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Priestess: Prior to the Fire (2009)
Today's introduction almost overwhelmed the review itself, so bear with me ...
Wolfmother's unexpected and quite inexplicable success in the mid '00s caused numerous labels to rush out and sign their own hipster-endorsed hard rock bands -- e.g. The Sword, Witch, Burning Brides, Graveyard, and today's subject Priestess.
Mind you, most of these bands had no idea why Pitchfork Media and other webzines had decided to anoint or reject them for the "hipster metal" or the equally vague "millennial retro rock" tag, but, as usual, there was little they could do about it other shrug and play along.
Hailing from Montreal, Canada, Priestess was formed in 2002 by singer/guitarist Mikey Heppner after the demise of his punk rock band, The Dropouts, and also featured guitarist Dan Watchorn, bassist Mike Dyball, and drummer Vince Nudo.
Their first album, 2005's Hello Master, was initially released through Canadian independent Indica Records before major RCA swooped in and offered a worldwide deal, then reissued the LP with new artwork (reminiscent of Rainbow Rising!) the following June.
Abundant touring opportunities in the U.S. and U.K. followed, and Priestess gained valuable exposure opening for everyone from Mastodon, to Megadeth, to GWAR, to Black Label Society, to Dinosaur Jr., to Nashville Pussy, to Motörhead.
I myself saw the band live at least three times between '05 and '06, in Brooklyn, New York (at CMJ), and Austin (SXSW), playing with Witch, Early Man, and The Hellacopters, and, while they weren't as entertaining as Danko Jones or The Darkness, Priestess usually held their own.
However, aside from placing the song "Lay Down" on the popular Guitar Hero III video game, RCA didn't know what to do with the group, and their second album, Prior to the Fire, would spend the next few years in A&R Purgatory (*) before both sides agreed to part ways.
When it finally arrived, almost four years after the band's debut, Prior to the Fire delivered much the same caliber of modern hard rock and metal as its predecessor with a sound that fell right in between The Sword's intricate riffing and Wolfmother's catchier revival act.
Heppner's gritty higher registers suited infectious standouts like "Lady Killer," "The Firebird," and "Sideways Attack," while his and Watchorn's inventive riff constructions enhanced extended numbers like "The Gem," "It Baffles the Mind," and "We Ride Tonight."
Yes, Priestess totally missed the mark on the acoustic intro to "Communicating Via-Eyes," which sounds like bad Jethro Tull (if you're gonna go there, at least bring a flute, boys!), and Nudo's lead vocal turn on "Lunar" was underwhelming, at best.
But it's still impossible to excuse RCA's unrealistic expectations based on these results and their reasons for signing Priestess in the first place -- and I say this as an RCA employee who would have worked the band in '07 and '08, had they not been dropped.
Alas, like countless bands that faced this sort of corporate impasse, Priestess were never able to recover, and after struggling to complete a third LP, announced an open-ended hiatus in 2012 from which they have yet to (and from which they will probably never) return.
* Meaning that RCA kept pressuring the band to write more songs in search of a "hit" -- like anyone can pick a hit -- until the label/artist relationship was damaged beyond repair.
More Priestess: Hello Master.
Lowrider feat. Elephant Tree - Through The Rift
Best of Black Sabbath
by Various Artists
Earthless - Never Say Die
Caustic Casanova - Wicked World
Summoner - A National Acrobat
Black Electric - Sweet Leaf
Rwake - The Rwrit Ginsburg/Margera/Reeder/Rota - N.I.B.
Year of the Cobra - Planet Caravan
Hippie Death Cult - Fairies Wear Boots Leather Lung - Hole in the Sky Mooner - The Wizard
Howling Giant - Lord of this World
Elephant Tree - Paranoid Brume - Solitude
Saint Karloff - Sleeping Village
Elephant Tree - s/t
HRH: Doom vs. Stoner in Sheffield this weekend was absolutely fantastic!
I got to see Ohhms, Stoned Jesus, Mammoth Weed Wizard Bastard, Conan, Elephant Tree, Bong Cauldron and Crowbar. I saw Elder too but I was far too drunk to remember them.
Now I’m absolutely dying in bed from tonsillitis. Send help.
African Baobab Tree, Hatiyan Jhad, believed to have been planted by wandering sufis from Madagascar a few centuries ago.
Young Heart Attack: Mouthful of Love (2004)
It seems like only yesterday (well, maybe last week) that I saw Young Heart Attack play a SXSW showcase with great verve and gusto, then decided to seek out their now 20-year-old first album, the suggestively named Mouthful of Love.
But the year was, in fact, 2004 when I saw the quintet of Chris Hodge (vocals/guitar), Jennifer Stephens (vocals), Chris 'Frenchie' Smith (guitar), Steven T. Hall (bass), and Joey Shuffield (drums) playing their home-base of Austin, TX.
However, the group did have to "reach" across the Atlantic (or vice-versa) to find a champion in music journalist and Gay Dad founder Cliff Jones, who would go on to produce their first set of 7-inches and this full-length for XL Recordings.
Molded on classic '70s hard rock, with a nod to the MC5, whose "Over and Over" is covered here, Young Heart Attack distinguished themselves from the competition with the two-headed frontline of Stephens and Hodge trading microphone hysterics.
And I do mean "hysterics" (but in a good way), because both the gravelly Stephens and the strident Hodges tear through their bandmates' frantic three-chord barrage on the title track, "Tommy Shots," "Sick of Doing Time," and "In Luck" like a flame-tipped Q-tip through ear-drums.
But don't panic!
Young Heart Attack stop just short of instigating full-blown cardiac arrest on slightly-less-crazed rockers like "Starlite," "Misty Rowe," and "(Take Me Back) Mary Jane" -- one of numerous marijuana references here, in lieu of genuine stoner rock characteristics.
Well, there's also the GTO parked on the album's cover, but these references are why, as an avid supporter of the era's underground stoner rock scene, I was somewhat suspicious of hipster-endorsed hard rockers like Y.H.A., Burning Brides, The Sword, et al.
Call me a contrarian and a nitpicker (I am both!), but it always irked me that certain bands earned automatic indie rag coverage just because maybe they bathed a little more often, or sported better haircuts, than stoner rock's true ugly ducklings.
But this debate was rendered moot when, despite decent media attention and U.K. tours with The Darkness and Motörhead (*), Young Heart Attack broke up in '06; only reforming two years later long enough to record a second and final LP called Rock and Awe.
All this being said, this is a fun little record from a fun little live band.
* Incidentally, Lemmy Kilmister made a guest appearance on Y.H.A.'s cover of AC/DC's "Get It Hot," found on the B-side of their "Tommy Shots" single.
More ‘00s Hard Rock, Stoner Rock & Hipster Metal: Arctic’s Arctic, Bad Wizard’s Free and Easy, Bask’s American Hollow, Children’s Hard Times Hangin’ at the End of the World, Clutch’s Earth Rocker, Danava's Unonou, Danko Jones’ We Sweat Blood, The Datsuns’ Outta Sight/Outta Mind, Dead Meadow’s Dead Meadow, Elbrus’ Elbrus, Elephant Tree’s Elephant Tree, Fu Manchu’s King of the Road, The Glasspack’s Powderkeg, The Hellacopters’ Disappointment Blues, Mammatus’ The Coast Explodes, My Sleeping Karma’s My Sleeping Karma, Queens of the Stone Age’s Rated R, Snail’s Feral, Sasquatch’s II, Sweatmaster's Sharp Cut, The Sword’s Age of Winters, True Widow’s I.N.O., Thulsa Doom’s The Seats are Soft but the Helmet is Way Too Tight, Turbonegro’s Apocalypse Dudes, Witch’s Witch, Witchcraft’s Witchcraft, Zen Guerrilla’s Positronic Raygun.