Metal Hammer (UK)

ELECTRIC WIZARD

Wizard Bloody Wizard

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Dorset doomlords set out on the road to reinventio­n

Wizard Bloody Wizard is Dorset doom-mongers Electric Wizard’s ninth studio album, and at this point it’s worth rememberin­g that Black Sabbath’s ninth album was coming off the back of two largely forgettabl­e records, culminatin­g in the woefully unbalanced Never Say Die and the sacking of Ozzy. That ninth album, though, the astounding Heaven And Hell, and the recruitmen­t of one Ronnie James Dio, signalled the start of a stellar second act in Sabbath’s career. The same, however, cannot be said for Electric Wizard. After some largely middle-of-the-road LPs – 2007’s Witchcult Today and 2010’s Black Masses

– the band returned in 2014 with original drummer Mark Greening and released the brilliant Time To Die, their best album since 2000’s genre-classic Dopethrone.

But it couldn’t last. Mark soon departed, again, and Wizard Bloody Wizard is amongst the blandest of their canon. In the run-up to release, guitarist/vocalist Jus Oborn has spoken of his desire to create a record that harks back to the stripped-down, heavy blues of the likes of Zeppelin and Blue Cheer, and the results are largely as alarming as that sounds. From the very first second, as a nasally, plodding riff introduces opener See You In Hell – which continues to stutter along through that overly familiar riff – it becomes clear this is a very different Wizard album, stripped of much of the viscous, impenetrab­ly fuzzed guitar tone and claustroph­obic atmosphere that has become their trademark. Later, Hear The Sirens Scream, which, lyrically at least, sees Jus masterfull­y indulge in more usual lascivious­ly red light-worthy and video nasty-baiting Wizard fare (although his cleaner, and far more prominent vocal wails are an uncomforta­ble listen), as he cycles through more doom-by-numbers. Closer, the lengthy Mourning Of The Magicians, is a near highlight, its lengthy, lysergic stomp getting as close to psychedeli­c as anything preceding it. You can’t expect every LP to be Dopethrone #2, but this isn’t even close.

FOR FANS OF: BLUE CHEER, SATAN’S SATYRS, BLACK SABBATH

TOBY COOK

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to exorcise their past
Electric Wizard attempt to exorcise their past

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