Heavy Music of the Week is a function on Heavy Consequence breaking down the highest steel, punk, and exhausting rock tracks it’s essential to hear each Friday. This week, the highest choice goes to Aerosmith and Yungblud’s collaborative single “My Solely Angel.”
Aerosmith and Yungblud’s new collab “My Solely Angel” is critical for each artists. For Aerosmith, it marks their first new music in over 12 years, to not point out their first music since Steven Tyler’s vocal damage pressured the band to retire from touring final yr. For Yungblud, it silences some current skeptics.
For context, Aerosmith and Yungblud — the latter particularly — confronted criticism for his or her current stay collab in the course of the VMAs’ Ozzy Osbourne tribute, with The Darkness’ guitarist Dan Hawkins calling it “one other nail within the coffin of rock ‘n’ roll” and his brother, frontman Justin Hawkins, labeling Yungblud a “poser.”
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“My Solely Angel” ought to quell among the negativity. It’s a superb rocker with an uplifting romantic tinge, carried out as a duet by Tyler and Yungblud — with the Aerosmith singer holding down the decrease register, and Yungblud the upper finish (just a little nasally however a marked enchancment from his rendition of “Loopy Practice” on the VMAs). The refrain is an impressed slice of melodic exhausting rock, with the instrumentation powered by Joe Perry’s legendary guitar enjoying and a gentle however highly effective drum observe courtesy of former Weapons N’ Roses stickman Matt Sorum.
Honorable Mentions:
Arch Enemy – “Break the Spell”
If it looks as if we’ve been telling you about Arch Enemy‘s Blood Dynasty album for over a yr straight, it’s as a result of we kinda have. The Swedish band has elongated the album cycle even additional with the announcement of a deluxe version, which provides three new tracks, “Break the Spell” amongst them. We don’t blame them for milking it, because the band has tapped right into a uncommon echelon of high quality and amount, with their newest observe being one thing akin to “excessive exhausting rock.” Alissa White-Gluz’s harsh howls are befitting of the melodic loss of life steel the band usually performs, however the bouncy guitar association is just too accessible and rock-oriented to qualify as melo-death — thus, too far off the trail for the unique tracklist, however nonetheless worthy of an ancillary launch.
Biohazard – “Demise of Me”
Biohazard let the riffs swing at an infectious mid-tempo on “Demise of Me.” It’s a welcome change of tempo from the sooner, moshier stuff we’ve heard from the band’s forthcoming comeback album Divided We Fall, and that variation goes a good distance whenever you take hardcore out of the stay setting and put it on a disc to hearken to at house. “Considered one of my favorites,” enthused drummer Danny Schuler in a press launch. “To me, this music embodies the frustration, miscommunication, and intolerance that we generally take care of in our lives.”
Lifeless Warmth – “By My Will”
Lifeless Warmth caught our ear a number of weeks in the past with their observe “Perpetual Punishment” and make a return to the weekly rundown with the follow-up single, “By My Will.” Most of what we stated earlier than stands true for this one: Lifeless Warmth are executing old-school thrash steel with decisive historic accuracy, so far as capturing that classic Bay Space sound is anxious. “By My Will” sees the band cranking up the tempo for a punkier, sub-three-minute thrash assault.