Search - Bible of the Devil :: Firewater At My Command

Firewater At My Command
Bible of the Devil
Firewater At My Command
Genres: Rock, Metal, Christian & Gospel
 
Bible of the Devil's second studio full-length appears on the tiny Grand Forks, ND, imprint Genuflect. This is an appropriate den for BOD to call home, for the Chicago band makes dangerous sounds come alive... Are those gu...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Bible of the Devil
Title: Firewater At My Command
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Genuflect Records
Genres: Rock, Metal, Christian & Gospel
Styles: Hard Rock, Hard Rock & Metal, Rock & Alternative
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 885767284555

Synopsis

Product Description
Bible of the Devil's second studio full-length appears on the tiny Grand Forks, ND, imprint Genuflect. This is an appropriate den for BOD to call home, for the Chicago band makes dangerous sounds come alive... Are those guitars? The sound transforms from a tinny rattle to a throaty, hyperspeed roar as a rustbucket Ford pickup with a lifted suspension and no headlights tears out of the gloom and screeches to a stop next to your dead rental vehicle. In the rig's payload is an enormous speaker cabinet blasting some of the most overdriven rock & roll to arrive since the American heartland heard British heavy metal. Next to that sits a hill of a man in a handlebar moustache and square toe boots. And he's holding out his hand. The sound making your ears bleed is Bible of the Devil's Firewater at My Command, an album that's as serious about song titles like "Drinkin' the Pay" and "Jet Engine Orchestra" as it is about trading solos, ripping drums, and screeching vocals that are nearly unintelligible, but always get their point across. On tracks like "Tomahawkin'," mouth/guitar player Amp Reed seems to be emulating Bruce Dickinson. But what's this? The Iron Maiden vocalist's trademark howl is harnessed in by the choppy, lurching instrumentation, which doesn't want to shake its Midwestern punk influences. "King of the Britains" is more anthemic, but it too wears its influences like a leather vest over a gaping knife wound. No matter -- you'll gladly sop up the spilled blood with your shirt if these guys will let you drink with them after the show. It sounds like Reed and fellow guitarist Viet Claus are harmonizing on the line "Put your head on a plate." But you can't worry about that right now, because it's all you can do to hold onto the speaker cabinet as the old Ford hurdles down the highway at 100 mph, carrying you further and further away from that dead rental car. It's time to believe in Bible of the Devil. 12 Tracks and 53 Minutes long.