Alex Haslam: Guitar
Andy Shackleton: Bass
Aaron Hay: Drums
Lancastrian rock apostles Wytch Hazel have been constructing their citadel since 2011, when debut single Give up launched this boldly healthful new voice to the British metallic underground. Since then the quartet have regularly underscored and bolstered a signature sound rooted in heroic days of yore, however finessed to a sublime apex by long-time producer Ed Turner. That sonic alchemy coalesces throughout V: Lamentations, effervescent with much more febrile creativity than earlier masterworks Prelude, II: Sojourn, III: Pentecost and IV: Sacrament. The latter, bizarrely, reached quantity seven on the UK ‘Christian & Gospel’ chart, because of a mis-classification on the UKCC, regardless of promoting sufficient to clinch the primary rock album spot. “Ed is a big a part of what we’re doing,” affirms Wytch Hazel‘s guiding mastermind Colin Hendra. “He’s added so many extra particulars, there’s extra to choose up on a number of listens. Ed’s been key in bringing these songs to life; what he brings to the desk is improbable and distinctive and precisely what we want. Ed finishes my musical sentences along with his manufacturing“.
Nevertheless, working remotely with this enigmatic taskmaster (“The epitome of eccentric,” laughs Colin) – and the obsessive perfectionism that each Colin and Ed deliver to their work – made for an much more painfully fraught recording course of than final time. Colin reveals he had practically all of this album written when Sacrament emerged in 2023: “So why has it taken so lengthy?!” he groans, with a pissed off despair that he can solely now begin to snort at. “I principally am simply bodily and mentally damaged by the entire thing. I even have well being points now; I had power exhaustion that I’m working by means of. It’s getting higher, however there may be that query: is that this value it? The infinite pursuit of perfection isn’t completed, it’s a really painful course of, however now it’s previous the end line I really feel such reduction, like an enormous weight has been lifted.”
Fortunately, accumulating materials isn’t an issue. From heartfelt, shimmering headbangers like I Lament, Run The Race and Components, to the richly textured, pensive atmospheres of The Citadel, Woven and Heavy Load, nice songs come to Colin naturally and abundantly, as if divinely bestowed from some otherworldly wellspring. “I’ll sit there and assume, ‘The place did that come from?!’ It’s one of the best feeling on the planet,” enthuses Colin. “This factor was simply born – what did I do? I didn’t strive, it simply occurred, like I’m a conduit for this non secular, magical factor. I’m certain there may be some ability concerned, however I can’t put my finger on what! I’m sitting there shifting my fingers round after which a tune seems, it’s so bizarre and magical and particular. I can’t cease doing it both, the songwriting is compulsive. I can’t get sufficient of it, I adore it!“
As ever, Colin’s songwriting resounds with open-hearted emotional pressure, evoking pleasure and sorrow usually in the identical melody. A metallic frontman of uncommon sensitivity, Colin has pushed himself to breaking level for his artwork. Opener I Lament was the final tune to be written, and regardless of its Maidenesque jubilance, the lyrics got here at a low level: “I used to be in a spot the place I used to be like, if I proceed with these patterns of behaviour, the place does this really lead me? It’s much more sincere songwriting, very reflective of the place I’ve been for the previous few years: a extra introspective, doubting, darker place. However I really feel like I’ve had a really important non secular shift over the previous few weeks. I used to be nonetheless coping with power exhaustion and melancholy, however I really feel I’ve made quite a lot of progress bodily, spiritually and mentally, so I’m viewing the album differently now.”
Wytch Hazel‘s beguiling juxtaposition of sorrow and pleasure is most profoundly evident on the closing partnership of Heavy Load and Therapeutic Energy, the world-weary, Sabbath-like dejection of the previous giving option to the latter’s heavenly uplift. “I needed it to have a cheerful ending, that simply felt very Wytch Hazel,” affirms Colin. “I do consider music can heal. For me significantly songwriting may be very therapeutic, I don’t assume I’d be right here if there wasn’t that outlet. I consider issues have meanings and significance, I would like my life to have that, and Therapeutic Energy is like, this really means one thing. Music isn’t only a self-indulgent, leisure factor, for me it’s an enormous a part of my life, very particular, very magical and really significant. I would like Wytch Hazel to be a pressure for good, a therapeutic energy“.
Serving to in that regard is the brand new line-up, welcoming again authentic drummer Aaron Hay, who was there on Wytch Hazel‘s debut single in 2011 and 2012′s The Fact EP, alongside well-established oppos Alex Haslam and Andy Shackleton. “The band we’ve received in the mean time is simply one of the best bunch of lads,” beams Colin, “we’re having one of the best time touring collectively, we get on so properly. The gigs have been an actual spotlight these previous couple of years, and experiencing that as finest mates collectively has been improbable.” It’ll get even higher in Could, as Wytch Hazel are supporting Michael Schenker on the guitar legend’s My Years With UFO UK tour (“I can’t give it some thought for too lengthy, he’s like a childhood hero,” confesses Colin). “I’m extremely privileged. In opposition to all this painful stuff, I do have to carry in equal measure the great journey that it’s to be on this band. There’s a lot to be glad about, too many issues to rely“.