Holy hell! Here’s something totally fresh for you; a young band playing classic 80’s style metal. Totally not overdone yet at all. Better get on this bandwagon now, lest you want to look like some geezer neanderthal.
Maybe opening this review with a scathingly sarcastic remark isn’t entirely fair, because Black Moor really aren’t that bad, the only problem is, the sophomore full length Lethal Waters is about 5 or 6 years too late. Undiluted nostalgia pieces were pretty novel not too long ago. As these things go unfortunately, novel things generally progress into a widely saturated market. The only way to really overcome this is to either A) dilute/fuse your music with some new sounds to give it some kind of unique, interesting edge, or B) just be the biggest dog under that umbrella. Black Moor are neither the big dog, nor are they all that creative. They’re another one of those bands who borrow their sound from swaths of 80’s speed & NWOBHM bands; the sound is so white-wash standard it’s sometimes difficult to directly pin down specific influences.
Let’s pretend you’ve been living under a rock for the past 5 years, would Black Moor be impressive in that case? Moderately. The riffs are pretty juicy, but overall Lethal Waters has a certain indescribable feeling of thinness, almost completely personified by the vocalist; once again, not terrible, but just lacking in any real definition. The singer isn’t especially powerful and doesn’t have any unique grit. If you want a good idea of how this band sounds, think of Cauldron. That’s it. Black Moorhave same lack of defining personality, the same thinness, and the same tendency to rely almost entirely on a few good hooks (not to mention having a pretty similar, albeit slightly better sound than Cauldron.)
1. Hellraiser 03:40
2. Thunderhead 03:48
3. Lost in the Shadows 04:04
4. Midnight Warrior 03:57
5. Into Eternity 04:29
6. Night Danger 03:21
7. Hatred’s Maze 05:02
8. Lethal Waters 03:59
9. Frozen Tombs 05:17
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