The Slow Poisoner, Magic Casket
There’s a part of me that really, really wants to hate The Slow Poisoner’s Magic Casket. I’ve never been big on the whole horror schtick — the goofy, faux-serious Gothic lyrics, “creepy” vocals, and cheeseball B-movie samples, it always, always, always rubs me the wrong way.
I could never wrap my head around Goth in general, and bands that take mediocre rock and try to make it more entertaining by throwing all the horror-movie clichés at it just piss me off, mostly because they never succeed at camouflaging how crappy their songs actually are. I can see right through it, no problem.
And when The Slow Poisoner (aka one-man-band Andrew Goldfarb) starts off with the desperately weird-for-weird’s-sake spoken intro to “From the River Bottom,” all about how man should evolve back to being aquatic — because, um, it’s just better, I guess? — I cringe and shake my head, ready to dismiss the whole damn thing.
Luckily for Goldfarb, my reactionary sneer starts to fade as soon as the title track hits; against all odds, the man knows how to write a song. For once, the “creatures of the night” patina isn’t trying to cover up the flaws, but rather just serves to make the darned decent music beneath actually better.
I never thought I’d see the day, honestly, but there it is — I’m seriously liking Casket, especially the murky “Le Grand Zombi,” half-hysterical “The Shriek” (which does indeed feature a very nicely-done shriek), and the faux-gospel of “Thundering Fists o’ the Lord.” Then there’s the boogie-woogie cover of “Swamp Gal,” originally by Tommy Bell, and a fiery rendition of “See That My Grave Is Kept Clean,” which sounds less like a plea and more like a threat.
By the end of it, okay, I’m liking the heck out of this. I can’t claim I’ll be listening to it every day, mind you, but Halloween’s not that far off, and this’d do quite nicely to get me in the holiday spirit…
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