The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 

Throwing dice, taking names

The Sword is +20 awesome
By DANIEL BROCKMAN  |  May 12, 2008

080516_sword_main
HEADY METAL: If anyone can show Metallica how to re-bottle their lightning, the Sword can.

Let’s say your band are named the Sword, your albums have titles like Age of Winters and Gods of the Earth, and your latest single is “Fire Lances of the Ancient Hyperzephyrians.” Would these count as hazardous levels of irony?

“There’s no irony at all!” says drummer Trivett Wingo. And he’s serious, or at least as serious as Bruce Dickinson or Robert Plant or any of metal’s storied mythmakers has been. Although this Austin quartet have existed as the Sword only since 2003, they’ve shot to a lofty position in the metal hierarchy by sticking to the old-fashioned way of doing things: presenting, with a poker face, a 20-sided fret-burning obsession with Fantasy that has even the most wizened Gygaxians consulting their Monster Manuals.

“People spend far too much time thinking about music rather than actually experiencing it,” laments Wingo. “It’s supposed to be a ritualistic counter-cerebral thing, like when you’re in the fucking cosmic dance with Shiva, fucking rocking out to some Zeppelin jams, you know what I’m saying?”

It would seem that Lars Ulrich does. “Lars is pretty much obsessed with the Sword, and he mentioned that Metallica had been listening to a fair amount of us when they were writing [their forthcoming Rick Rubin–produced LP], so I’m interested in seeing if it has any kind of Sword inspiration on it. I wouldn’t be too surprised.”

Bold words for someone so new on the scene — but if it takes an army of handlers to instruct a middle-aged Metallica on how to rebottle the lightning they rode in on 20 years ago, the Sword have that shit covered. Which is probably why they’re opening for Metallica across Eastern Europe this summer.

A cursory listen to Gods of the Earth might support Wingo’s casual assertion that the Sword’s æsthetic is “confined to the past” — if “the past” refers to the rehearsals for Master of Puppets. Much as with Master, multiple tunes begin with acoustic arpeggios that give way to chugging bombast, with lengthy excursions into gorgeously morose twin-guitar Black Forest Old World classicism. And echoing the Lord of the Rings shout-outs in Zep’s “Ramble On” and Iron Maiden’s odes to The Rime of the Ancient Mariner and “The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner,” the Sword indulge themselves in literary reference: “Beyond the Black River” and “The Frost-Giant’s Daughter” are named after and themed on short stories by Conan creator and author Robert E. Howard; “To Take the Black” is from author George R.R. Martin’s series A Song of Ice and Fire. It’s enough to inspire young metalheads to visit a library. Well, almost.

How does this fit in with what’s going on now in underground metal? And how does it fit in with an increasingly historically conscious metal fanbase, one that can catch references, sniff out irony, and peg influences?

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Guitar Hero: Metallica, Year in National Pop: New attitudes, Nirvana versus Foo Fighters, More more >
  Topics: Music Features , Entertainment, Music, Pop and Rock Music,  More more >
| More

[ 06/03 ]   Always, Patsy Cline  @ Ogunquit Playhouse
ARTICLES BY DANIEL BROCKMAN
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   THE CULT SURVIVES ROCK'S HIGHS AND LOWS  |  May 31, 2012
    There is a difference between an unknown musical artist and a superstar, and that difference isn't necessarily musical — it's mythological.
  •   RAZORMAZE ADDS FOCUS TO THEIR THRASH  |  May 15, 2012
    For a kind-of goofy metal dude, Alex Citrone is pretty serious — especially when he talks metal, and especially when he's talking about his band, Boston shred titans Razormaze.
  •   ZAMBRI | HOUSE OF BAASA  |  May 15, 2012
    For those of us of a certain age who remember when school dances had a strict four-fast-songs-then-one-slow-one policy, the memory of bouncing around to "Let's Hear It for the Boy" with the anticipation of "One More Night" or "Take My Breath Away" still makes our palms sweat with hormonal anxiety.
  •   CONFRONTING THE SWEDISH GLOOM OF IN SOLITUDE  |  May 08, 2012
    When I am finally able to get through to the cell phone of In Solitude's tour manager, they have emerged from a massive dust cloud, their metal-mobile finding civilization after a long spell traversing the deserts of Arizona with no idea where they are going.
  •   [R.I.P.] ADAM YAUCH AND THE BEASTIE BOYS  |  May 08, 2012
    ADAM YAUCH, a/k/a MCA, was likely inspired to pen those words, that appear in a tossed off couplet in the middle of what would wind up being one of the band’s final singles, by his immersion in the world of illness.

 See all articles by: DANIEL BROCKMAN



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2012 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group