. .  
.
.
.         . .
.
... Home | Reviews
SEARCH 
.
.   .
.
Home
Reviews
Latest Reviews

Prong's X - No Absolutes

Rabid Flesh Eaters - Reign of Terror

Coffins/Isla Split

Haken - Affinity

Be'lakor - Vessels

Valdur - Pathetic Scum

Messa - Belfry

Die Choking - III

Sailing to Nowhere - To The Unknown

Black Anvil Interview

Six Feet Under - Graveyard IV The Number of the Priest

Destroyer 666 - Wildfire

Onslaught - Live at the Slaughterhouse

Rotten Sound - Abuse To Suffer

Venomous Concept - Kick Me Silly: VC III

The Great Discord - Duende

Arcana 13 - Danza Macabra

Die Choking - II

Obsidian Kingdom - A Year With No Summer

Thy Catafalque - Sgurr

Denner Shermann - Masters of Evil

Pilgrim - II: Void Worship Review

by Matt Hensch

.
Talk about dropping the ball. I thought Pilgrim did a fine job throughout "Misery Wizard" with its slow, melancholic lurches and Reverend Bizarre-esque textures-big songs and big riffs. Two years and some change passed between "Misery Wizard" and "II: Void Worship," though it sounds like they wrote and released the latter within a space of five days. These songs bore me to tears. Plodding, monotonous doom numbers crammed alongside FOUR useless instrumental tunes stack up to almost forty-five minutes of these American doomsters asleep at the wheel. Quite sad given that "Misery Wizard" actually had a fair number of memorable hooks and choruses, whereas "II: Void Worship" peers down into the quality vacuum and adores the vacancy of its languid numbers. It worships the void, all right.

The main issue here isn't an identity crisis but a depersonalization. These bruising, dejected riffs aren't much different from Pilgrim's guitar work on "Misery Wizard," save for the fact that they are all completely uninteresting and wishy-washy. Riff after riff is manufactured to act like a fourth-rate doom chop: slow, open-ended, and gradual, yet completely without substance. There's no other way to describe the riffing other than it's all composed of basic, unhurried notes and beating-said sequences into the ground for minutes on end, going nowhere. Pilgrim is a group that drives itself on the power of the riff; no hooking guitar work means "II: Void Worship" becomes this stale, lumbering product circling around the ghost of what it was capable of. The drumming is standard for this kind of thing: simple, sluggish, as lethargic as the sonic setting; about what journeymen of doom would expect.

The only anomaly is "The Paladin," a rocker a bit more up-tempo yet still ineffective for the reasons mentioned above. Jon Rossi's forlorn vocals augment the musical spine substantially, but the whole thing is pretty much derailed by the utter absence of worthwhile riffs. "II: Void Worship" is no hydra, and without its head there's not a whole lot it can do but flail around and twitch. But then there are these instrumental tracks, which are no different from the three 'real' anthems other than their lack of vocals. What's the point of adding in "Arcane Sanctum" or "Dwarven March"? Why not just settle for an EP of genuine material instead of this filler? Pilgrim just falls apart here, sounding disinterested and directionless. It's demoralizing, really, because they mostly stick to the same formula upon which "Misery Wizard" was based; the ingredients are here, the execution not so much. The only thing missing from "II: Void Worship" is the only thing that matters: quality.

Pilgrim - II: Void Worship

Rating:4.5

tell a friend about this review

.


...end



Thrash Worthy Link



.
.
antiMUSIC - iconoFAN - Rocknworld - Day in Rock - Rock Search - thrashPIT - iconoSTORE
.
Thrashpit is presented by Rocknworld.com - Part of the antiMusic Network

Tell a Friend about this page - Contact Us - Privacy - Link to us

Copyright© 1998 - 2007 Iconoclast Entertainment Group
All rights reserved.
No Part of this site may be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in any form.
Please click here for legal restrictions and terms of use applicable to this site.
Use of this site signifies your agreement to the terms of use. Updated 12-19-99