Royal Thunder - Wick album review

US rockers light a fire in the heart and mind

Cover art for Royal Thunder - Wick album

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Royal Thunder’s debut album, CVI, and its follow-up, Crooked Doors, rightly had fans salivating over the Atlanta band, with their kaleidoscopes of hypnotic psychedelia and cauldrons of esoteric flavours backed by a gritty crunch. Third album Wick is an equally elaborate affair, but baring a more naked, primitive soul that’s arguably more captivating. Opener Burning Tree evokes a secret coven lit by the dying embers, summoning in ceremonial spirits, while first single April Showers’ bluesy slow hand and stirring croon gradually build to a riveting apex.

Mlny Parsonz’s smokey, weathered vocals rightly take centre stage, boring into the inner depths of the listener’s psyche and igniting a hearth that refuses to diminish. However, with Josh Weaver and Will Fiore’s guitars stripped back to their bare bones, Evan Diprima’s drums come to the fore, subtly swinging like a pendulum before punctuating the swagger of Tied with masterful effect. The serene simplicity of We Slipped and defenceless beauty of Plans and The Well are superbly juxtaposed by the rolling twang of The Sinking Chair and the title track’s enormous chorus that triumphantly emerges from a swamp of bleak tones and open wounds. Wick is an even more staggering reminder of what a seriously special band Royal Thunder are.

Adam Brennan

Rugby, Sean Bean and power ballad superfan Adam has been writing for Hammer since 2007, and has a bad habit of constructing sentences longer than most Dream Theater songs. Can usually be found cowering at the back of gigs in Bristol and Cardiff. Bruce Dickinson once called him a 'sad bastard'.