The Prophecy – Christopher Thelen

The Prophecy
Metal Blade Records, 2000
Reviewed by Christopher Thelen
Published on Sep 14, 2000

By my own standards, I should hate Squealer.

This four-piece Swedish metal band often shows signs of being a
typical “import” metal band, and the song titles on their disc
The Prophecy seem to hint at something sinister. When their
vocals harmonize, it’s not always the smoothest of transitions.

Yet I can’t bring myself to hate these guys. I just can’t. Maybe
it’s the way the group intertwines thrash drumming with more
melodic music structure. Maybe it’s the dare-to-be-pop sound some
of the tracks have in the face of screaming guitar work. Maybe it’s
the sheer balls the group had to cover Depeche Mode’s “Enjoy The
Silence”. Whatever the case,
The Prophecy is admittedly weak at times, but this group
piques my interest, and suggests there is greatness in them there
amplifiers.

The band – vocalist Henner, guitarist Lars Döring, bassist
Tobias “Eggi” Exxel and guitarist Michael Schiel – plow through
metal which dares the listener to categorize it in one distinct
style. (Drums on the disc are handled by Martin Winter.) It’s not
strictly thrash metal, though Winter’s drums do occasionally
suggest that flavor of metal has touched the lips of the band
members on occasion. It’s not pop metal, though there is the
occasional vibe in the song structures. It’s not Viking metal…
thank God. It’s not demonic or spiritual metal.

Maybe what Squealer has done, in effect, is created their own
unique genre that can neither be classified nor cloned. Songs such
as “…But No One Cares,” “To Die For (…Your Sins),” “Nowhere To
Hide” (which blends in with the previous track incredibly well) and
“Live Everyday” show the great potential that Squealer has.

Yet there is a tentativeness about their music which I just
can’t shake. It’s almost as if they are still building up their
confidence, and it wasn’t quite near full throttle when they wrote
and recorded
The Prophecy. Still, there’s enough I hear in this disc to
suggest that this is only a hint of things to come.

The Prophecy is a disc which defies categorization… and
may be a hit-or-miss effort with metal fans who might not know just
what to do with this disc. It’s worth picking up and checking
out… but I’m more interested in seeing what is going to come next
from this band.

Rating: B-

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