eMusic Review 0
The seventh studio album by this ever-evolving British doom quartet (only guitarist/vocalist Jus Oborn remains from the original trio lineup) is their heaviest to date, easily the equal of 2000's Dopethrone — widely regarded as their masterpiece. New drummer Shaun Rutter is the most active skinsman they've ever had, throwing in energy-boosting fills and building a thick groove. Rhythm guitarist Liz Buckingham (who's also Mrs. Oborn) and bassist Tas Danazoglou offer woozy, swaying riffs that lumber relentlessly forward, never faltering. Oborn himself has evolved from a stoned howler into a real, evocative blues singer, and his guitar riffs and Tony Iommi-inspired solos spiral lysergically and endlessly, completely justifying the eight- to ten-minute track times.
Despite their lyrical roots in early '70s occultism and their insistence on analog recording equipment, there's nothing truly retro about Electric Wizard's music; nobody sounded like this in the '70s, not even Sabbath. It's crushingly heavy stuff, but with an organic, hypnotic, compelling flow. The deep-fried, album-closing instrumental "Crypt of Drugula" could probably be clipped, but that one quibble aside, Black Masses is a monster — one that grows in stature with each play.