SuperVolcano
Feb 17, 2010 at 6:28 PM By: Django Gold
Rating: 7/11
SuperVolcano is a prog-metal band, and though it would be unfair to label them “technical” in nature, it is each musician’s prowess on his instrument that immediately jumps out through the speakers. Drawing on the cerebral moods of modern-day progressive acts like Dream Theater and Porcupine Tree, SuperVolcano’s songs are in fact highly complex, but they are also grounded in a driving rhythmic sensibility that keeps them from straying too far into the excesses of the genre. These stabilizing rhythms come largely from drummer Jesse Weiss, with guitarist Michael John Thomas III and six-string bassist Matt Powell dancing over the top with intervallic gymnastics and a distorted crunch. Singer/madman David A.K. is a versatile vocalist, able to transition between metal shrieks and his more restrained, yet equally forceful, singing voice.

It’s a delicate balance between the four musicians, probably best realized in the decidedly un-jazzy tune “Jazz,” which takes off smoothly from ethereal menace into a stunted funk vibe. Less successful is “Wine/Aft. Error,” which suffers from a series of “complexity for its own sake” moments, in which structure is abandoned for acrobatics that don’t really pay off. But, when they hold their course (especially in a live format), SuperVolcano can blow its top with the best of them and are certainly worth a listen.




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