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The worst track on the record is the jammiest (“Halcyon”), but even songs with stronger material squander their opportunities.
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Rather than leaning directly into out-and-out jam, they mesh their progressive layering and expert riffcraft with that expansive ethos, and the writing feels stuck in the middle, soft-pedaled and meandering. The jam influence, while improved from Reflections‘ “Sonntag,” is at best immaterial and at worst a hindrance, as on “Embers.” Elder don’t pitch a tent in the clearing they cut on The Gold & Silver Sessions EP, but they certainly have a nice little campfire going. And yet, that song, the only one with a central riff worthy of comparison to its forebears, still jams off into outer space on the back half of the record, my attention span with it. It grips in a way that Omens as a whole doesn’t. It spits that perfect blend of rollicking stoner rock spirit and psychedelic development, but more importantly, it oozes immediacy. “Embers” starts out with as solid an opening as Elder have ever played-and as strong a one as Omens can provide. And that’s the roughest part: the abundance of should-be quality. Nick DiSalvo’s cedar voice entwining with his riffs and those of new axeman Michael Risberg, the wedding-cake layers, the attention to detail, the lush production, the marvelous instrumentality, the whole damn package is here. By the end of the record’s introductory eleven minutes, there’s one riff worth writing home about, and another that might remind you to pick up some stamps at the store.įor all the precise layers and lush production of “In Procession,” it can’t hold your attention half as long as required for the spin’s shortest song (at a thrifty ten minutes) to work. The journey is no less ambitious than Reflections‘ but lacks fulfillment in a way that seems difficult to imagine given the technique of the artists at work here. The songs are no shorter than Lore‘s but feel so much longer.
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The riffs crunch no less than Dead Roots Stirring‘s but bite with far fewer teeth. But alas, it’s not as if the Americans (recently transplanted to Germany) shifted their sound in some massive way comparing elements of Omens to past efforts is remarkably apples to apples. Were there a hipster fire escape available, this wvrm might set off a smoke detector while mumbling something about sell outs and early material. The toke is the same, but it hits differently. Where once I was option a, now I am b-side. “Omens” is Elder on its face and in its core: divisive long-form stoner prog. The Sword of Jamacles that began its arc early in Elder‘s career and swings its lowest and nearly beheads Omens, a record that may just make Elder everything the haters claimed they were. Running through the halls of their ethereal proghalla didn’t just make clear that, next to the sum of Elder‘s previous achievements, Omens isn’t great it cemented that Omens isn’t good. It didn’t become apparent how little I like Omens until I revisited Elder‘s back catalog.