
So, It's been a damn long time since I've even looked at this blog. What better time than now to make a new update. So, since I had today off, I ran to my local music store and picked up the new album by The Sword entitled Warp Riders. Recent events in my life have thrown off my internal clock something fierce, and for some reason I had it stuck in my mind that the album was coming out today rather than the week ago that it had.
I was aware that this album was in ways a "concept" album. In knowing this, I set my expectations toward something maybe a bit sonically spacious more dragged out and echoey considering that the theme of this album had shifted away from the mythical battles that took place eons past into a setting more sci-fi in nature. Apparently that was not the case, and it's not all together a bad thing either. It has the familiar sound of The Sword's previous releases and this album has a much stronger and appealing sound than Gods of the Earth, which I felt had fell a tad short of the mark if only so slightly.
There are ten tracks to Warp Riders, and after just listening to it, I cannot find a single track I didn't like immediately. The album begins with something more akin to my initial expectations. Something more spaceoperatic, but after a brief silence, the wall of familiar Sword sound takes flight and the album never falters, never fails to deliver. The story throughout Warp Riders is a fun stride back toward the crafted stories of what come to my mind when someone mentions the science fiction of the late sixties or early seventies. Even the album cover itself is flawless in its conveyance of this dedication to such a period. This album is so filled with guitar rifts and thundering drums that you wouldn't need anything else consuming that space. Then somehow they slide in the vocals that blend perfectly into the heavy beats and screaming guitars with an almost svelte ease.
This album is a must-have for anyone who is either a fan of science fiction from ages past, or just want an amazingly created hard rock album. Having listened to this album a few times now, I am so glad my initial presumptions about this album were far off base, as this feels like an album from the Sword. Let that spacey theremin driven rock opera I was looking forward to come from someone else. The sword has delivered Warp Riders and it is about perfect in every way.
"she makes a fold in space, we slip
between the curves
Sacrifice of the sisterhood to do for those
they serve
To cross the Universe in hyper-spatial flight
We ride the warp of space into the
womb of night"
the video for Tres Brujas (the second track on the album) is a tad corny, but very much a fun watch...

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