CATHEDRAL The Carnival Bizarre CD + DVD (Earache) 16.99Another rare audio cassette edition of classic 90s-era Cathedral, dug out of the corners of a distant warehouse.
Also available as a CD and DVD set from 2008, now out of print from the label.
"Ride with me on a shooting star ... Through galaxies of death we chase..."
The third album from 1995 is where Cathedral went "stoner rock". Yeaurgh. Motor-revvin' and we're off, "Vampire Sun" bustin' out one of Cathedral's signature mid-90s stoned-groovy monster riffs, downtuned and driving, and catchy as hell. It's peak 70s-worship from these guys, Dorrian dropping his menacing growl for that sleazy "ooo, yeah...gimme... catcall action while the band applies crushing Frostian doom metal guitar tone to 70's-era hard rock riffs powered by just the right level of garage-punk to make almost every song on The Carnival Bizarre a terminal stomper. The vibes remain dark, though: "Hopkins (The Witchfinder General)" is the catchiest cruncher you'll ever hear about Vincent Price burning witches at the stake (no wonder this punisher was also released as a separate EP by Earache, it's one of the hookiest things these guys ever wrote). Yeah, the Hemmer Horror / 1970s-era horror cinema influence is all over the album, and I'm all for it. It gets Sabbathian to the tenth power on "Utopian Blaster", which sounds like something that could have been off of Paranoid; the swift Iommi-esque licks and that monumental chug-a-thon riff later shifting into a slower, more psychedelic groove . Iommi-esque, I say? Good god, it's actually the man himself guesting on guitar for "Blaster", and man does he sound right at home. Another top-notch Cathedral jam. The classic Spanish Blind Dead films get their due with "Night Of The Seagulls", a creeping, crusty dirge built around a slimy, slo-mo riff, wafting spectral electronics and gong strikes, erupting into a churning chorus that burns itself into your skull as it again slowly slides into a repetitious, mesmeric drone-riff.
Like most stylistic shifts, Cathedral's embrace of heavy rock over the glacial death-doom of their earlier material rubbed a bunch of folks the wrong way, back when this came out. And stuff like the title track is certainly a more upbeat direction, even sometimes descending into straight-up silliness, but this still isn't the typical 90s stoner rock fare that some have tried to make it out to be; it's just so goddamned heavy. Even at it's goofiest and grooviest, Garry Jennings' guitar tone is pure lava. There's a lot of cool backing instrumentation that adds dimension, a guest trumpet performance from noted British jazz artist Kenny Ball on the awesome slithering psych-doom of "Fangalactic Supergoria", washes of orchestral cinematic string sounds, whooshing Hawkwidian synthesizers, dazed choirs, trippy Mellotron tones (those rich, gorgeous sounds draped over the oddball boogie of "Blue Light" like something from a Riz Ortolani score) , bongos, gongs. Oo-la-la.
And they'll head off into deep instrumental excursions that stretch out for ages. Even the lesser songs are a blast, moody mid-tempo numbers "Inertia's Cave", Electric Grave", and "Palace Of Fallen Majesty" - the riffs are undeniable. You must submit. The Celtic Frost influence is just so massive on these songs. Cathedrals were, in many ways, at the top of their game here, as far as I'm concerned. You either got the joke or you didn’t. I mean, for god's sake, when Lee starts to tell the listener to "shake that funky thing", you've got to see what's going on here. Tongue in cheek humor not that far removed from Monster Magnet. The spoken-word parts where it sounds like Dorrian is reading from Clark Ashton Smith before they erupt into more bongo-fueled drug-funk. There just so much weird shit going on throughout this aptly-titled album. Some of this is deliberate Sabbath pastiche. Some of this dives into weirder waters. A lot of this applies To Mega Therion guitar tone to hooks honed on hours of listening to Mountain, James Gang, The Stooges, and Sir Lord Baltimore. You tell me that doesn't sound like a good time.
Regarding the CD/DVD edition: The Our God Has Landed DVD part of this set is great. It collects all of the Cathedral music videos produced for Earache up to that point: the gnarly early videos for "Ebony Tears" (Forest Of EquilibriumSoul Sacrifice), "Ride" and the disco-hall classic "Midnight Mountain" (The Ethereal Mirror), "Cosmic Funeral" (Cosmic Requiem), "Hopkins (Witchfinder General)" ( The Carnival Bizarre ), "Stained Glass Horizon" (Supernatural Birth Machine), and "Black Sunday" (off Caravan Beyond Redemption, I think). These are a lot of fun, as Cathedral weren't afraid to bring their peculiar sense of humor to their music videos. Additionally, the disc features Cathedral's five-song set from their March 1992 show at the Astoria in London, on the legendary Gods Of Grind tour. Professionally shot with multiple camera angles and bone-crunching sound, the set includes some of their all-time early 90s classics: "Soul Sacrifice", "Equilibrium", "Autumn Twilight", "Frozen Rapture", "A Funeral Request", interspersed with behind-the-scenes footage of the band goofing around. Killer.
Limited 2008 two disc (CD + NTSC/Region 0 DVD) release of the Metal band's third album including a bonus DVD (entitled Our God Has Landed) that contains a live show from 1992 plus eight promo video clips. Originally released in 1995, Carnival Bizarre proved to be arguably the defining document for the band. The album bridges the gap between the gritty Doom of the band's earliest recordings with the vibrant catchiness and quirkiness which became the band's trademark. Cathedral were formed by ex-Napalm Death vocalist Lee Dorrian and ex-Acid Reign guitarist Garry Jennings. Features a guest appearance by Black Sabbath's Tony Iommi on 'Utopian Blaster'. The package comes housed in a double CD jewel case and offers an essential slice of Metal history in one complete audiovisual set. 23 tracks.
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