Battle Beast - Bringer Of Pain album review

OTT Finnish metallers cram in the glam on album four

Battle Beast bringer of pain album art

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Over the course of a decade and various lineup changes, Battle Beast’s sound has morphed from seething heavy metal on debut Steel into a full-on, Euro-powermeets- 80s-glam assault that nods as much to Nightwish and Blind Guardian as it does Tygers Of Pan Tang and Accept.

During the writing sessions for Bringer Of Pain, main songwriter and guitarist Anton Kabanen left the band, but undeterred, the Finns’ fourth album finds them firing on all cylinders and displaying their clichés unapologetically. This is a huge step forward from 2015’s Unholy Savior, packed with chrome-plated, overblown musicianship, extravagant vocals from warrior chanteuse Noora Louhimo and massive, catchy choruses.

The over-the-top stadium anthemia of Straight To The Heart is the most raging opener BB have produced to date, followed with righteous warmongering on We Will Fight and a gloriously synth-laden King For A Day. The rampantly silly Bastard Son Of Odin, though, is the cheese-on-toast highlight that should have any self-respecting metal fan punching the air with glee.

Dannii Leivers

Danniii Leivers writes for Classic Rock, Metal Hammer, Prog, The Guardian, NME, Alternative Press, Rock Sound, The Line Of Best Fit and more. She loves the 90s, and is happy where the sea is bluest.