By Ragnarok Radio on Feb 25, 2010 in Metal reviews, Reviews | 0 Comments
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01. The Ballad of Solomon Eagle 05:17
02. Vagrant Stomp 04:49
03. The Ale House Braves 03:49
04. Cities of Frost 05:34
05. Hot Knives and Open Sores 04:21
06. Hounds Ditch 05:30
07. Mortlake (Dead Water) 02:11
08. They Come Back (Harvest of Skulls) 04:43
09. Beginners Guide to Suicide 08:05 |
The racket Orange Goblin specialise in tends to be referred to as ‘stoner metal’. Indeed, they’re reputed to be the UK’s premier exponents of that particular sub-genre. They epitomised that style on their standout third album, 2000’s ‘The Big Black’, but since then have been moving in a more traditional heavy-metal direction. By the time their sixth album, 2007’s ‘Healing Through Fire’ rolled around, staple traditional stoner tracks like ‘Scorpionica’ were a thing of the past. Sure, there are hints of it at various points on ‘Healing Through Fire’, it’s definitely still an influence, but to be honest you’d be hard pressed to actually define this as a stoner metal record. I don’t know what you’d call it, really…it’s just really fucking metal.
‘Healing Through Fire’ is all brash, swaggering aggression, a rousing drunken salute to heavy music. That lively, stomping tone is set right from the outset with ”The Ballad of Solomon Eagle“, which is by no means a ballad in the traditional sense. Although from Orange Goblin, I doubt you were expecting “Total Eclipse of the Heart” anyway…which isn’t to say I wouldn’t give a kidney to hear them cover that. It’s hard to explain, really, but listening to this album makes me feel like my hair isn’t nearly long enough, and gives me a sudden impulse to grow a large mountain-man style beard, behind which I can stomp around glaring at people. Tracks like “Ale House Braves” and “Hounds Ditch” typify this kind of feeling; it’s the kind of song you expect to find playing in one of those dingy bars populated entirely by bikers and stereotypical ‘road people’ out of Kerouac novels who hop freight trains. Even the barman has a denim jacket, and tattoos on his face, and there’s probably an underground fight club in the basement. It’s pure attitude music.
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By Ragnarok Radio on Feb 22, 2010 in Gig Photos | 0 Comments
Photos from the Mastodon show in Newcastle on February 21st. We also met the folks who caught Brann Dailor’s drumstick see the first picture! Photos by Victoria Baker and Ewan McNulty.
By Ragnarok Radio on Feb 16, 2010 in Metal reviews, Reviews | 0 Comments
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01. Badge And A Gun 3:40
02. In The City 3:10
03. You Belong To Me 4:06
04. Mrs. Operator 3:12
05. Higher & Higher 4:53
06. Too Much 3:34
07. Fortune And Fame 3:00
08. Superman 4:32
09. You 3:20
10. Champagne, Chicks & Rock n’ Roll 2:28 |
‘Fuck me, not another band covered in tattoos.’
- Christopher Persuad-Jagdhar, The Wildhearts
Originality seems to be something of a problem in music these days; regardless of which genre a band are considered to be a part of, more often than not there will be older acts with whom they share similarities. This is largely true of the recent wave of Swedish rock och roll seen on Ragnarok of late, but is it true of Mama Kin?
Named after a track on Aerosmith’s first album, they play soulful melodic rock. The album starts with a police siren (like Guns N’ Roses’ ‘Appetite For Destruction’) and goes on to paint a sleazy picture of the rock ‘n’ roll city of… erm, Karlstad (like Guns N’ Roses’ ‘Appetite For Destruction’). The band’s personnel have a cool glam image (like Guns N’ Roses’ ‘Appetite For Destruction’). However, it sounds very little like Guns N’ Roses’ ‘Appetite For Destruction’, and to be fair, it would be extremely difficult for a band to live up to such a seminal work - but hey, no one said they were trying to, and who says that unoriginality strictly has to be a bad thing?
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By Ragnarok Radio on Feb 15, 2010 in Interviews, Ragnarok Radio Episode | 0 Comments

Its an American invasion on this month’s Ragnarok Radio with our interviews with Cauldron and Bonded By Blood.
Toronto’s NWOTM band Cauldron talk to Gordy in Glasgow about Chained To The Night, record collecting and playing at Germany’s Keep It True festival in 2007.
Bonded by Blood formed in 2005 hailing from the Californian Thrash Metal scene naming themselves after the 1985 Exodus album ‘Bonded by Blood’. Exiled to Earth is set to be the bands second full length album to be released this year on Earache Records.
Episode 48 features the following metal tunes.
Cauldron - Chained up in chains
Bonded by Blood - Feed the beast
Rotten Sound - Blind
Necronoclast - Vultures
Without Thought - In Your Hands
Wolves in the Throne Room - Wanderer above the Sea of Fog
The Howling Wind - Virulence
Hellbound - Swamp Blues
The Bombs of Enduring Freedom - Beware the Bombs

Ragnarok Radio Episode 48 - Cauldron and Bonded By Blood [76:41m]:
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By Ragnarok Radio on Feb 12, 2010 in Power metal reviews, Reviews | 0 Comments
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01. My Heart Cries Out For You 04:44
02. Dark Journey 04:52
03. Land Of Street Survivor 04:17
04. Pay the Price 03:27
05. Destiny’s Call 04:54
06. Evil Masquerade 05:04
07. Running Out Of Time 04:35
08. Spellbound 04:37
09. Only The Strong Will Survive 03:29
10. Epic 04:38 |
‘Where the Eagles Fly’ and indeed the band responsible, Dark Illusion, inspire a strange conflict within me. I’m almost perfectly evenly divided between two opposing forces, and I really can’t decide which side of the fence to fall on. To that end, I’m going to do something a bit fruity and effectively write two reviews of this album. Each side will make their case, and I’ll leave it down to you, the reader, the civilian jury, to decide who wins. To start with, here’s the case from the prosecution, led by the part of me that’s an angry misanthropic shit of a man.
I don’t want this to turn into a philosophical debate about the nature of creativity and originality, but let’s face it, your classic melodic power metal isn’t a genre steeped in fresh ideas and innovation. Dark Illusion are a perfect example of this. I mean, to start with the first thing you saw up there, all of the songs are just named after the most-repeated line in the song. The album itself is named after a line from the chorus of the first song. They didn’t even have enough inspiration to come up with a couple of extra words. What makes it even worse is that all of said lines are pure cheesy filth as well.
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By Ragnarok Radio on Feb 8, 2010 in Progressive metal reviews, Reviews | 1 Comment
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01. Express Death 06:59
02. Pyramids 06:46
03. Paper Walls 05:48
04. He Dives Down 06:56
05. Terra Incognita 09:04
06. Lucky Me, Lucky You 04:14
07. Super Globe Of Pain 06:27
08. The Electric Hour 05:17 |
I’ll get it out of the way right from the start - Switch Opens are a Swedish metal band. Yeah, I know, you’re probably scuttling for cover toward the stereotype of all those identical ‘Gothenburg scene’ melodic death metal bands…but fear not. To start with, Switch Opens are from Stockholm, some 300 miles away from Gothenburg. And when it comes to metal, their sound too is a comparable distance away.
No, this isn’t another melodeath screamathon. To be honest, I’m not entirely sure what it is. It’s really quite fascinating to dream up a list of Switch Opens’ probable influences while listening through this album - they create a haze of fuzz that screams Kyuss, but some of their riffs sound more rooted in Southern Metal, with the likes of Down or Corrosion of Conformity. Their down ’n’ dirty groove kind of puts you in mind of Motörhead, albeit a more doomy Motörhead, maybe on Valium…and on top of that, they appear to share a name with a Soundgarden song. Putting all of that together, I suppose, makes this seem like the work of hairy stoners.
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By Ragnarok Radio on Feb 4, 2010 in Metal reviews, Reviews | 0 Comments
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05. I’m On My Way 4:49
06. I Don’t Give A Good God Damn 3:03
07. Bad Father, Bad Son 3:06
08. Ain’t It December 3:26
09. Black Eyes On A Saturday 5:42
10. MTV Killed Rock N’ Roll 4:28
11. Medicine 3:14
12. Die Beautiful 3:56
13. Move To Detroit 2:56
14. Jona Song 3:24
15. Demolition Man 6:02 |
Sweden has given us some great things over the years… meatballs… Vikings… that’s all I can think of at the moment. It has also produced the likes of Arch Enemy, Opeth and Bathory when it comes to extreme metal, and then there’s the more straightforward rockin’ bands like The Hellacopters, Backyard Babies, and Europe (hey, they were pretty good when you listened past ‘The Final Countdown’). Von Benzo fit into the latter of these two camps, but don’t quite inspire in the same way.
Opener ‘And The Dead Said No’ has a very cool intro, and a lovely feeling that something spectacular is about to be unleashed; like slowly taking the lid off of a box marked ‘FREE SWEETS’. Sadly, the song is a less-than-memorable rock standard, what would be a very nice pre-chorus turning out to be the chorus itself; like looking inside the box to discover the sweets are all mint humbugs or coffee Revels. This sets a precedent for a what is largely a whole album of cannon fodder.
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By Ragnarok Radio on Feb 3, 2010 in Metal reviews, Reviews | 1 Comment
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01. Dirt Bound 03:43
02. Hard Livin’ Man 03:18
03. No Doubt About It 03:59
04. Straight Shooters 03:33
05. Elvis Chapel Blues 04:35
06. Fill Your Head With Rock 05:12
07. Dog 03:15
08. A Shot Of You 03:22
09. Butter You Up 03:34
10. Swan Song 04:10
11. Sicker Than I Think 03:44 |
I have a hard time believing that Bonafide are actually Swedish. There’s something deeply 80s Americana about them. This is a band who fantasise about fast cars, sleep in leather jackets, and use a gang chant of “hell yeah” as about 40% of their backing vocals. Everything about their image and their music suggests they’re probably from California…but they’re not. They’re just trying really, really hard to be.
Seriously, has anyone informed Bonafide what decade it is? This album really sounds like it should be playing over the end-credits of a rubbish 80s road-trip movie. I can’t listen to opening track ’Dirt Bound’ without seeing a slow-motion high-five, and maybe a red sports car tearing off into a California sunset. And it goes on in the same fashion, attempted hard-rock anthem after attempted hard-rock anthem. You barely even notice the gaps between songs, it’s just a montage of spandex-clad riffs, facepalm-inducing backing vocal harmonies and predictable guitar solos. Now, I’ve never said a bad word in my life about guitar solos, and yet here Bonafide are trying to make me be that guy. You just see theirs coming a mile off. A lot like everything else in their music, really.
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By Ragnarok Radio on Feb 1, 2010 in Interviews, Ragnarok Radio Episode | 1 Comment

C.J from Newcastle’s hard rocking punk act The Wildhearts talks to Andy in Glasgow. The interview was conducted while the band were on tour promoting their new album ‘¡Chutzpah!’. The tour featured a set list playing the album in its entirety along with an encore featuring older songs.
¡Chutzpah! is their eighth studio album released in August 2009, produced in Denmark by Jacob Hansen who has most famously worked with Volbeat. C.J talks about working with Jacob, their new ‘downtuned’ playing style and appearing at the Kerrang! awards.
Episode 47 is presented by Gordy and Richard on location in Glasgow.
This month’s show features a mix of hard rock and heavy metal with the following tunes.
Revengine - Given It All
Final Curse - Christinsanity
Sleeping Martyr - Hollow
Solipsia - Confusion
Wheelchair Wheelchair Wheelchair Wheelchair - Panto Massacre
Forever Never - Empty Promises
The Wildhearts - Chutzpah
The Flare Up! - Put it in a Letter
Eightball - Revolution Man

Ragnarok Radio Episode 47 - C.J from The Wildhearts [70:04m]:
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