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Cathedral
The Serpent's Gold (2004)
Review
by: Jason Thornberry
Date: 6/15/04
Ever
watch an ice cube melt, or a snail makes its way from
the sidewalk to your door? That's what the better tracks
on this double disc retrospective felt like. Brilliantly,
Lee Dorrian, the visionary behind the doom-to-the-max
group Cathedral, slips the agonizing deceleration of rock
itself among other numbers that could have been any number
of respectable jukeboxes in 1974.
The Serpent's Gold is the result of Cathedral
growing up before our eyes, and feeling the same growing
pains ("Ride") every great band does before
they reach their pinnacle ("Enter The Worms",
oddly enough, on the same album). The inclusion of their
earliest, most extreme songs ("Equilibrium",
"Ebony Tears", "Autumn Twilight")
makes their foray into superbly strange seventies necrophilia
"Vampire Sun" ("Aw, c'mon! Let's get it
on!") and images of electric vultures perfect, like
something from a Ralph Bakshi film.
Disc Two is packed with rarities and demos, so you feel
like you're in the rehearsal room with Cathedral as their
thinking of new ways to baffle the world – often
at about 20 bpms. As The Serpent's Gold ends
you appreciate the precision of the slogan "Slow
and steady wins", and you'll plan to step cautiously
around snails from here on.
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