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Soulfly announce 13th album Chama, release new single Storm The Gates
Listen to Soulfly’s new single Storm The Gates, taken from their forthcoming 13th record Chama…
Max Cavalera reconnects with the tribal fury on Soulfly’s wonderfully unruly 13th album Chama.
There’s no rest for the wicked. Massimiliano Antonio Cavalera may have just entered his 57th year on our blue, green and increasingly grey planet – a point at which most of his contemporaries are seriously slowing down if not altogether calling it a day – but the indefatigable icon has undertaken an outrageous workload. Not content just reviving revered industrial project Nailbomb and revisiting Sepultura classic Chaos A.D. with Cavalera Conspiracy, he’s also re-lit the engines on Soulfly for this pulverising 13th offering.
Actually, pulverising might be an understatement. Named after the Portuguese word for ‘fire’ and, more specifically, the Brazilian battle-cry popularised by UFC legend Alex Pereira, Chama feels like defiant proof that Max and his bandmates are burning hotter than ever.
Never ones to knowingly under-do the bludgeon, the release of sheer primeval force as first song proper Storm The Gates explodes into life will startle even longtime aficionados. Hammering away like a cross between Cavalera at his heaviest and Mick Gordon’s hell-raising Doom soundtrack, those brutal 161 seconds culminate with what appears to be the sound of the plug rattling loose on an overloaded amp-stack. Nihilist somehow cranks the planet-eating power further, before No Pain = No Power pummels things back into the earth with the tribal rhythms of 1996’s Roots and 2000’s Primitive alongside a contemporary serrated edge evocative of Slipknot and Fear Factory.
There’s absolutely no letting up, for the first three-quarters. Grindcore influence bleeds through in the 1,000-mph Ghenna and the gnashing politics of Black Hole Scum, with shades of Ministry and Napalm Death looming large. Always Was, Always Will Be is more of a celebration of Max’s own legacy, pulling back an iron curtain to reveal a host of cheeky aural nods to the great man’s past glories.
Boldly pumping the brakes in the final movement, Chama is a record that leaves fans with something to chew on. Soulfly XIII is a spacey instrumental that could’ve been written to soundtrack an ayahuasca trip deep in the Amazon jungle. Then the ferocious title-track drags the listener along for the subsequent vision quest, through a last blast of weirdly distended sonic violence and into the proggy beyond. It’s a remarkable statement from a band many have long since written off as a spent force: somehow harder and heavier than ‘in their prime’, yet also still able to upend expectation with real soulfulness and experimentation. Superb.
Verdict: 4/5
For fans of: Sepultura, Machine Head, Slipknot
Chama is released on October 24 via Nuclear Blast