At times sounding like The Cure, other times like old Midnight Oil, and other times like something you can’t quite describe, Old Moon‘s new album, Altars, is a dark, gothic rocker full of all the haunting guitars, slithering bass, creepy synths, and crashing drums you’d want from an album such as this.
Multi-instrumentalist and vocalist Tom Weir comes out big in the opener, “Ephemera,” hitting us with sludgy bass and vocals echoing off the back of either his studio or perhaps a mausoleum. The guitars on “Chains of Sleep” instantly throw you into a world of dark nightclubs in crumbling old factory towns, and Weir’s vocals pay homage to Peter Murphy through it (and a lot of the album, to be sure).
“Past Lives” covers a required topic on any post-punk/ goth record – death, and “Anhedonia” starts with stadium rock drumming and then pulls you into a small performance space in the stadium’s basement. The switch from the big build-up to subdued tones is effective, and something that Weir pulls off well throughout the record. The hollow-sounding “Untouched” would fit in a horror film, post-apocalyptic action thriller, or a dystopian western.
“Drowse Down” has a slow, psychedelic feel to it that makes you feel like you’re walking in a fog after you’ve had a deep tissue massage. The closing track, “Laid to Waste,” isn’t as gloomy as the title would suggest. The guitars are a bit brighter, and the cymbals clash louder, to create a track for vampire hunters at dawn.
Altars is the first goth record I’ve heard in a long time that doesn’t sound like it’s trying too hard to be edgy or nihilistic. It’s a solid effort and worth a spin.
Keep your mind open.
[Move on over to the subscription box while you’re here.]
[Thanks to Dave at US / THEM Group.]