It might all be down to their everyman persona, but the greatest trick Alter Bridge have ever pulled off is how easy they make all this look and sound, even though their timeless take on classic rock is often as complex, technically, as it gets. It takes a lot of skill and talent to make it seem so effortless. And it remains true on this new record - the blood, sweat and tears that undoubtedly went into it have vanished under the sheen of a collection of songs that sound like they’ve always been there.
Wisely, they haven’t messed with the Alter Bridge formula
on their eighth album. Going down the self-titled route is, in most cases, a
sign of confidence, that a band is unwaveringly sure that this is exactly
representative of who they are right at this moment in their career; there’s no
temptation to head down wild diversions or throw in weird experimentation just
for the sake of it. Alter Bridge is Alter Bridge at their most Alter Bridge.
They pile in all guns blazing. Myles Kennedy’s voice, of
course, soars, effortlessly tackling those
theatrical high notes and perfectly complemented by MarkTremonti’s less
histrionic register. Musically it’s all growing up proudly from their metal
roots. Towering riffs seem to come to them as easily as dreaming does to the rest
of us. Opener Silent Divide, chugging and
squealing, is an adrenaline- fuelled juggernaut that throws everything at you, with a howling Tremonti guitar
wig-out to see it on its way - it’s not for the faint hearted.
Tremonti is a wizard at his craft. But the sturdy,
steadfast rhythm section of bassist Brian Marshall and drummer Scott Phillips
is what anchors it all, with a base of pure rock that the movement of tectonic
plates couldn’t shift.
Trust In Me is a live favourite in-the-making, its sky-high chorus sung by Tremonti, the verse by
Kennedy, raging one minute, floating and dreamlike the next. Disregarded is a grunge-spattered descent into
darkness, with a subtle background note of Led Zeppelin in there to sweeten the
deal. And in among all the drama, a moment of reflection and quiet with the
acoustic-based Hang By A Thread, a proper,
emotion-drenched, end-of- the-road tear-jerker. They save the most ambitious
moment for last, with Slave To Master, a
sprawling, nine-minute full-metal gallop to the finish with a constellation of
furious, fiery fretwork to see us into the night.
Alter Bridge is the
sound of a band supremely confident in their own skin.
Emma
Johnston
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