The Bastard must contain 1001 riffs. Each one fine tuned to near-perfection. Tremelo speed picking, stomping riffs, downtuned doom structures, folk medleys. The whole celtic/folk feel to it is excellent , what with the soft female vox, Scalzi's 'low brow' vocals, and Cobbet's harsh screams throw together.
Remember - it's a concept album, so each singer (voice) represents a different character, or group of characters. Listen carefully to track 1 with the clean female vox singing over blastbeats, and underlying that are the gr1m screams coming out the woodland....it's such a nice touch, but it really requires close listening to pick out all these nuance -- this applies throughout the album.
I've said it before and I'll say it again, "You should have slain me" is a masterpiece all unto itself.
But yeah, it took AGES to really fall in love with The Bastard, whereas The August Engine was a lot more immediate. It won't hit you in one listen - no classic ever does. There are many, many more subtleties to The Bastard - A tale told in Three Acts than there are in 99% of the albums I own.
Great artwork, fantastic lyrics (really quite profound when you read between the lines), simple production across two 24 track tapes....man, this has it all.
10/10!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Coming soon to a theater near you.
See review for further details:
http://www.royalcarnage.com/Reviews/jaykeeley/hammers of misfortune/bastard_rev.htm