With Josh Homme's guitar tuned down two whole steps to C, and plugged into a bass amp for maximum distortion, stoner metal pioneers Kyuss achieve a major milestone in heavy music with their second album, 1992's Blues for the Red Sun. Producer Chris Goss
masterfully captures the band's unique heavy/light formula, which
becomes apparent as soon as the gentle but sinister intro melody gives
way to the chugging main riff in the opener, "Thumb." This segues
immediately into the galloping "Green Machine," which pummels forward
inexorably and even features that rarest rock & roll moment: a bass
solo. "Thong Song" alternates rumbling guitar explosions with almost
complete silence, and "Mondo Generator" plays like an extended acid
trip. The slow build of the epic "Freedom Run" and the driving "Allen's
Wrench" are also highlights, and though the album is heavy on
instrumentals, these actually provide a seamless transition from song to
song.
aCá
Saturday, September 06, 2014
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