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Metal/Prog Metal CD Reviews

Metal Witch

Tales from the Underground

Review by Gary Hill

While this CD was released in May of this year, from what I can tell the album originally hit shelves eight or so years ago. This is potent metal. It has some really great riffs and a lot of power and ferocity. I only have two issues with it. The first is the vocals. They are somewhat raw and guttural, a bit like Accept. At times that seems to fit the music really well. At other points, though, they become a little grating and hard to take. Secondly, this has a tendency to be a little samey from start to finish. I think a little variety to break things up might have been helpful. Still, it has enough energy and drive and cool riffing to make it work despite those issues.

This review is available in book (paperback and hardcover) form in Music Street Journal: 2024  Volume 4. More information and purchase links can be found at: garyhillauthor.com/Music-Street-Journal-2024.
Track by Track Review
Cheers To The Underground
The guitar riffing that gets things going here is positively on fire. This whole piece is absolutely fierce.
Flute Of Shame
I really love the driving metal vibe on this. The sound here is a bit more restrained. Yet, it's pure metal stomper.
God Save The Heroes
Not a big change, this is another pounding metal stomper. This rocks well.
Heavy And Roll
This has more of a mainstream rocking sound to it. It's a driving number with lots of energy.
Standing In My Way
Screaming hot and mean, I like this one a lot.
Stay True
Fierce and furious, this is another powerhouse that works really well.
Still Going Strong
This is a defiant stomper that works pretty well. This doesn't really stand out all that well, though.
The Heart Of England
Somehow this feels meaner and more majestic. It's another killer stomper. The instrumental break on this is particularly meaty.
The Man Who Shouldn't Live
This is among the fiercest music here. Somehow the chorus hooks are especially catchy, too.
Weapons Of The Night
There aren't any surprises here. This is just another driving metal stomper.
 
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