Earn 1 Loyalty Point With Every $1 Spent!

Hurricanes And Halos (2LP Black Vinyl)

SKU: 3909-1
Label:
Nuclear Blast
Category:
Hard Rock
Add to wishlist 

"I had no idea this album was even happening until late Friday evening. It arrived in the Promo Department and Madam Xsent a minion scurrying to my stately offices inquiring if I was expecting something new from Avatarium. After said minion was soundly whipped for making eye contact and disturbing my righteous Steelsleep, I reflected on the question. Having heard nothing whatsoever of a new album I assumed it was just an EP, remix or some such nonsense. Not so, as it’s actually the third album of bluesy, 70s influenced quasi-doom rock from Candlemass founder Leif Edling and company. That’s a pretty big deal around the AMG offices, because to date Avatarium has done no wrong, starting life as a folksy doom band, then morphing into a 70s rock monster. Hurricanes and Halos continues the evolution, following Opeth down the rabbit hole into 70s psychedelic prog rock. The moments that qualify as doom are now few, but the material is still heavy in its own way and the band has a charm that’s tough to resist, even when they explore sounds far afield from their doom roots.

The album certainly opens with a bang, as “Into the Fire – Into the Storm” charges hard with a Deep Purple-esque guitar and Hammond organ assault. Songbird Jennie-Ann Smith’s sultry, jazz club vocals soar over the urgent rock to deliver a snappy and simple chorus, and the guitar solos conjure the glory days of Rainbow. This makes for an instantly likable dose of 70s doom rock, light on the doom. The truly interesting material begins with “Road to Jerusalem” – a folksy, jaunty, Middle Eastern flavored number with a bouncy swagger, beautiful vocals from Mrs. Smith and gorgeous guitar-work on tap throughout. The extended guitar jams are a joy and it’s a great little number full of atmosphere and mood.

The album centerpiece is the nine-minute epic “Medusa’s Child,” and it’s a pretty unusual creature, leaping between quasi-doom and strange Jefferson Airplane-styled weirdness with Jennie joined by creepy children’s sing-alongs. It feels a bit long in the snake after a spell, but the inspired keyboard and guitar jams are worth the price of admission. The album’s best material arrives late with “The Sky at the Bottom of the Sea” which could have wandered off a Hellwell album. It’s a herky-jerky, schizophrenic mess with crazy organ runs and a generally mushroom addled vibe. Jennie completely owns the chorus and her powerful voice offers a firm guide rope through the tumultuous prog-rock extravaganza. Imagine Ann Wilson of Heartjamming with Yes and Genesis and you’re in the general ballpark.

The album standout for my money is “A Kiss (From the End of the World),” which is a mammoth, olde-timey doom nugget recalling the classic Dio-era Sabbath platters. The heavy riffs feel very welcome after an album nearly devoid of them, and Jennie gives her best performance on a simple but powerhouse chorus. It has a sad, forlorn feeling1 and to my ears it almost sounds like a response to Sabbath‘s “Lonely is the Word.”

At a trim 44 minutes, Hurricanes is an easy listen despite a few long cuts. However, I’m not overly enamored with how it closes out on the mostly-ambient instrumental title track. It comes across like a mix of the Clockwork Orange soundtrack and a graduation march, and ends an interesting, eclectic album on a bland note.

As with every Avatarium release, Jennie-Ann Smith’s vocals are the main attraction. She has a warm, lovely voice, capable of real power and a smokey, nightclub purr. No matter where the music goes she is able to fit in and own her surroundings. She reminds me a lot of Ann Wilson and she adds gravitas and charisma to whatever the band comes up with. Soen guitarist Marcus Jidell once again impresses with all sorts of 70s rock stylings, showing his affinity for psychedelic and prog rock while never dragging the music too far from a given song’s logical path. His solos on tracks like “Road to Jerusalem” and “Medusa’s Child” are wonderfully tripped out and he plays with a lot of emotion and feeling. The keyboard wizardry of Carl Westholm (ex-Candlemass) also deserves praise, as it bathes the material in a thick coat of 70s rock glory. There’s a lot of Jon Lord in his playing, and a fair amount of Ray Manzarek too.

Hurricanes and Halos finds Avatarium very comfortable in their own skin doing whatever they want creatively, and I admire that. It isn’t as powerful a collection of songs as their debut or The Girl With the Raven Mask, but it’s another impressive showcase for the talents of those involved. Highly recommended." - Angry Metal Guy

There are no review yet. Be the first!
You must login or register to post reviews.
Laser Pic

customers also bought

SEE ALL
  • Second album from this post-Santana lineup is a bit more commercial than the debut but there are still progressive overtones. Neil Schon shines again.
    $7.50
  • Remastered with 4 bonus tracks."This is a brilliant album, dense in texture, full of physical and nervous energy, equally appealing to mind and body. There is a guiding intelligence which enables these five excellent, assertive musicians to work with and not against each other. The group benefits from the addition of Nicky Hopkins, the most perfect of rock pianists (although his playing is sometimes over-shadowed by the electrical sturm and drang around him, something of an occupational hazard for pianists). Ron Wood's very prominent bass provides the rhythmic background of the album, and Tony Newman's drumming is solid and wonderfully varied, especially on "Spanish Boots" and "Plynth," Rod Stewart's voice is a little high and raspy, but this is a matter of personal taste; the singing itself is emotive, displaying a good grasp of blues-rock singing technique. The rasp, in fact, is somehow appropriate; it's really the vocal equivalent of electric distortion.Beck himself, of course, is the star. His playing doesn't quite have the excellence and logic of Clapton, but his ideas are unsurpassed. Outside of Jorma of the Airplane, Beck plays the most unpredictable guitar lines in rock, yet manages to combine them with a heavy blues feeling. He is capable of enormous speed and precision, yet his technique is almost always in service to a fertile, bizarre imagination. Listen to the eastern, Arab quality of his playing on the Yardbird's "Heart Full of Soul" and "Over Under Sideways Down." Beck miraculously manages to adapt this quality to a straight blues — the most obvious case being "Let Me Love You" on Truth — a very unlikely fusion.Much is made of Beck's egotism (in concert he will interrupt a song to play, by himself, Earl Scrugg's "Beverly Hillbillies Breakdown"), but really, he has the resources to support it.Truth, the other Beck album, contained individually outstanding cuts, particularly some ingenious reworking of traditional blues, but the entire album was not so much good or bad as patchy. "Greensleeves" and "Ol' Man River" came across as fillers, and another cut was an old B-side. Beck-Ola has greater esthetic unity, but the problem of working up material still remains. The new album has only seven cuts (five of which are original) and a playing time of under thirty minutes.Beck-Ola includes two oldies, "All Shook Up" and "Jailhouse Rock". While Beck throws in a little new-fangled feedback on the latter, the original echo, sounding very campy by now, is preserved for Stewart's voice. This cut contains the strongest vocal performance of the album (Stewart's best singing altogether is on a very soulful number called "Drinking Again," which for some reason is not on the album). The Beck Group's "Jailhouse Rock" boils with all the virulence the Fifties could muster. There's a change of pace with "Girl From Mill Valley" — a lovely, wistful gospel tune written by Hopkins, which towards the end teeters unfortunately on the edge of Mancini-land. The addition of a vocal part would have made it even better.The last cut, "Rice Pudding," is teeming with ideas. There's lots of rhythmic interest and a driving, syncopated riff which is returned to regularly as if for recharging when the semi-improvisations start to wear thin. There is the same kind of mood control, even metabolic control, which the Stones displayed on cuts like "The Last Time." In the middle of the finale, the tape is cut, leaving the listener hanging unmercifully in the group's thrall until the release of the next album." - Rolling Stone
    $7.50
  • "Blue Öyster Cult tried a new producer on Mirrors, replacing longtime mentor Sandy Pearlman with Tom Werman, a CBS staffer who had worked with Cheap Trick and Ted Nugent. The result is an album that tries to straddle pop and hard rock just as those acts did, emphasizing choral vocals (plus female backup) and a sharp, trebly sound. But this approach appeared to displease longtime metal-oriented fans without attracting new ones: "In Thee" became a minor singles-chart entry, but the album broke BÖC's string of five gold or platinum albums in a row. The real reason simply may have been that the songs weren't distinctive enough. Much of this is generic hard rock that could have been made by any one of a dozen '70s arena bands." - All Music Guide
    $7.50
  • "Considered to be the some of their finest work since Agents of Fortune , this flight of dark fantasy, which includes the Top 40 hit, Burnin' for You , will satisfy the souls of Cult fans everywhere!"
    $7.50
  • Remastered edition of the second album from the greatest hard rock band to come from Long Island.Comes with 4 bonus tracks and a price you can live with.
    $7.50
  • Remaster of the band's third album comes with 5 bonus tracks. This one has some of their best toons...
    $7.50
  • "Signing on with Deep Purple/Black Sabbath producer Martin Birch, Blue Öyster Cult made more of a guitar-heavy hard rock album in Cultosaurus Erectus after flirting with pop ever since the success of Agents of Fortune. (They also promoted this album by going out on a co-headlining tour with Sabbath.) Gone are the female backup singers, the pop hooks, the songs based on keyboard structures, and they are replaced by lots of guitar solos and a beefed-up rhythm section. But the band still were not generating strong enough material to compete with their concert repertoire, so they found themselves in the bind of being a strong touring act unable to translate that success into record sales." - All Music Guide
    $7.50
  • "The band's first live album achieved even greater success and went gold; includes The Subhuman; Harvester of Eyes; Hot Rails to Hell; (Then Came the) Last of May; Cities On Flame; Before the Kiss (A Recap); Maserati GT (I Ain't Got You); Born to Be Wild , and more."
    $7.50
  • “You can expect a beefy rock album, freak style. I think that Cooking with Pagans finally has the sound and energy of Freak Kitchen live; the energy and rawness. It is anything but overproduced, stripped down, drums, bass and guitar. To the point.” – Mattias “IA” EklundhIt has been 5 years since Freak Kitchen graced us with a new album.  Since the release of 2009’s Land Of The Freaks, the band has toured the world – making stops in Europe, USA, and Asia along the way.  Finally the band was able to settle down in their home base of Sweden to record the long awaited follow up Cooking With Pagans.The album finds the band collaborating with Blacksad comic book creator and former Disney animator Juanjo Guarnido.  In addition to creating the amazing packaging for the album, Mr. Guarnido has created an incredible animated video to support the album release.Freak Kitchen consists of world renowned guitarist Mattias “IA” Eklundh, bassist Christer Ortefors and drummer Bjorn Fryklund, The trio offers an intense blend of progressive metal and rock, often served up with a wicked dose of humor.  RIYL Frank Zappa, Steve Vai, and Bumblefoot. 
    $6.00
  • Legendary first album comes with 4 unreleased bonus tracks. Now available at a great price.
    $7.50
  • "Remastered from the original tapes are Godzilla; Goin' Through the Motions; I Love the Night , and the rest of this 1977 fave. PLUS you'll hear unissued versions of Be My Baby; Please Hold; Night Flyer , and more!"
    $7.50
  • "Lemmy Kilmister had been leading Motörhead for 16 years by the time 1916 was recorded in 1991. Over the years, Motörhead had experienced more than its share of personnel changes -- and in fact, Kilmister was its only remaining original member. But the band's sound hadn't changed much, and time hadn't made its sledgehammer approach any less appealing. As sobering as his reflections on the horrors of World War I are on the title song, he's unapologetically amusing on "Going to Brazil," "Angel City" (an ode to the "beautiful" party people of L.A.), and "Ramones" (which salutes the New York punk band). Whether the subject matter is humorously fun or more serious, Motörhead is as inspired as ever on 1916." - Allmusic Guide
    $7.50
  • Remastered edition with 2 bonus tracks."The third and final album of what could be called Journey's cocoon phase (Escape would give birth to a fully formed butterfly and put the band through the stratosphere), 1980's Departure would also be the quintet's last with keyboardist/vocalist Gregg Rolie. Produced by Geoff Workman and Kevin Elson (essentially both engineers turned producers), the album continued to build on the band's previous two recordings, but offered an added edge, arrangement-wise. This was likely due to the fact that the band had walked into Automatt Studios with 19 new tunes and proceeded to record most of them live, eventually trimming down to 11 songs. Catapulted all the way up to number eight on the Billboard Top 200, Departure was the band's highest charting album to date and got off to an explosive start with the driving riffs and chorused vocals of "Anyway You Want It" (another radio smash that would chart Top 25). Never sounding tighter, the quintet then launched into "Walks Like a Lady" (another future FM staple, climbing to number 32) and a string of outstanding rockers, including future concert opener "Where Were You" and the stop-go-stop-go energy of "Line of Fire." On the other hand, elegant power ballads like "Good Morning" and "Stay Awhile" would foreshadow the band's future commercial triumphs on Escape. And even though it packs the occasional filler like "Someday Soon" and "Homemade Love" (a weak attempt to boogie that falls absolutely flat), Departure is a solid record all around. Soon, Rolie would be replaced by the greater pop-savvy songwriting muscle of former Babys keyboard man Jonathan Caine, and Journey would go from huge cult act to monster superstars." - All Music Guide
    $7.50
  • Raise The Curtain is the latest effort from the former Savatage mastermind.  Its quite different from the Jon Oliva's Pain project and in a surprising way.  The music has a strong 70s vibe blending elements of progressive rock, AOR, and metal.  Oliva plays all the instruments but he collaborated on the songwriting with Dan Fasciano.  From the opening roaring organ sounds you know you are in for something a bit different.  You can tell this is Jon Oliva - there are parts that will remind you a bit of Savatage but you will also think in terms of Kansas, ELP, Alice Cooper.  A mash up of styles for sure but quite well done.  A friend who heard an advance copy summed it up perfectly: "A fun album".  This is the first pressing that has one bonus track.  Grab it while we got 'em.
    $15.00