Your move, Angel Witch.<\/p>\n
Born out of the Seattle music scene in the mid-’80s alongside other influential heavy metal acts like Metal Church<\/strong> and Queensryche<\/strong>, Fifth Angel<\/strong> rose to prominence with their 1985 demo and 1986 self-titled debut with producer Terry Date. After their second album, Time Will Tell<\/em> in 1990 the band fell dormant. Aside from reuniting briefly in 2010 all was quiet among the Fifth Angel camp until their revitalized lineup burst onto the scene in 2017 and have been going strong ever since. After their third release, The Third Secret<\/em> in 2018, the group dropped their long awaited 4th full length When Angels Kill<\/em> on June 19th 2023 via Nuclear Blast Records.<\/p>\n
When Angels Kill<\/em> boasts some serious firepower; Fifth Angel shows that they aren’t just legendary and influential, but show they still have a lot more to offer to the scene. Similar to Metal Church (who also dropped an album this year), their familiar blend of classic heavy, speed and thrash metal isn’t anything necessarily new or nuanced, but is written, played and produced with such conviction that I can’t help but be sucked in. There is a noticeably heavier tone and conceptual structure to this record which does make it stand apart somewhat from prior releases. While the album is admittedly a little overly cramped and the interlude bits don’t add much, the musicianship really connects and continuously impresses throughout the albums runtime.<\/p>\n
Every member of the group gives arguably career best performances. With the modern heavier sound, the dueling guitars from classic shredder Ed Archer and Flotsam and Jetsam<\/strong>‘s Steve Conley form a strong partnership and drive much of the energy on the record. The rhythm section as well is equally as effective, with long tenured bassist, John Macko and classic drummer Ken Mary both show how they are two of the best in the game.<\/p>\n