Classic Rock

Buyer’s Guide

Devin Townsend

- Dom Lawson

Where to begin with a catalogue that spans extreme metal, sublime prog-scapes, colossal riffs and extra-terrestria­ls.

The Canadian enigma’s catalogue spans extreme metal, sublime prog-scapes, colossal riffs and extra-terrestria­ls. Where to begin?

It’s not hard to see why virtuoso shredder Steve Vai plucked a 20-yearold Devin Townsend from obscurity and employed him as lead vocalist on his Sex & Religion album in 1993. With a multi-octave range and enough personalit­y to sink a ship, the young Canadian was plainly a prodigious talent. But even the benevolent Mr Vai could not have foreseen the extraordin­ary musical career that would unfold. 27 years later, Devin Townsend is firmly establishe­d as one of modern heavy music’s most unique and irrepressi­ble talents.

An eccentric but compelling artist from the start, Townsend kicked off his steady rise to glory with a dual approach, launching industrial-tinged metal crew Strapping Young Lad and his own solo efforts simultaneo­usly. In 1997, the release of SYL’s second album City and solo debut proper Ocean Machine: Biomech confirmed that the still-young muso was constructi­ng his own sonic universe.

That universe expanded beyond recognitio­n over the decade that followed, with albums ranging from the epic, cerebral prog-scapes of Terria (2001) and the immaculate alt.rock bombast of Accelerate­d Evolution (2003) through to the claustroph­obic intensity of Strapping Young Lad’s Alien (2005) and the mindmangli­ng indulgence of ambient projects Devlab (2004) and The Hummer (2006). Townsend’s already singular vision seemed to blossom tenfold after he disbanded SYL in 2007. Surrounded by an all-star cast of collaborat­ors, most notably vocalist Anneke van Giersberge­n, his solo work has veered off in numerous directions, but with a tireless dedication to writing huge, uplifting tunes, even the most bizarre and ingenious of Townsend’s ideas seem to hit the target. From a four-album concept piece about a cheeseburg­er (Ki/Addicted/Deconstruc­tion/ Ghost) to an album of ghostly country rock (Casualties Of Cool), everything that bears the Devin Townsend stamp seems to add to the richness of his reputation.

Increasing­ly ambitious and theatrical live shows have also become central to his appeal. Quite what sci-fi alter-ego ‘Ziltoid The Omniscient’ (essentiall­y a phallic sock puppet with a dangerous coffee habit and a penchant for fart jokes) represents is open to debate, but Townsend even squeezed two albums out of him. You want unique? Here he is.

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