San
Jose’s Forgotten Gods are perhaps one of the Bay Area heavy music
scene’s best kept secrets. I first discovered Forgotten Gods while
attending a show earlier
this year in San Jose with Ripple Music standouts Blackwülf and the
mighty Mos Generator, and I was impressed with Forgotten Gods’ live set,
which speaks volumes as those are no easy acts to follow. In keeping
with the tradition of classic power trios the
likes of Cream, Rush, and King’s X, Forgotten Gods have a sound that
makes people think “that sounds like more than three guys…” Truth be
told, though their sound falls more in the wondrous realm somewhere
between Doom Metal and Stoner Rock there is a bit
of good old-fashioned Prog Rock and a pinch of Psych Rock underlying
throughout
Twin Sisters, their 2015 sophomore follow-up to the equally doomy-stonery-proggy-psychy (psyche? Ha!) full-length 2013 debut disc
Fall of the Dagger. Recently I stated in another forum
“Forgotten Gods make the kind of music I would want to make myself…great
riffs, strong songwriting with sci-fi lyrics…” what’s not to like?
The
album begins with title track “Twin Sisters”, an up-tempo wah-filled
kick-starter full of moments of Sabbathy goodness with a NWOBHM gallop
running throughout. The doomier “Bad Magick”
is up next, a mid-tempo chugger followed by “Hole In The Moon” a
straightforward up-tempo hard-rocker, with a half-time breakdown at the
end that takes it to a heavier, doomier level. “Coyote” is a groovier
stoner-rock song switching between backbeat verses
and straight time choruses with riffs that remind me of Corrosion of
Conformity and Rage Against the Machine which are some of my favorite
riffs on the album. The standout ten-minute doom epic “Kaleidoscope
Woman” has a host of Sabbathy riffs punctuated with
one of the best middle section breakdowns my ears have heard in a long
time, and also features an eerie sounding spoken narrative at the
beginning which to me evokes similarities with the beginning of Rush’s
“The Necromancer” from 1975’s underrated
Caress of Steel (yeah, they pretty much had me right
there…). “Sleeping Panther” is another up-tempo rocker with more
straight-ahead stoner-rock vibe, with great riffs and furious drumming,
and album closer “Return My Bones” is a doomy-psych
masterpiece with tempo changes between slower verses and faster
choruses, again highlighted by a fantastic middle section breakdown
leading into an ending that builds and builds to a mid-tempo finale with
a guitar melody dripping with vibrato and Iommi-esque
licks.
Guitarist/vocalist
Dave Stoltenberg delivers a steady stream of riffs throughout,
punctuated with riffs and solos layered with effects that evoke the
aforementioned prog/psych vibe one moment,
crunchy and punishing the next, with a melodic vocal approach somewhat
reminiscent at times of J.D. Cronise of The Sword. Bassist Pete Rice’s
bass lines and drummer Kevin Swartz’s focused and powerful drumming
provide a foundation that complements Stoltenberg’s
guitar riffs perfectly, while the production by Tim Green is
straightforward and even a bit airy and gives the music room to breathe.
If I had to pick one thing that stands out to me on
Twin Sisters it would have to be the middle and end of
song breakdowns. Forgotten Gods have a knack for crafting deliciously
groovy, heavy, riffy changes of tempo, in all seriousness, every song
here seems to have a section that gets my hands
air-guitaring and my head bobbing with a giant grin on my face.
-The Riffcaster