Sunday, July 20, 2025

Dawnbringer - Into the Lair of the Sun God (2012)

Into the Lair of the Sun God is a continuation of the sound Chris and Scott had found with Nucleus, only it sounds more refined and 'mature', as if the duo had really settled into this like some band having played around in it for decades. It's got another classy Christina Casperson cover like its predecessor, and I think both are the best in the whole Dawnbringer catalog at reeling a prospective listener into the journey that awaits them on the actual album, without giving away the content. Normally I'd look at these and think I might be bound for some dungeon synth or obscure black metal (which I'd be okay with in either case), but it's such a great pairing with this epic USPM sound. There should also be some kudos that Chris manages to explore this style without stepping on the toes of any of his other heavy metal projects, numerous of which were well active by this time, like High Spirits, Superchrist and the brilliant Pharaoh.

Sure, there are a few points of crossover, especially with Pharaoh (Matt Johnsen even pops in for some lead guitars here). A few vocals, a few of the busier guitar lines, but this is it's own thing, a classy and atmospheric conceptual heavy metal record eschewing song titles for Roman numerals. Pretty atypical for metal of this style, but it does actually help the listener roadmap the album as something to experience fully without worry about the 'hits', and that's a good thing, because Into the Lair of the Sun God is an extremely consistent 44 minutes of steady or galloping rhythms, well-layered leads, balanced tempos that shift between momentum and atmospheric reflection ("III" is a good example). The drums feel the best in the band's entire career, the bass lines thrive where in the past they were somewhat suppressed against the other instruments. The guitars are as bright as the title demands, which create a good contrast against Black's middle-ranged, hazier vocals which still remind me a bit of Lemmy, if the legend had been fronting something less lewd and rock & roll. There is a fair amount of complexity to some of the riffing, not so far as Helstar or Pharaoh maybe, but certainly in that region (as with "IV"). On the other hand, there are also a few pieces like "V" which is basically a straight up radio rock anthem, or the plodding and potent "VI".

I have to reiterate how well composed this music is...this might be the best 'songwriting' they have ever done, even if I'm nostalgically connected to Unbleed, which was quite different in style, that record does seem like chicken scratch compared to Sun God's calligraphy. This is not a record without precedent, there are many points here where you'll find parallels to Omen, Riot, Manilla Road or most of the other bands I mentioned before, but the way it's imbued with theme and pacing and consistency and the vocals make it all quite unique regardless. A pretty strong showing for a band that doesn't seem to spend too much time re-treading the same terrain, they hit little peaks and plateaus. Into the Lair of the Sun God shares this particular plateau with Nemesis, but it's further developed, catchier, with little moments of grace and power in each of its rhythmic arcs that better reward the listener. I think it's the pinnacle of this entire later phase of the band's career, a record I put up alongside the works of a Slough Feg or Hammers of Misfortune, two of my favorite peers when it comes to modern/throwback US heavy metal.

Verdict: Win [8.75/10]

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