Coming at you with more ferocity than an army of orcs freshly borne from the muddy, stink-filled pits of Modor, Ogre is one mean, nasty beast, breathing the fire of some of the nation's best underground Sabbath-inspired doom metal and is just screaming to be heard.
Now if that sentence seems like a mouthful, let's break it down one step at a time and shine the microscope on this freaking epic undertaking of riff-mongering metal. Ogre, a three piece from Maine, had previously burst onto the scene spewing their twisted brand of fantasy rich, futuristic sci-fi doom metal with such albums as Dawn of the Proto-man, Unleashed from the Northwest, and Seven Hells. Each album found them spawning their own mind-bending mythology of dogmen, the Colossus and the Proto-man. Personally, we think the Ripple Effect should be in there somewhere, but we'll let the boys slide on that one.
Now, don't let any of this sci-fi talk scare you. The story, as timely and provocative as it is, involving oil, war, death, environmental decay and too many other cool sci-fi-isms to mention without signing the band up for a weekly TV show, is only part of the deal. The rest is the music, and that, my friends, is where Ogre really becomes a beast. Ross Markonish, while rarely a shredder proves to a be Merlin at the riff, throwing out shades of Sabbath or Pentagram at a whim, then dropping it down into a bluesy ode or a psychedelic, effect-washed freakout without ever breaking a sweat. Will Broadbent pounds the drums with the ferocity of a battletroll crushing heads with a spiked mace, and Ed Cunningham may be one of the underground's most unheralded vocalists. While some may find a shade of Ozzy in his voice (easy to do in context of the Sabbath-rich tone of the album) in reality he sounds more like Bon Scott after the thorazine has worn off. A dynamite, expressive voice with enough range, angst and shrill to bring Ogre's haunting tale to life and shove that passion right down your gullet.
"Queen of Gasoline," drops the bottom out, plunging down into a stuttering, near catatonic wreckage of metal. This is Ogre's "War Pigs," and all the better for the comparison, a fierce, spit in your face blitzkrieg of environmental warfare. Forget Ozzy, just listen to Cunningham lose his frontal lobe singing this baby, Broadbent's drums clearing the way of all riff raff as he bashes away like a blacksmith at this anvil. As the psych-doom gets heavier, the Ogre-beast revisits the stunning riff of "End Days," before losing itself into the sci-fi netherlands. Upon touching back to terra firma, the boys drop down into a near-beautiful, Colour Haze moment of gentle psychedelic riffing demonstrating a remarkable moment of subtlety for this rampaging machine. But don't worry, the boys haven't gone soft. As "Battle of Doom Capital," explodes in moments of fury punctuating the quiet.
From that moment on, the album loses itself in a shocking haze of blazing guitars, charging riffs, sci-fi ruminations, Pentagram heaviness and a handful of illegal substances. Finally, as the disc comes to a close, sweat beading your brow from the pummeling work-out you've just witnessed, the boys retreat to the delicacy of the opening "Requiem," acoustics, perhaps showing that beauty can return to a place once so hostile.
In the end, Ogre has become a beast. And what a gorgeous beast it is.
--Racer
Buy here: Plague Of The Planet
www.myspace.com/ogre