There are times in life when one must empty oneself of everything. To remove extraneous distractions; to turn a tired present into a bright future; to cut any redundant, weighty anchors loose and reset the mental and spiritual mojo without such baggage throwing it out of whack. Not only is it a way in which to truly free yourself to put every bit of energy you have into forging forward, it also allows a person to take stock of themselves in the here and now, and assess who they are and who they want to be, with no gods or masters intervening.
Such is one meaning behind the title of Baroness’s fifth (and final ‘coloured’) album – an apparent “burning down of the house and a radical rebirth”, according to main-brain John Baizley. Even by Baroness’ own standard, never a band to include anything in the music that is throwaway or accidental, masters of knowing exactly what can be left out and what is both useful and beautiful, there is a focus and singularity of attention here that is truly dazzling. It doesn’t deny what has come before, but it doesn’t stand on the shoulders of previous work, either. It is, on its own two legs, an absolute masterpiece.
Where 2015’s Purple predecessor felt like a celebration, a joyous expression of relief after a mountain conquered, you can hear a far more complex self-analysis at work here. That album was written in the wake of the bus crash which, while it could have been so much worse, left John having to rehabilitate his arm to play guitar again, after doctors had to piece it back together with metal pins and plates. Those more immediate emotional outpourings are less in evidence here, with a darker undercurrent at play at times, more prepared to take time weaving its magic at its own pace. Opener Front Toward Enemy opens with a steady burst of proggy guitar and a big chorus, before I’m Already Gone brings in the first of many more slow-burning pieces. Seasons shows off the incredible guitar interplay between John and new six-stringer Gina Gleason, while Cold-Blooded Angels throws in sparkly, spacey moods before rising like a giant towards the song’s glorious climax.