Avatarium – Between You, God, the Devil and the Dead Review

As a hardcore Candlemass enthusiast,1 I was predestined to love Leif Edling’s spinoff project, Avatarium. Featuring Leif’s original doom alchemy and the truly awe-inspiring vocals of Jennie-Ann Smith, there was a lot to love about them. The debut had enough nods to Candlemass to satisfy, and The Girl With the Raven Mask began to build a unique entity, fusing ’70s psychedelic rock, prog, and jazzy cabaret coolness into the doom foundation. Each subsequent album had its own thing going on with the doom element waxing and waning according. 2022’s Death, Where is Your Sting was the first album without Leif Edling and it ended up their least “metal” outing, often feeling like an early ’70s rock release close to Jefferson Airplane. It was still an enjoyable spin, but the heaviness factor was minimal. This left me longing for the older, more forceful sound and hoping for more actual metal. Now we get Between You, God, the Devil and the Dead. Will the scales rebalance and put things right, or has the slide into retro rock intensified?

Between is a slightly heavier album than Death, Where is Your Sting, with a few rougher edges to the ’70s rock-oriented sound, but it’s far from a return to the band’s early days. However, it’s still a tremendous showcase for the massive vocal talents of Jennie-Ann Smith, and the lady could sing me a Chinese take-out menu and still hold my rapt attention. The songs run the gamut of ’70s hard rock, delta blues. jazz cabaret fare and sometimes, actual doom, but I’d be hard-pressed to claim this is a metal album. Opener “Long Black Waves” is a cool blend of ’70s rock and classic doom with Jennie-Ann leading the way with her pristine, soulful vocals supported by oceans of retro organ work and restrained but toothsome lead work. It’s an instant winner and sticks like hot tar in long hair with a sullen but sultry hypnotic attraction. “Being With the Dead” is about as close to a call back to their debut as Avatarium gets these days, and the song is legitimately doom and fairly heavy too. There’s tons of Deep Purple-centric organ abuse coursing through the song and the riffs recall Sabbath’s “Buried Alive” a bit too closely at times.

The remainder of Between shows off the band’s “softer” side. “I See You Better in the Dark” is an upbeat, Delta blues-inflected mood rocker, with Jennie-Ann impressing as always though the song needs more oomph and punch. “My Hair is on Fire (But I’ll Take Your Hand)” approaches Messa’s cozy cabaret energy and it’s good but doesn’t fully stick with me. The closing title track is a schmaltzy emo-ballad that smacks of the excesses of Jim Steinman-era Meat Loaf and it’s a bit much. Toss in an instrumental with a greater doom-focus than the surrounding cuts and you have a slightly frustrating listen if you hoped for more metal tuneage. Keeping most songs in the 3-5 minute window with fairly tight writing aids the album’s flow, and Jennie-Ann can elevate pretty much anything to likable, but this isn’t the Avatarium I fell in love with originally. I find myself desperately wishing for more crunch and power and in the end, I’m a bit bored by the band’s output for the first time.

I’ve raved about Jennie-Ann on enough reviews to feel like I’m beating a dead horse, but the woman has a one-of-a-kind voice and can fit into almost any style and sound great. With Leif gone, she’s the center of gravity for the band, and rightly so. She’s got a love it or really love it voice and it’s hard to find fault in anything she does. Marcus Jindell (ex-Royal Hunt, ex-Evergrey, ex-Soen) is a gifted riff crafter capable of creating a wide spectrum of moods, often looking to 70s rock for inspiration. He’s on his game as usual here, though he dips into the metal pond too sparingly for my tastes with only a few big doom leads surfacing. Former Candlemass keyboardist Rickard Nilsson provides a lot of 70s-centric organ noodling to flesh out the various soundscapes the band dabbles in, and he hits the Deep Purple button early and often for some Moog rocking fun.

There’s a wealth of talent and interesting music here, I guess I just want them to trend heavier when that isn’t their predilection anymore. Between is a solid slab of ’70s rock worship with a few high points, but this isn’t something I see myself returning to much, just as I rarely spin their last album. I’ll keep checking in on future releases though, because Avatarium could do something special and I’d hate to miss it.

Rating: 3.0/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: AFM
Websites: instagram.com/avatariumofficial | facebook.com/avatariumofficial
Releases Worldwide: January 24th, 2025

Dolphin Whisperer

Every now and then a band rolls around featuring a one-of-a-kind performer that near regardless of their choices will keep them in good graces. In the case of Swedish doom-rockers Avatarium, this kind of star rests in none other than premier vocalist Jennie-Ann Smith. Her penchant for powerful, highly enunciated, and frightfully fragile deliveries mirrors no one else in the active metal world today, allowing Avatarium to live as morphing and thoughtful riff-based support for her wiles. Mostly anyway, as Avatarium’s Candlemassive roots with doom maestro Leif Edling had raised them in a lumbering, Sabbathian tradition. But starting with Edling’s complete step away from songwriting for 2022’s Death, Where Is Your Sting and into this newest Between You, God, the Devil and the Dead, Avatarium has forged a path steeped in their own emotional rock rather than just fat, evil riffage. An omission of true metal, though, does not necessary spell out a bad time.2

Fortunately for Avatarium, the husband wife duo of guitarist (and cellist and pianist) Marcus Jidell (ex-Royal Hunt, ex-Soen) and Ms. Smith continues to provide a beyond steady songwriting flair, even if it isn’t quite of the epic and crushing variety. Choice intros like jagged crunch of “Long Black Waves” or the rolling tom thunder of “Until Forever and Again” bellow in a familiar, foreboding manner the ambience of all things smoke-filled and brooding. But rather than lean on amplified fuzz for dramatic impact, a comfortable and punchy master highlights stadium weight kicks and growling organ underpinnings to frame a grooving sway and occult atmosphere around Jidell’s bluesy licks and Smith’s Heartfelt croons. No matter the influence, Avatarium sounds huge.

Though retro has always been the flavor of Avatarium’s grand plans, Between wears more proudly than past outings a Coverdale/Hughes-era Deep Purple aura in its bones. From the bass-led swagger of “I See You Better in the Dark,” complete Smith’s blue-eyed soul, stomping verses, to the psychedelic instrumental “Notes from the Underground,” a constant burn of attitude-toned string bends and snaking neoclassical charms color Avatarium’s unique personality. And though Heart comes as an easy comparison for the power balladry of cuts like “My Hair Is on Fire” and “Lovers Give a Kingdom to Each Other,” there’s a panache to the guitar-forward nature and careful vocal escalations that reminds of 70s Scorpions before the arena took over their more psych-leaning sound. Returning keyboardist Rickard Nilsson (of Hurricanes and The Fire I Long For) provides that extra cherry on top with hissing Hammond and blipping Nord flurries that provide the low end with an oscillating swell that sizzles under Smith’s sultry lines.

The path that Avatarium follows is well-worn, right down to the conflicting mood that arises from the monstrously squishy but nonetheless sticky serenade that closes Between. Similar to the gentler mood of preceding album Death, nuance in the recording of Smith’s vocalizations tether an interest just as much as the inherent fortitude of her proudest offered crescendos. Forceful “p” pushes, slithering and tooth-whistling sibilant crackles, and tickling fricative “f” squishes (especially on titles that feature the “f” like “Until Forever and Again”) pepper the texture of every passing lyric. Smith tonally is already a joy to the ears, and the attention to detail that twists letters into moments elevates the experience of lesser passages. While it’s true that I don’t necessarily want to listen to sappy credits roll title track, I can’t help but pay attention when Smith rests so elegantly over its cloying construction.

It’s a rare talent that a band like Avatarium, who actively makes musical choices that are at odds with my listening desires, continues to make compelling collections of songs that I want to hear again and again. In this case, though, the closer might be a little too sweet in the tooth still—and signaled in an odd manner after the vibey instrumental piece. Yet as part of a greater whole, Between You, God, the Devil and the Dead possesses a classic trajectory and classy ensemble of killer tunes. The power of doom may no longer much reside in the foot-tapping thump of Avatarium’s catchy shuffle, but volume and repetition assists its enjoyment all the same.

Rating: 3.5/5.0



The post Avatarium – Between You, God, the Devil and the Dead Review appeared first on Angry Metal Guy.

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