Reviews list for Iapetus - The Long Road Home (2017)

The Long Road Home

Sometimes a bands expectations precede them. There is a certain point when a new act is getting ready to break out and present the world with a new fresh new sound, only to see the names of album collaborators and then formulate relatively predicable expectations. That was the case with Iapetus, a New York prog-death band and their 2019 album The Body Cosmic. As soon as I saw the credits featuring the drummer of Ne Obliviscaris, any sense of wonder was squashed. The album was still good, but minus a few surface level changes, this really was not anything revolutionary in either progressive music, or melodic death metal.

And so, as part of the Review Draft, I had the chance to listen to the bands 2017 debut. And it was pretty rough as a whole. Don't get me wrong, I enjoy the compositions on display here and how they split the difference between the post-metal soaring of Ne Obliviscaris, combined with a melodic death metal sound that is indebted to Insomnium. The performances are very impressive, but not super technical to whip me out of its very comfortable groove and flow. Overall, The Long Road Home is a very loud album with very few calming sections, and the few that we get are relatively short.

The album has a number of extended song structures, so it would be fascinating to hear how Iapetus are able to make these tunes work as part of a whole. Well the record is actually quite impressive in that regard. Like Ne Obliviscaris, songs have a sense of momentum and direction that is quickly changing, and sometimes it can result in some very strange style changes. But songs like "My Father, My God" know where they are going and how to say everything that needs to be said, while still making it sound like a coherent idea. "Lachrymae Rerum" meanwhile, does not get the album off on the right foot after the first two instrumental tracks, which are fine I guess, but I feel like they serve more of a textural purpose than a melodic one.

Given the influence, it should come as no surprise that this record dabbles in fantastical themes and environmentalism. As such, this can be a long album if you are not prepared for it. Considering how much it sounds like Insomnium melo-death instead of Ne Oblivscaris melo-black might also play into its length being a determent. "Eviscerate Divine" and "The Long Road Home" do not make for the epic conclusion that Iapetus were expecting, since both songs have very similar instrumental ideas and together take up nearly half of the albums runtime. Perhaps only one of them would have made this albums conclusion sit more comfortably, but here we are. In the end, I think Iapetus' biggest problem is that they have lots of good things going for them, but they try too hard to play into the "ten minute epic" school of progressive songwriting that it hurts them more than it doesn't. The Long Road Home is an album worth exploring, but you'll likely find yourself appreciating the destination more than the journey.

Best Songs: ...Of Hangmen & Vertebrae, Savior Solitude, My Father, My God, The Long Road Home

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Saxy S Saxy S / April 14, 2023 03:13 AM