Monday, November 17, 2014

His Name Is Alive - Tecuciztecatl

His Name Is Alive
Tecuciztecatl
28 October 2014
London London
 
4 stars out of 5
 
 
Despite having mastered a dozen or so different genres over their two-and-a-half-decade career, including ethereal goth, neo-soul, noise-rock, jazz, gamelan, and arrangements for amplified pine cones, His Name Is Alive have always been instantly recognizable as His Name Is Alive. Tecuciztecatl is no different, meaning it’s completely different: a full-blown rock opera named after the moon god of the Aztecs, with a story along the lines of a Hammer horror film and music loosely based on the collected guitar solos of Thin Lizzy (I’m not even joking). Now a quartet consisting of Warren Defever, Andrea Morici, Dusty Jones, and J. Rowe, HNIA spent a couple of years writing and recording this record, during which time Defever and Jones practiced their duelling guitar solo techniques by creating a seventy-minute edit “of every Thin Lizzy guitar solo from 1971 to 1983” and playing along.
 
The opening track is the most epic thing that HNIA has ever dedicated to ones and zeros: “The Examination” shifts through many different musical themes through its thirteen-plus minutes, from Thin Lizzy and Shades of a Blue Orphanage to Renegade and Thunder and Lightning. Andy FM’s vocal performance is the best of her time with the band so far. And the solos… I have a friend who I constantly anger because I keep telling her “rock is dead” (she’s probably the most technically gifted guitar soloist I know), but now I may have to play her “Reflect Yourself” and apologize for the errors of my ways. But this ain’t no wank fest—every lick and riff serves a purpose and propels the story, and the story is appropriately dark and creepy. Has HNIA resurrected rock ‘n’ roll? In reality this is doubtful, but for the duration of Tecuciztecatl it’s easy to believe that they have.
 
reviewed by Richard Krueger

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