Rating:
Genre:
Rock
Release Date: 09/25/2007
Run Time: 47:00
France is not the first country that comes to mind when one thinks of European
metal -- Sweden, Norway, England, and Germany, certainly, but not France (at least as of late 2007). Nonetheless, France has given us some noteworthy
metal bands:
Blut Aus Nord is a prime example, and
the Old Dead Tree is also one of them despite the band's many lineup changes. On this 2007 recording (which lead singer
Manuel Munoz has described as "a concept album about avoidance, kidding oneself and the urge we have to hide from reality and to remain passive when facing difficult life experiences"),
Munoz is joined by bassist
Vincent Danhier, new guitarist
Gilles Moinet, and yet another drummer,
Foued Moukid, who has left the band since this 47-minute CD was recorded. But the revolving door syndrome does not prevent
the Old Dead Tree from making
The Water Fields a worthwhile
metal disc. The question is: what kind of
metal?
The Old Dead Tree has never been easy to categorize. Some have called
The Water Fields doom metal (although it doesn't have the
Black Sabbath fixation that early
doom metal was known for), but perhaps the most convenient way of describing the material is "atmospheric alternative
metal with elements of
death metal,
black metal,
gothic metal,
metalcore, and
screamo." Throughout the album,
Munoz thrives on the clean vocals/extreme vocals contrast -- and his extreme vocals draw on
death metal's growl and
black metal's rasp as well as
metalcore's screaming. But except for the extreme vocals,
The Water Fields isn't all that extreme; in fact, it is quite melodic in a dark, moody, melancholy, brooding way. This is definitely a respectable outing from
the Old Dead Tree -- and
Munoz is getting better and better at juxtaposing the sweetly troubled
emo boy and the harsh extreme
metal hell raiser.
~Alex Henderson, All Music Guide