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PATRIARCHS IN BLACK Feat. Members Of TYPE O NEGATIVE, HADES Reveal New BLACK SABBATH Cover
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PATRIARCHS IN BLACK Feat. Members Of TYPE O NEGATIVE, HADES Reveal New BLACK SABBATH Cover
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PATRIARCHS IN BLACK Feat. Members Of TYPE O NEGATIVE, HADES Release New Video For âLeft Behindâ
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PATRIARCHS IN BLACK To Release Completely Covered In Black, Ft. Songs By BLACK SABBATH, MOTĂRHEAD, KISS In February
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PATRIARCHS IN BLACK Release âIâm Coming Homeâ Digital Single And Lyric Video
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Patriarchs In Black â Home Review
By Saunders
Random dunks into the promo sump yield a variety of interesting, if uneven results. The element of risk and getting lumped with an unlistenable dud is counteracted by the odd chance of scooping up an unheralded stunner, or the next big thing. New York/New Jersey duo of scene veterans Dan Lorenzo (Hades, Non-Fiction) and Johnny Kelly (Type O Negative, Quiet Riot, Danzig) formed Patriarchs In Black several years back. Despite a relatively short career, the duo, armed with various guest musicians and vocalists, arrive at their fourth album, simply titled Home. Featuring an array of well-known and lesser-known guests, it almost feels like a compilation rather than a traditional album. This is especially evident through the varied musical terrain the seasoned vets traverse, exploring diverse and occasionally questionable musical territory with impressive ambition and a broad sense of adventure. Can this genre-hopping, vocal-swapping fest hit the mark and result in a compelling and cohesive listening experience?
Home is an odd duck album, both adventurous and perplexing. At nearly an hour in length, Patriarchs in Black cram tons of material and excessive ideas into its weighty runtime, featuring a colorful cast of supporting characters, predominantly filling the restlessly shifting vocal duties. Musically, Lorenzo and Kelly boast big match experience and tight, punchy chops as they hyperactively shift between genres. The album fits both comfortably and loosely under the stoner/doom metal banner, yet this label only scratches the surface of the bandâs repertoire. Elements of hard rock, southern rock, blues, nĂŒ, modern alt rock/metal, rap rock, and a swathe of â80s and â90s metal influences, lending retro flavors to the more contemporary and streamlined modern rock and metal tropes. Itâs the old everything but the kitchen sink approach for better and worse.
A snapshot of the guest vocalists finds contributions from Mark Sunshine (Unida, RiotGod), Kyle Thomas (Exhorder, Alabama Thunderpussy), Karl Agell (ex-Corrosion of Conformity, Legions of Doom), Dewey Bragg (Kill Devil Hill), John Kosco (Dropbox) and Rob Traynor (Black Water Rising) amongst others. Sunshineâs impressive pipes feature most prominently, including channeling Axl Rose and Chris Cornell on the sludgy, grungy groove of âBurn Through Time,â while adding some melodramatic theatrics with mixed results on âCelestial Yard.â Opener âHymns for the Hereticâ benefits from the well-worn grit of Kyle Thomasâs vox, pairing with infectiously bluesy, heavy rock-drenched riffage and fat stoner grooves. âThe Callâ keeps momentum rolling, as veteran Agell punches out an inspired performance atop a beefy and melancholic doomy rock base. âStorm Kingâ is another gritty, noteworthy cut, riding some infectious, Clutch-esque grooves, featuring booming riffs and vocal grunt. Shit gets decidedly weirder as the strange journey hits some left-field bumps. âKaosâ livens energy and aggression, throwing down some angsty, goofy vox and meatheaded grooves to jarring, nĂŒ metal-adjacent effect. There are ill-advised, lamely executed rap rock ditties (âWhere You Think Youâre Going,â âReady to Dieâ), and a decent modern blues rock number (âEnough of Youâ) that sounds awkwardly out of place, even by the albumâs haphazard standards.
Throw in a couple of overcooked songs lengthwise, and short, questionable interludes, including the jokey âThe End,â a fittingly silly way to climax the album, and you are left with a unique and strange album. Home has fun elements and a handful of enjoyably groovy tunes and inspired vocal additions. Lorenzo and Kelly are skilled, seasoned musicians, sounding as though they are having loads of fun across intersecting and occasionally disparate genres, excelling most when delivering thick, bluesy stoner doom riffs and swaggering grooves. Unfortunately for all its charms and oddities, Home remains hamstrung by numerous less-than-stellar factors bogging it down. The length and choppy nature of the writing song-to-song makes for an overloaded, inconsistent and messy front-to-back listen. And while never dull, itâs an exhausting listen, marred by sizable missteps and too many clunky moments to overcome.
One of the more intriguing albums Iâve heard in 2025, Home is an odd curiosity that could eventually fit into a time capsule equivalent of â90s Metal Weirdness. While there are solid tunes and cool jams scattered across the album, the pros are dragged down by the cons. Entertaining and confounding in nearly equal measures, Home is hampered by considerable bloat, clunky flow and ill-advised experiments and stylistic decisions, resulting in a curious, if sadly mixed bag collection. Worth a listen to cherry-pick the gems, but prepare yourself for a rocky journey.
Rating: 2.5/5.0
DR: 5 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Metalville
Websites: Bandcamp | Facebook
Releases worldwide: August 15th, 2025
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PATRIARCHS IN BLACK Release âCelestial Yardâ Music Video
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PATRIARCHS IN BLACK To Release Home Album In August; Music Video Posted For First Single âThe Callâ
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Today, doom metallers Patriarchs In Black reveal âThe Call,â the first single from the bandâs fourth album, Home, set for international release on August 15 via Metalville. Dan Lorenzo explains about âThe Callâ: âLast summer, I was driving in my car and a riff popped into my head. I got home and went upstairs to