This pairing of
Justin K. Broadrick's
Jesu releases offers an excellent way to look at the evolution of a project.
Broadrick was -- arguably anyway -- the man who brought shoegaze music into doomy, sludgy, turtle-paced metal via the first two 20-minute cuts found here, the long out of print Heart Ache EP. The latter of these tracks begins with a solo acoustic piano, but becomes something wholly other midway through. these tracks offer both malevolence and vulnerability. The four new tracks that make up the
Dethroned EP were begun in 2004 but finished in 2010. They offer a heavier, slightly faster metallic crunch that draws on not only shoegaze, but post-punk as well. The best of these cuts, "Annul," pumps out a steady, two-chord power riff that touches on
Killing Joke's earliest material. "Aureated Skin" contains flowing melody both in
Broadrick's voice and open-tuned chords and plodding, drums that underscore the sheer melancholy that has become
Jesu's trademark. The post-metal "I Can Only Disappoint You," uses dissonance and a much more present vocal mix (
Broadrick sounds strangely similar to
Robert Wyatt here), backwards tape manipulation, undistorted single-string guitar and bass runs, as well as beautifully tempered atmospheric keyboards that suggest melody even when it's not present. What the
Dethroned half of this nearly 70-minute set reveals is that
Jesu is still breaking new ground. Contrasted with Heart Ache, this new double EP is an excellent introductory portrait of the project, past and present. ~ Thom Jurek