ALBUM REVIEW – HEAVY TEMPLE

Heavy Temple – Garden Of Heathens

Reviewed By: Denis Bridger

Review Score: 9.5

If you are familiar with Heavy Temple already, then I reckon you are ahead of the game. They look like they have just left Jerry Garcia’s place, and they play heavy, doom, psychedelic, rock ’n’ roll and they are back with there second full release Garden Of Heathens.

Heavy Temple are from Philadelphia and magicked their way into the land of psydoom on the Winter Solstice of 2012. They quickly built up pace on the local Philly scene and played with the likes of Corrosion Of Conformity, Mothership and such festivals as Doom Fest and Psycho Las Vegas.

Having heavily toured for their first two EPs, Heavy Temple and Chassit, Heavy Temple took time out in 2021 to record their first full album Lupi Amoris (Wolves Of Love) which was accepted with much love, and led to their work schedule becoming even fuller. A great album, so much bass and riff-magic and that magic voice, of course.

Now they are back with Garden Of Heathens and in the bio I have spotted a genre new to me (Desert Rock). My imagination can envisage what that may sound like: dry, dusty, windy, desolate, but that definitely doesn’t describe this album or this band. I have seen lots of videos filmed in desert-like places, so maybe that is it. Maybe it’s an asthetic thing. Here you will journey on a heavily doomed, psychedelic road that starts somewhere on Height Ashbury in ’67 and leads smack dab into the modern age (maybe stopping off somewhere in Scandinavia in the ‘80s).

Vocalist High Priestess Nighthawk’s lyrics on this record stem from the American dream. The relationship to metaphors aren’t what you might think, but are rather pretty personal. Only Nighthawk herself will ever know their true meaning.

Lets talk about the music…

How to start an album? How to pick that first song? Just like that, with a mega-massive bass that gives you a mini heart flutter, and then those almost erotic, soul-grabbing vocals from the High Priestess and drums that are almost hurting my ears (I’m wearing headphones). The mix is perfect. It’s well loud and it’s pretty awesome. Extreme Indifference to Life ‘ just broke my ears and the haunting vocals with that big sound, like Grace Slick just had a musical offspring with Kyuss.

HIRAETH
This track dives straight in with more of that heavy bass and a driving riff. Nighthawk’s vocals really are very captivating and kinda remind me of early Judas Priest in places (the feel, not the music). The track builds and one cannot help but pull a ‘this is great’ painful rock face when you have heard something you know is brilliant. I don’t see Heavy Temple as the classic doom/stoner band. They have so much more going on, harking back to those heady psychedelic days of the very powerful, albeit, very short summer of love, but being very keen on making it a more up to date rock/jamming vibe. ‘Hiraeth’ is a ripper of a track and goes full throttle all the way. Great solo, too.

DEVINE INDESCRETION
More killer riffs, drums, and bass. I can’t make it more simple, these guys have really found their groove and the production is excellent. The album was recorded at Animal Farm Studios and track three is a stand out track. There is something very Jefferson Airplane about this track. Maybe it’s the vocals. Grace Slick also had those haunting tones that made you want to jump down the hole with Alice.

The bass is really pushing everything forward on this track. There is some great, what sounds like just a jamming, off the cuff solo with a bit of a Jimmy Page chord change thing going on. I am listening to this and I am really enjoying all seven minutes that come with a changed tempo and vibe a couple of times. I feel like like I am at some mad 60s all nighter. What a way to end a track… you got me with that one. Just awesome!

HOUSE OF WORSHIP
This song could be one of those metaphors that High Priestess Nighthawk speaks of. We may think this is about religion, but it seems that all may not be so obvious. ‘House Of Worship’ is an even heavier and, maybe, slower track, that’s a bit more in the doom vein. It really reminds me of CandlemassEpicus Doomicus Metallicus or maybe Messiah Marcolin’s singing style. I couldn’t be more impressed by the vocals to be honest. Really unique and beautiful. The drums really come to life on this track and they are so clear to the ear. There is a ripping solo and great bass work, and the tone is killer with reverb to the max, I suspect. Lots of darkness in this track and it’s heavy, heavy, heavy.

SNAKE OIL (AND OTHER REMEDIES)
We are over the half way mark. A more mellow intro with very nice drums and riffs that are constant, while that bass has lost all the reverb and is cleaner but deeper than the deepest thing in the world. More of an up tempo bluesy classic rock n roll vibe going on with maybe a hint of Motörhead. Also, do I hear an organ? A great driving rhythm, excellent pounding rock music going on here with understated gritty guitar solos and more of the 60s psychedelic jamming thing. Good rocking’ and rollin’ sounds. Nothing not to like here, folks. Almost nine mins and the jams keep coming. On the live front they must be excellent. It feels like they could revive the all nighter psychedelic raves that the likes of the Grateful Dead and Pink Floyd used to do in ’67… definitely that vibe. It’s a banger.

THE GARDEN OF HEATHENS
Although I rarely use Americanisms, the title track throws us a curveball (we play cricket in the UK, so no curveball, but anyway). I have being trying to think of an album title track that was an instrumental and I can’t, at least one that isn’t an instrumental album, anyway. I suppose there are some. Ideas on postcard please. So, yes, an instrumental, with a tinge of Alice In ChainsJar Of Flies. Very relaxing after all that heavy psydoom.

JESUS WEPT
Still bit of a grunge thing in my ears with screaming guitar, and back too the really dirty bass tone. I kept expecting Layne Stayley to start singing, which I think is something about the key of the song (Drop D tuning?). Not really that it sounds like an Alice In Chains song, but wouldn’t that be a compliment? When Nighthawk starts singing it’s got a really nasty but good, dirty, angry feel and is so full of belief and passion. By the end of the song, we’re at a much faster pace. I can just hear everything pounding and driving with such a force that my head is going to fall off, if it rocks anymore… and a slow down to finish. Phew! Fantastic.

PSYCHOMANTEUM
Jimi Hendrix has entered the building, folks! Not quite, but it’s a little Jimi-esqe maybe? Then, out of the blue, I’m on a thrashing metal train travelling at a pretty quick pace with an instrumental that could be off Exodus’ Bonded By Blood. The second half gets back on track with more of the doom. A good solid tune to finish on.

CONCLUSION
Just feckin’ awesome, all killer, no filler. Great production, massive sound. That’s all I’m going to say. See them live, if you can. They are bound to ‘shake your foundations’!

Garden Of Heathens is out today (April 12th) via Magnetic Eye Records.