Three and a half years since they re-established themselves at the forefront of contemporary metal with 2015’s Purple, Baroness are readying their return with the labyrinthine next step on their musical odyssey. A 17-song melodic puzzle-box of an LP – melodies and harmonic ideas borrowed, repurposed and reinterpreted across three sides of vinyl – it’s a fascinating, wilfully unwieldy listen. Lyrics are full of sonic Easter eggs. Unorthodox prog is hidden inside the most accessible songs. Tracks emerge from swirling chaos and dense layers of sound. With that in mind, we sat down with frontman John Dyer Baizley to chart a passage through the maelstrom.
“There are fragments of sound that bleed in and out from one song to the next, over the course of the record there are definitely themes that recur,” the singer and guitarist explains, “but not in a concept-album kind of way. Over the years I’ve come to regard it more and more intimately, and as more and more fundamentally linked to my everyday life to the point where the lines are so blurred that I don’t even think there are any there anymore between who I am as a visual artist and musician and who I am as a human being. I intended this album to be a kaleidoscopic representation of that. I am talking about my life-experience since Purple, which is why you get those re-emergent themes and literal repetitive lines. We went so overboard with that, it would be dizzying for me to even try to explain. There’s always a reason, but it can be hard for me to keep track of what it is!”
Well, we’ll do our best…