Review: High on Fire at the Middle East | April 7, 2010
High on Fire play the Middle East
Ok, let's get it out of the way first: the merch was lacking. Lacking!
When I go to see High On Fire, I expect to see, I dunno, hoodies with blue dragon-demons perched on snowy ledges and shit -- but even the stepped-up attention the band is getting due to their absolutely smoking new platter Snakes for the Divine (E1) isn't translating into an uptick in stoner fantasy merch. Bummer!
Oh,
the music? Obviously, the band slayed. High On Fire strode onto the Mid
East stage like phantom warlords, picking up their axes and instantly
bludgeoning us with "Frost Hammer." In the low-ceilinged confines of
the Mid East down, the mix was muddy and claustrophobic: it was
probably one of the worst-sounding shows I've seen since ... uh, the
last time I saw High On Fire at the Mid East down. But fuck it: Matt
Pike's guitar sound is going to come across as sludgy and incoherent
even if he had scientists re-calibrating the attenuation of the entire
room and rebuilding the sound system out of crystal lasers. After a few
songs, he cranked the knobs on his Soldano stack, and it was as if our
ears were being coated with green slime.
On record, HoF can come
across as relentless and one-dimensional, with everything running at
full blast at all times. Live, they are no different, but there is
something about being in the presence of such a bonecrushing
steamroller that makes the unstopping carnage so appealing. Normally,
this would be the part of the review where I would point out things
like "The band's set leaned heavily on their new album" or something to
that effect, but please: after being liquified by four or five of their
epic tracks in a row, it was hard for my mind to get around to
remembering things like song titles and what album is this from and
that sort of thing. After 30 minutes or so of focused headbanging, you
just kind of become zombified.
In this sense, HoF are almost
more of a Ministry-esque industrial band: Pike's riffs are massive, but
indistinct, like a constantly chugging metal-tipped scythe being
dragged along the ground. Drummer Des Kensel plays like a one-man drum
circle, with a thundering power that takes your breath away at certain
moments. He never divides the tune up into segments of different beats
and fills, the way most metal drummers do, and he also avoids the
double bass drum trap that makes most metal into a rush to the finish.
Instead, he just steadily plows each song into your skull with the
determined pace of a man who just doesn't give a fuck. At this point,
Kensel and Pike have been doing this together for almost 15 years, and
the rhythmic interplay and telepathic ratcheting of tension and power
the two execute is astounding.
Your typical HoF track eventually
gets to a point where Kensel (and since 2006, ex-Zeke bassist Jeff
Matz) have made a frothy mess of your ear-thingies and then Pike hits
some pedals and holy fucking shit just throws the whole song off a
cliff for a few minutes with his eternal yawning lead work. If he were
a lesser guitarist and this were a lesser band, the consistent way that
Pike leads every tune into a prolongued solo section would seem
indulgent and lame; but he isn't and they aren't and basically when you
go see HoF you are waiting for these moments to mow down your mind with
laserbeams of awesomeness.
It also helps that Pike is a true
metal warrior of the type you don't see that much anymore: amidst a
clustered field of pasty dudes in black T-shirts of other bands
composed of pasty dudes in black T-shirts of other bands, Pike is a
true rock star. Six feet and change, long hair, sideburns, tattooed and
shirtless, with crooked teeth and what people could politely refer to
as a face that looks "lived-in," his stage presence alone lends an
authenticity to his molten tales of roaming sludge-lords. In recent
years he has added a few tricks to his stage moves arsenal, playing
nutty hammer-ons with one hand while using the other to exhort the
crowd to an even greater frenzy. Tonight at the Middle East, his energy
was infectious, even to the typically arms-folded Cantabrigian
contingent. It doesn't hurt too that his grizzled rock starpower and
shirtless heroics guarantees that there might actually be the
occasional female fan amidst the dudes with XXL hoodies and backwards
Dean guitar baseball hats holding in their long curly locks.