Henry Metal - "Henry Metal V”
(out via Henry Metal Records | December 1st 2017)
"Henry
Metal V" is the fifth studio album from Henry Metal. The album takes a
highly stylized and original approach to the True Metal style and is an
entertaining and addictive ride from beginning to end.
In
true Henry fashion, technical chops and classic riffage meet unbridled
expression throughout the album and each song offers a glimpse into a
corner of the Metal genre's tried and true subject matter, from sex to
monsters to muscle cars.
The album is out everywhere by December 1st and will be released independently through Henry Metal Records.
Henry Metal Biography
Henry
Metal debuted in late March of 2017 with the release of 2 singles,
“Butthead Maven” and “Boss of Me,” both of which would appear on his
debut album “So It Hath Begun.” The nine song LP was the genesis of a
uniquely honest, straightforward and blatant style which subsequently
unfolded organically into 3 more full-length albums released rapid-fire
within a few months of each other. Sometimes humorous and sometimes
righteously indignant, “So It Hath Begun” covered the landscape of raw
rebellion, lust, sarcasm and humor with a middle finger displayed
proudly to all conventions pertaining to the business of making
commercial music.
The
momentum created with “So It Hath Begun” pushed seamlessly into “Wizard
Vs Demon,” Henry's second album. Songs such as “Succubus,” “Heavy
Metal Is Dead” and the title track “Wizard Vs Demon” developed the
somewhat more serious musical aspirations of Henry, while tracks such as
“Hackers, Leakers, Truth Seekers,” “Fukushima Ceviche” and “Possible
Side Effects” took shots at society at large. Humor also plays a
continuous part throughout the album, especially in “Samurai” and “Rock
Out.” Musically, Henry's classic baroque guitar shreds continued to
weave in and out of classic American blues-rock pentatonic riffs, all
the while sitting snugly in a deep, intricate pocket of solid and
perpetually moving metal.
Meanwhile,
the outright rejection of every entertainment business formula and
traditional gatekeeper had become an over-arching theme in the style and
marketing of Henry Metal. The music videos for “Wrist is Pissed,”
“Wizard Vs Demon,” “Terrible Driver,” “Thought Police” and “You Ain't
Seen Nothing Yet” are campy, unapologetic affairs with the same
simplicity and purity of intention, for better or worse, as the music
itself. As the campy imagery mingles with music that rages with
intensity it becomes a cautionary message about taking even serious
things too seriously. This approach has not been without its critics
and plenty have dismissed it as either a derivative rip-off (largely
because of the disguise) or garbage altogether (presumably due to the
somewhat comedic lyrical tone). Of course, Henry is not the first to
undergo the critical wrath of musical know-it-alls. To hear Henry tell
it, “if you're pissing people off, you know you're doing something
right.”
Henry's
third record, “The Maestro Abides,” took a decidedly more serious and
substantive turn as evident on such tracks as “Thought Police,”
“Bankster,” “The Maestro Still Abides” and “On With the Show.” Though
not quite your average 'good time rock,' the album is packed with good
times, from a strange rebel and sheriff interlude to a song about speed
walking and not putting enough ink into disposable pens and, hence,
wasting time and good plastic. The album, in some spots, is perhaps
Henry's most abrasive and opinionated to date, though all better for it.
“Metal
O'Clock” is Henry's fourth offering which is an extremely engaging,
musical and catchy affair from beginning to end. With big choruses,
memorable riffs and a stadium rock vibe it might be considered quite
commercial were it not for its subject matter which opens with a punk
rock middle finger, continues into a thrash metal fury and pays homage
to the Swedish Viking gods Odin and Freyja on the way to making fun of
government ineptitude and consumerism. To cap off his senior release,
Henry sarcastically glorifies drug abuse before taking us out with a
tune about elective cosmetic surgery. As usual, there is not a single
dull moment on the intense, virtuosic and precisely composed “Metal
O'Clock.”
Henry
gives a nod to the lineage of his inspiration with his cover release of
“Fire” by The Crazy World of Arthur Brown. 1968 England was when and
where the face paint, devil horns and phrygian scales were gearing up to
take over the rock world. Thank goodness these things are alive and
well today.
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