Crowbar stalled out after the 2001 LP
Sonic Excess in Its Purest Form. Leader
Kirk Windstein was dealing with
Down, membership was in flux, and
Crowbar's infamous label woes were a constant headache. But the long-running New Orleans sludge metal outfit wasn't going to go out like that, and
Windstein started the resuscitation process in summer 2003. He tapped original drummer
Craig Nunemacher, and
Pantera vet
Rex Brown offered to handle bass and production.
Down II producer
Warren Riker also signed on. The result is
Lifesblood for the Downtrodden, a typically pummeling tribute to the Art of the Riff, but an album that also finds new methods of mayhem.
Windstein's vocals never waver from a raging and vengeful wronged-soul growl. But his guitar work searches out tense melodies amidst the animalistic main riffs, and
Nunemacher and
Brown are relentlessly rhythmic without sacrificing dynamics. "Slave No More"'s slight shifts of time signature are incredible, increasing the song's power while highlighting its pained chorus. "Coming Down" suggests
the Deftones, "Fall Back to Zero" shuttles between a swirling limbo of sorrow and an explosively percussive chorus, and "Dead Sun" alters the tempos yet again behind one of the album's most ferocious
Windstein riffs. (The guitar line, roughly tabbed: "Da-na-da-na-DA-naah-[space]-da-deh-deh-deh-deh....")
Lifesblood isn't an album to change minds about
Crowbar. It spits out chunks of sludgy metal with plain and simple intent, just like all the band's records have. It gives
Windstein the room and the reason to scream oaths like "I got a call to rule the underworld -- that passion burns in me" and "Dirt underneath me but light up above/Destroy what's in your way and never lose love for yourself." It's
Crowbar's return to recording, and fans will love it. ~ Johnny Loftus