Lovingly pinched from MSN Headbang: The Spanish doom trio Orthodox released its fourth full-length in March. It’s called Baal, and it’s an excellent record—all their records have been excellent—and, as always, it marks a change for the band. Their debut, 2006′s Gran Poder (“Great Power”), was an ultra-heavy doom metal effort, all slow riffs and roaring vocals, equal parts Black Sabbath and Melvins. Originally released on Alone Records from Spain, when it was reissued by Southern Lord in the U.S., the double vinyl edition included two covers—Venom’s ‘Genocide’ and Black Sabbath’s ‘Black Sabbath’.
Their second album, 2007′s Amanecer en Puerta Oscura (“Dawn in a Darkened Doorway”), kept the heavy guitars at times, but added jazzier drumming, piano, clarinet and trumpet for a progressive, exploratory feel. They went even farther afield on 2009′s Sentencia (“Verdict”), which only featured guitar on the first track, and that wasn’t metal so much as amplified Spaghetti Western-style twanging. The album’s primary focus was avant-garde jazz, as the 26-minute “Ascension” featured piano, upright bass, and brushed drums.
Baal is the most metal Orthodox disc since their debut. It’s not a return to the crushing doom of Gran Poder as much as a desert-bleached stoner doom record. It reminds me of Kyuss a little, and of early ’70s proto-metal acts like Josefus (from Texas) and Buffalo (from Australia). It’s got five tracks (Gran Poder had only four, one of which was a 90-second interlude; Amanecer… had seven, but two of them were short bridges, and Sentencia only had three).
The opening track, ‘Alto Padre’, is an instrumental, and serves as a sort of overture / fanfare, the guitar and fuzzed-out bass roaring and ascending as the drums rumble and the cymbals crash. The second track, ‘Taurus’, is a doomy crawl, and the first one to feature vocals—surprise again! For the first time in their career, Orthodox are singing in English. Bassist / vocalist Marco Serrato Gallardo sounds like a cross between Melvins’ Buzz Osborne and System of a Down’s Serj Tankian, and he frequently filters his vocals through an effect that makes them seem to be coming up from underwater.
Continue reading: MSN Headbang: Orthodox Unmasked Review.
Tags: Album of the day, Alone Records, Ba'al, Headbang Blogger, Orthodox, Phil Freeman
This entry was posted on Monday, May 9th, 2011 at 4:07 am and is filed under 2011, Album of the Day . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.








Great stuff. Been interested in this band for a little while now and really digging everything I’m hearing. btw Last year’s “Matse Avatar” 7″ also had English lyrics.