PILE OF PRIESTS – Pile of Priests
- by ER
- Posted on 09-06-2020
For the recording of the eponymous, Evan Salvador (guitars, vocals), bassist Patrick Leyn (who sounds like Steven Di Giorgio of Sadus, Death and Testament fame) and Evan Knight (drums) hired guest session pianist Cody James Tyler (opening intro) and a graduate of Berklee College of Music in Music Composition and a vocal coach, harsh/clean vocalist Adrienne Elizabeth Catli Cowan (Conjunction Of Souls, The Restitution). On top of that, the lyrical story of an exiled prince seeking revenge on his deranged father for burning his rebel sister on a public stake is riveting. And on top of that they enjoy the promotion by the renowned Jon Asher and Asher Media Relations. Sounds like a recipe for success, right? So why isn’t it?
While the 9 track, 7 song album is chockfull of great riffs, melodies, progressive harmonies and excellent solos, it seems the Americans have a hard time composing an actual song from these elements. Two tracks come close but still miss the mark, and these are my favorite on the album, although it’s not the type of usual "I love this" favorite. "Death Of The Paragon" is truly progressive, starting out like an Iron Maiden song (with Salvador’s mournful and ominous recitation adding drama to the proceedings) and erupting into a latter Death death/thrash fest that feels a little too free-flowing and disjointed, ending on the same note it started. "The Restitution", album’s closer is actually a solid and varied affair, Adrienne’s clean, admittedly fabulous clean vocals giving it a gothic metal sheen until she utters an atrocious (sorry, Adrienne, nothing personal, vocal coach) growl which sounds like Death’s Charles Michael "Chuck" Schuldiner with a severely sore throat, something which actually detracts from the enjoyment of this track (although not nearly as much as the video single "Conjunction Of Souls" 4 tracks earlier, where she almost ruins the whole song), but thankfully the female growls are brief and the rest of the song and the album is enjoyable, with an effective epic end.