Indiana's
the Gates of Slumber is the greatest American biker doom band not fronted by Scott "Wino" Weinrich. Guitarist/vocalist
Karl Simon is very much in the Wino neighborhood, vocally, offering a hoarse shout with a surprising upper range, but as a guitarist he's much more obviously descended from
Tony Iommi; a lot of the riffs on this (and every
Gates album) could have come off
Sabbath Bloody Sabbath and/or
Sabotage. That's not a bad thing, of course; classicism and craft have long been prized in metal. Besides, the band sounds astonishing on this release. Producer
Sanford Parker has given them a full, analog sound that pours from the speakers and fills the room with warm waves of distorted guitar, thundering drums that sound like tympani, and a rumbling bass sound like the world's largest Harley idling right behind you. There are a few surprises here. "The Mist in the Mourning" is an acoustic guitar-and-vocal piece with a female singer dueting and harmonizing with
Simon, and the nearly 11-minute "Descent into Madness" features a psychedelic, almost
Pink Floyd-esque guitar and keyboard interlude. But for the most part, the
Gates M.O. remains what it's been all along: a huge churning roar, somewhere between classic
Sabbath and contemporaneous work by
High on Fire and similar acts. If you like your metal big, heavy, and focused on themes of war, death, and glory, without the epic cheesiness of
Manowar, then you will love this album -- the
Gates have always been great, and this is their best album to date. ~ Phil Freeman