Sunday, 12 November 2017

52 Albums That Shaped My Life - #23

Shrinebuilder – Self-titled
(Neurot Recordings, 2009)
Buy the album here

Shrinebuilder are the perfect supergroup.  The band contains members of some of the most respected bands in stoner and doom.  Wino of Saint Vitus and The Obsessed, Dale Crover of Melvins, Al Cisneros of Sleep and Om, and Scott Kelly of Neurosis combine to create a record of such unity and breadth it would take any other band an entire career to come close.  While the members share common musical ground, there is a rich diversity of vision, tone, and experience that produces a new experience on each subsequent listen of this record.  In Wino and Kelly the band boasts two of the most distinct voices in contemporary heavy music.  Crover’s legendary drum sound has helped lay a doom blueprint, and Al Cisneros can lay claim to recording stoner rock’s defining albums with Sleep and having the most gloriously fuzzed out bass sound around. Shrinebuilder themselves have only produced one album to date, but perhaps with this near perfect record their work is done.

It is totemic music that inspires images of pagan celebration and worship, draws on natural and celestial symbols, and drives it all home with the full force of false gods.  In “Solar Benediction” and “Pyramid of the Moon” we are taken on a voyage through day and night as if watching the skies from the start of human civilisation.  Shrinebuilder ask us to imagine what these most omnipresent of celestial bodies would have meant to people at the earliest stage of development of our societies; the fear, awe, and war that would have ensued in our attempts to make sense of that which is out of reach.  “Solar Benediction” burns with the power of the sun.  The track channels the rage of a burning desert in to a beautiful contemplation of the birth of civilisation, religion, and war.  No time is wasted with Wino’s distinct wail giving way to the heavy riff and thick growl of Scott Kelly.  Al Cisneros’ beautiful high-pitched, fuzzed-out bass sound and Crover’s full, earthy drum tones keep the track grounded and natural feeling, but the overall sensation is one of endless power.  It finds its counterpoint in “Pyramid of the Moon” with its more Sleep-esque riff and almost spoken vocal bringing the temperature down.  Kelly’s sonorous tone will be familiar to fans of his solo acoustic work, but it finds a more fitting home here with the beautiful doom guitar sounds that he and Wino exchange throughout.  The paganist atmosphere escalates through the mid-section of the song with droned chanting, winding and ethereal solos, and heartbeat-like bass drum sounds that produce the effect of a pounding tribal mass. 

The light and dark of Shrinebuilder are equally compelling, but in “Blind for All to See” we are trapped in the contemplative slow-burn of a half-light dusk, reacting to the vibrations and squeals of experimental guitars but held in captive sway by its alluring bass sound.  Cisneros has the unmatched ability to create soothing, sensual, addictive basslines that once heard you hope will never end.  The unpredictable guitars, restrained drums, and deep vocals just glide over or bounce off this bassline as if it is the monolith towering over awe-inspired worshippers.  “The Architect” is much more immediate with an opening riff which seems to have inspired later era Mastodon.  Wino’s voice and incredible timing are on full display, patiently finding the perfect moment to accentuate the riff with an ascending wail or gentle word, and never attempting to dominate the song.  At under six minutes, “The Architect” is the most direct and deliberately catchy of the songs on Shrinebuilder but still carries the atmosphere of pagan worship that drives this album.  The bass solo at the end carries in to final track “Science of Anger” and its overlapping, squeezed guitar sounds and gentle vocals.  The slow riffing takes centre stage this time with Wino’s beautiful voice through the verses setting up the explosion of Scott Kelly’s huge chorus riff and verse.  Wino’s delivery of the line “Humbly I stand / Awestruck and numb” is an album highlight for me and cements “Science of Anger” as the most memorable track.  Inspired by Sleep’s stoner riffing, infused with Saint Vitus’ more delicate tones, and driven by Neurosis-like intensity this final song has all the elements that make this record so special. 


A darkly gentle exploration of the birth of civilisation and humanity’s attempts to understand where it belongs among it all, this record is testament to the strengths of each musician here.  It opens itself in waves, inviting further enquiries, always with something more to offer, another stone to overturn.  And while it may pay homage to innumerable influences, Shrinebuilder has become a benchmark for modern stoner and doom that may even surpass the best efforts of each member’s full-time band. 


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