In The Future

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (895 ratings)
In The Future album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 57:14

eMusic Review 0

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Dan Epstein

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Canadian quintet unleashes their inner Iron Man.
Label: Jagjaguwar / SC Distribution

Despite the plethora of critical plaudits thrown their way, there was something “off” about both Black Mountain's self-titled 2005 debut and the following year's Drugonaut EP. It was as if the Vancouver quintet had amassed all the tools and the concepts necessary to create a 21st Century update of 1970s-style prog/psych, but couldn't quite figure out how to put the pieces together. Not this time, however. To invoke the bell-bottomed parlance of the Nixon era, In the Future is a stone mutha, a fully formed, thoroughly mind-bending opus that sounds like it flew in on the wings of those silver spaceships Neil Young used to dream about.

Black Sabbath and early Pink Floyd are some of the more prominent sonic touchstones in the mix (the devastating riffs of “Stormy High” and “Tyrants” would fit right in on Sabbath Vol. 4), but there are also traces of the aforementioned Mr. Young in the prickly “Angels” and the cosmic campfire sing-along “Stay Free.” Ziggy-era Bowie briefly pops in on “Wild Wind,” which sounds too short by itself, but makes the perfect lead-in for the dizzying sixteen-minute epic “Bright Lights.” By the time the chilling “Night Walks” brings the album to… read more »

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The Gods of Classic Rock Approve

lord kinbote

Black Mountain is a band that has studied well at the feet of the Masters of Classic Rockdom. Their record collections must be filled with the likes of Jimi Hendrix, Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath, as well as some of the more obscure bands like Uriah Heep and Hawkwind. For this, I praise them. While their riffs may not stay with you the way that the Gods' do, they still rock out better than their contemporaries, and lyrically they operate in the same universe. If you still yearn for the Gods and await the day of their return, this album can make the pain of your wait a little less.

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Still listen to this...

SpykeDaddy

This is one of those rare albums that you come back to month after month. A solid release. Listen to "Wucan" in full and be hooked forever. Stoner rock jams at the best. All vibe.

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Underappreciated greatness

Nosirrah

This is a great album. Kind of like the Melvins and early 90s Monster Magnet mushed together with a little southern spice thrown in. Slow paced, psychedelic southern rock...

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Interesting, but...

Joth

the album fails to pull you in with exciting riffs and other staples of a good rock album

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Cool.

fidelisdeo

This was my first exposure to Black Mountain. I was highly interested at first, but my excitement wore off a bit after multiple listens. All the same, this is a solid album with a cool psych-rock feel that is difficult to find. Gotta agree with some who say that Bright Light is annoying... otherwise, a rather solid outing.

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Rather dull

drewbie1

Had high hopes which were quickly crushed. The vocals are uninspired, and the riffage rather tame.

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overrated

Artanker

and I'm not sure why. downloaded while I was driving around Ireland, so I had time to focus on it and a great visual backdrop. It was just so so though. Not offensive, just a bit dull

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Promising

downingcr

I like this album. They kind of remind me of early Pink Floyd. Parts of the album annoy me (the repetitive vocals on Bright Lights, although the rest of the song is outstanding), but for the most part, this is on-point music.

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A Modern Classic

Redro

This record is packed with thrills. The off kilter stomp of Stormy High, The heady, heavy, sleazy groove of Wucan, or the sunset, bonfire-on-the-beach-at-sunset balladry of Stay Free. "In The Future" will be regarded in the future as a classic. And will be thrashed by those that love her.

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Great hunk of rawk

mikemos

I like their self titled album but In the Future really brings it home. I don't see this as sludge rock really, just a modern heavy sound with killer riffs. The songs are well crafted and very original. The "artless" comment" cracks me up. If people don't like certain genres why don't they stick with what they know? Angles is a classic.

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During the nearly three years between Black Mountain’s self-titled debut album and its sophomore full-length In the Future, there had been extensive touring, a first attempt at recording which proved to be a false start of sorts (though some of those songs ended up here), and a kind of development that would seem radical if these Vancouverites weren’t so quirky to begin with. Certainly, the roots of this sound are evident on the debut album. It’s loaded with trippy neo-psych folk and rock tropes. But these are counterweighted with a drenched-in-prog-and-Sabbath bombast that makes the title seem ironic. If not laugh out loud funny. That’s right: prog rock and Black Sabbath-like riffery and knotty, multi-part structures worthy of Greenslade are all entwined with pixie-ish protocol, acid-laced folk (think Melanie meets Sandy Denny meets Grace Slick’s early period duets with Marty Balin and Paul Kantner on the Jefferson Airplane’s Surrealistic Pillow and Volunteers). The weird thing is, despite its obvious nods to rock collections, including not only Sabbath’s Master of Reality but Jethro Tull’s Thick as a Brick, Hawkwind’s Warrior on the Edge of Time, Peter Hammill’s entire Charisma period, Eloy’s first three albums, Rush’s 2112 (where some of these rather drenched-in-warped-myth lyrics were derived from; but then they’re Canadians too), and Led Zep’s Physical Graffiti, with a touch of the optimism of Thunderclap Newman and Graham Nash — all is tempered by Neil Young’s sleepy delivery — sometimes in the same song! The sheer heaviness of tracks like “Stormy High,” that wails out of the gate with guitars in full pummel riffage, fuzzed out bassline, and floor tom, bass drum, hi hat fury are stretched out by layers of Mellotrons! Then, Stephen McBean and Amber Webber begin wailing wordlessly à la “Immigrant Song,” before McBean takes the lead vocal and you’re ready for your space rock pith helmet! Where’s Michael Moorcock when you need him? He’s about all that’s missing. It gets more insistent before it lets up with the starting-in-fifth-gear “Tyrants,” that winds and wends its way through a multi-dimensional journey densely packed with sonic wonkery, key and time changes, and the feeling of a journey through time and space for over eight minutes. The sheer sonic throb is balanced by long, droning Mellotron and analogue synth drones, tribal, chant-like drumming, and the pleading, world-weary, vulnerable voice of McBean. It’s quite a thing, but it’s only a precursor to the truly epic “Bright Lights” near the end of the set that rages on for nearly 17 minutes. Fuzzy electrics, shimmering acoustics, and trance-like keyboards flit in and out between the alternating vocals of McBean and Webber. The music picks up intensity, shifts direction numerous times, and careens across the rock and folkscapes of rock’s history from the late ’60s through the ’70s with great focus, wit, and ambition. There are other things like this here, too, with the utterly beautiful and tender lysergic folk explorations in “Stay Free,” where unplugged six-strings, tambourine, McBean’s falsetto, and Webber’s harmony are seamless, as of one voice. The lyrics are direct, but the sheer sparseness of the mix (organs hover in the backdrop) stands in such sharp contrast to “Wucan” and “Tyrant” that it’s like a wake-up call from the ether. (Movie music directors, take heed: this is the one you want for those long reflective moments where the two main characters have parted to rethink their positions.) It picks up, but never too much; the bridge is wonderfully constructed with just enough ornamentation to take it up a notch texturally and dynamically. “Wild Wind,” clocking in under two minutes could be a lost Kevin Ayers’ outtake. It’s only a shame it’s so brief. “Evil Ways” — no relation to the Santana number — is all metallic stoner rock with rumbling, quaking tom toms, piercing guitars, and huge organs challenging one another to overcome the vocals. As atrocious as this all sounds, perhaps, it’s actually quite wonderful and it works without faltering. For what it is, is a stunning extension of the root sound Black Mountain arrived with. Part of the credit has to go to John Congleton for his amazing mix. It’s packed with stuff, but there’s enough space here, and wonderfully warm atmospheres, to bring the listener right into the deeper sonic dimensions that Black Mountain is trying to create. That it’s done without artificial sounding punch up or tons of digital effects makes it come together as a whole. There is no sophomore slump here. – Thom Jurek

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