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II: Crush the Insects

II: Crush the Insects in Chattanooga, TN

Current price: $45.99
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II: Crush the Insects

Barnes and Noble

II: Crush the Insects in Chattanooga, TN

Current price: $45.99
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Size: OS

With two EPs running in excess of 70 minutes already under their belts,
Reverend Bizarre
confused quite a few fans and critics as to what constituted an actual album, but at least in their account of things, 2005's
II: Crush the Insects
held that honor, and not the aforementioned EPs: 2003's
Harbinger of Metal
, or 2004's
Return to the Rectory
. In any case,
Crush the Insects
is also, arguably, the Finnish doom ambassadors' least demanding full-length, thanks to an unusually generous rationing of shorter, more energetic offerings like
"The Devil Rides Out,"
"Cromwell,"
and especially its groove-driven opener,
"Doom Over the World."
In fact, the latter finds the trio members clinking their beer mugs in drunken celebration and really having way more fun than most doom bands would ever permit themselves; but then, not taking things too seriously (see also the amusing
"By This Axe I Rule!"
and
"Fucking Wizard"
) was another quality that set
's career apart from those of their peers, to the chagrin of the more stern doom purists out there. However, neither one of these distinctions (a few short songs, a couple of laughs) had a negative effect on the band's typically lofty songwriting standards; nor their bias toward bloated epics, which actually occupy the final two thirds of
, without going so far as approaching the half-hour monsters sometimes found on the band's other releases. That doesn't stop token tracks like the desperately dour
"Slave of Satan"
(itself an edited-down version of a previously released "single"), the ode to witchery
"Council of Ten,"
or the mystical tree-hugging of
"Eternal Forest"
from casually craaaaawling their way well beyond the ten-minute mark under the suffocating weight of
Peter Vicar
's pummeling riffs,
the Earl of Void
's thundering drums, and, flying above it all, the operatic wails of
Albert Witchfinder
. All of these traits are very much consistent with the classic
aesthetic, in other words, which should help minimize complaints about
' initial bursts of alacrity, while allowing novices to the band's discography to benefit from its more compact and welcoming dimensions. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia
With two EPs running in excess of 70 minutes already under their belts,
Reverend Bizarre
confused quite a few fans and critics as to what constituted an actual album, but at least in their account of things, 2005's
II: Crush the Insects
held that honor, and not the aforementioned EPs: 2003's
Harbinger of Metal
, or 2004's
Return to the Rectory
. In any case,
Crush the Insects
is also, arguably, the Finnish doom ambassadors' least demanding full-length, thanks to an unusually generous rationing of shorter, more energetic offerings like
"The Devil Rides Out,"
"Cromwell,"
and especially its groove-driven opener,
"Doom Over the World."
In fact, the latter finds the trio members clinking their beer mugs in drunken celebration and really having way more fun than most doom bands would ever permit themselves; but then, not taking things too seriously (see also the amusing
"By This Axe I Rule!"
and
"Fucking Wizard"
) was another quality that set
's career apart from those of their peers, to the chagrin of the more stern doom purists out there. However, neither one of these distinctions (a few short songs, a couple of laughs) had a negative effect on the band's typically lofty songwriting standards; nor their bias toward bloated epics, which actually occupy the final two thirds of
, without going so far as approaching the half-hour monsters sometimes found on the band's other releases. That doesn't stop token tracks like the desperately dour
"Slave of Satan"
(itself an edited-down version of a previously released "single"), the ode to witchery
"Council of Ten,"
or the mystical tree-hugging of
"Eternal Forest"
from casually craaaaawling their way well beyond the ten-minute mark under the suffocating weight of
Peter Vicar
's pummeling riffs,
the Earl of Void
's thundering drums, and, flying above it all, the operatic wails of
Albert Witchfinder
. All of these traits are very much consistent with the classic
aesthetic, in other words, which should help minimize complaints about
' initial bursts of alacrity, while allowing novices to the band's discography to benefit from its more compact and welcoming dimensions. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia

More About Barnes and Noble at Hamilton Place

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Find Barnes and Noble at Hamilton Place in Chattanooga, TN

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