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What's that pounding in your head you ask?
Well, nothing too much to be concerned with, just the driving
rhythms and hammering beats being forcibly driven into your skull!
Compliments of Night in Gales, Germany's modern-day answer to
those inventive early English torture devices used for employing
cruel and insufferable punishment to society's lawbreakers. In
fact, there ought to be a law against this kind of audible abuse!
"Nailwork" is the third LP from Night in Gales, the
Death Metal outfit that really hit their stride with "Thunderbeast"
two years prior.
"Nailwork," track by track is
violently relentless, humorously revealing, "All Scissors
Smile," "How to Eat a Scythe," and sharply direct
take a gander at the front-cover images, those ain't wood screws
they're playing with here! In raising the bar for extreme aggression,
they've withheld slightly more of the melodic grooves and vocal
harmony that prevailed upon "Thunderbeast," making
it so majestically impressive. Others of their time have since
tried and mostly failed to match the magnitude of this work.
Sadly, this includes Night in Gales, themselves, in this case,
though "Nailwork" does have it's moments. "Nailwork,"
"Blades to Laughter," "Filthfinger," but
it's a little too one dimensional in spite of the frequently
Goth-orientated strains that belie several of the pre-chorus
segments.
Alannah Myles must be turning in her grave
at about this point after the savage shredding given her "Black
Velvet" midway through
Oh, that was her career that
died, not actually her. Well, she would if she was. Trust me.
It's a horrific cover anyway. The next tune "Filthfinger"
is totally better as it strides step for step with the best of
their last. Testament-like riffing and frequent major/minor chord
changing sends shockwaves into the night where sounds of death
can also be heard echoing freely about, enveloped in a convulsive
assembly line beat that sounds too technically contrived to further
what was an already expansive delivery. "Nailworks"
is thankfully not the ascension into progressive/techno many
of the like have conspired to produce but neither does it retain
those finer elements that made their last record such a highlight! |