bomma continues to sing with heart, lungs, guts, power and projection in putting forth another dominant performance.  I cannot say enough good things about his abilities in that he rates with my all time favorite vocalists.  The best way to describe him would be versatile: He brings the commanding presence to fit the traditional metal mold but also the all out range (without overdoing it from a high end standpoint) to complement the power/progressive side of things.

Also of note is the excellent album artwork from Jan Yrlund, who has worked with other Retroactive artists such as David Benson, The Seventh Power and Liberty N’ Justice.  Lyrics share the same forthright direction of past Rivera Bomma releases.

Production is the lone area that disappoints.  Infinite Journey Of Soul has a demo-like feel with watery thin rhythm guitars, drums that lack presence, ill-defined guitar leads and almost non-existent bass.  The upshot is that Rivera Bomma end up robbed of much of the trademark power and vitality that defines their sound (listen to I Am God and Infinite Journey Of Soul side by side and you will notice the difference).

I cannot help but think Rivera Bomma would benefit from following the examples of contemporaries that brought in some of the best in the business to help out on production with their latest releases.  InnerSiege recruited Fredrik Nordstrom for the mix and mastering of its debut Kingdom Of Shadows, while Golden Resurrection hired Ronny Milianowicz to mix its most recent album One Voice For The Kingdom.  Germán Pascual enlisted Thomas Plec Johansson for the mix and mastering of his debut solo release A New Beginning.  I could go on and on in this area, but I am sure you get the point: Sometimes you have to dig a bit deep into your pockets - and bleed a bit in the process - in order to obtain professional quality production.

Infinite Journey Of Soul adds up to an uneven effort from a talented band I was expecting a bit more from after a seven year wait between albums.  Songwriting shines (at least on the albums heavier material) as do the duo of Rod Rivera and Johnny Bomman.  Production proves the lone area to fall short.  In the end what I feel I am dealing with in Rivera Bomma is a talented professional sports team with the potential to win a championship but lacks the acumen to even make it to the post season.  And as the most recent NFL season can attest, sometimes the most talented team does not always win the Super Bowl (with no apologies to the Baltimore Ravens and its fans) but rather the one that knows how to perform smart and minimize (if not eliminate) unnecessary mistakes.  I know Rivera Bomma have another great album in them- it is a matter of executing in the studio to produce such results.

Track By Track

“I.J.O.S. Intro” segues its short distance (1:40) between offbeat sound effects, female narration and guitar pyrotechnics.

The albums title track is where the fun starts.  Classic Rivera Bomma all the way, “Infinite Journey Of Soul” makes a dominant statement with its brazen riffing, ascendant presence and scripture voice over covering the final minute.  Choir-like vocals step forward to interweave with the ethereally done chorus.  Lyric snippet:

End of time
Lightning strikes
It’s raining fire in the sky

Good and evil hand in hand
Infinite journey of souls
It’s in stone Gods ten commands
Infinite journey of souls

Life no more in earth and land
Infinite journey of souls

Momentum picks up with “Empty Desire”, a razor edged barn burner that Rivera turns into a personal shred fest: Including the opening seconds that feature some enticing open air guitar and lengthy instrumental interlude driven by quite the pulsating stretch of soloing.  The song, otherwise, brings a dark, bottom heavy mentality with preeminent vocals and some of the albums heavier moments holding sway.

“In Blood” delivers its share of variety.  The song opens the first of its seven minutes instrumentally with romping double bass and organ holding sway, establishing quite the weighty backdrop its remaining distance, only occasionally descending into a slower passage upheld by quietly done guitar.  Chorus runs the gamut from the uplifting (at the start) to decisive (for the end).  Again, Rivera cuts loose throughout a skillfully done instrumental section.  Lyric snippet:

Do you hear me?
Do you know who I am?
Do you fear me?
I’m the voice in year head?

I’m the blind man
Who can see fantasy
Holy Father
Please embrace me

In a dream I’m faced with myself
With His love 
I’m dying, I’m dying

Rivera Bomma do the Sandi Patti cover “Via Dolorosa” justice.  The song proves lushly done, highlighting Bomma’s emotional vocal edge in moving front to back to back in keyboard driven fashion.  When impetus builds a pleasing edge of rhythm guitar cuts in to add to the momentous scene. 

“Angel And Demons” captures Rivera Bomma at its most powerful.  The song is characterized by its heavy hitting action, approaching classic metal as a result, but can also, contrasting, temper the pace for the palatial aspect that is its sweeping chorus.  Topping everything off is another exciting run of lead guitar.  Lyric snippet:

Lately I’ve been on my knees
Lonely fighting this disease
Inside of your love, I miss you the most

Inside your window, what do you hide?
Do you feel evil?
There’s someone above looking on
Inside your window, what demons you hide?
Do you feel evil?
There’s God up above looking on…

“Horizons End” charges out of the gate at a furious tempo with distorted guitars and blazing leads to match.  The song maintains a distinguished feel in moving forward, delivering a wallop with the guitar based impetus but also evening out for its deeply resonant chorus.  Just past the halfway point the pace dips for a quieter passage that gives way to a lush run of soloing.  Interestingly, a sitar closes out the final seconds.

A Latin flair is delivered in “In My Dream”.  Yes, it works in that a generous melody and some tasteful acoustic flavorings are allowed to come to the forefront.  A fitting Spanish guitar solo rounds things out.  Lyric snippet:

Fingers are pointing
Fists are shaking
Blaze the rage within

Hate them and kill them
For the color of their skin

Love one another
Like God loves us all
Sisters and brothers
Children of the Lord

Weighty, ominous and doom-ish, “The Maker” allows for a pulverizing metal statement.  A lengthy instrumental opening made up of gentle open air guitars and haunting riff action gets the song going.  Things take a pronounced hulking tone the rest of the way, with sledgehammer guitars, romping low end and shouting backing vocals setting the tone but with a stately chorus serving to tie everything together.  A decisive feel can be found in the apocalyptic soloing.

Closing things out is two minute open air guitar solo “Before The End - MMXIII”, which allows Rod Rivera to highlight his abundant abilities (in a similar vein as the Rex Carroll lead guitar pieces during his Whitecross days.

Review by Andrew Rockwell

Track List: “I.J.O.S. Intro” (1:40), “Infinite Journey Of Soul” (4:51), “Empty Desire” (5:39), “In Blood” (7:02), “Via Dolorosa” (4:55), “Angel And Demons” (5:23), “Horizons End” (7:12), “In My Dream” (4:36), “The Maker” (6:32), “Before The End - MMXIII” (2:00)

Musicians
Johnny Bomma - Lead Vocals
Rod Rivera - Guitars
Mike LePond - Bass
Edward Faust - Drums