Labyrinth – Sons of Thunder – Review

Labyrinth

Sons of Thunder (Metal Blade)
by Martin Popoff

Lots of controversy over this Italian buzz band’s four-month-delayed Sons of Thunder album (that was actually the name of the band years ago), battles with bigshot producer Neil Kernon (Dokken, Queensrÿche) resulting in slaggings of the man in the press and ultimately a remixing of the album, which at least taught the band that they could likely self-produce next time around. It seems Kernon was pushing the band toward excessively heavy and unmelodic, and judging from the high-strung drum sound and noisy backwash on this album, a little power and bass might’ve been welcome.

And fact is, this is a very heavy, very fast power metal band, not some flighty orchestral experiment, Labyrinth yammering on about some subplot in the life of Louis XIV in their stunted English (guitarist Thorsen reversed things and wrote the lyrics this time before the music). It’s not really too distracting sonically, given that returning vocalist Rob Tyrant has a perfect voice for the genre. The keyboard work is a bit dated, but other than that, the riffing is exhilarating, as is the occasionally too busy drumming. Traditional high-octane speed metal is what emanates despite the fussiness, Labyrinth well-suited to keep in perspective this maligned genre as its competitors continue to crossover into prog.
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