The spooky intro of Ashes sets the scene, with children reciting Ring A Ring O’ Roses over an ominous droning buzz. As this gives way to the Black Death-themed Rats, it seems like business as usual. But closer attention reveals the song to be both allegorical and timely. ‘In times of turmoil, in times like these / Belief’s contagious, spreading disease,’ croons the Cardinal, as the Nameless Ghouls build a metal structure so polished you could see your own pustulating buboes in it. There’s a harsher bite embedded in the chorus, however, to go with the grittier theme, which portrays destructive ideologies in the current cultural and political landscape as a modern-day plague.
You might not think you could get any more infectious than a song about plague rats, but that’s only until you hear Dance Macabre. If Square Hammer, from the Popestar EP, smashed Kiss’ disco-rock anthem I Was Made For Lovin’ You into shards you could cut yourself on, it’d sound like this.
Elsewhere, Faith follows a big beat and tumbling guitar leads into another flawless melody and more musings on the nature of belief, before See The Light takes the baton for a stately march, with Cardinal Copia declaring, ‘Every day that you feed me with hate I grow stronger.’ Again the lyrics are open to interpretation, but they mix a bitter taste into an Alice In Wonderland reference without name-checking Lucifer once. He does make a brief appearance in the fantastic and fatalistic Pro Memoria, but even here, it’s a cameo, with the Grim Reaper as the real star of the show.