Pallbearer

Foundations of Burden (Profound Lore)

Dinosaur doom needn’t sound the same all day, every day. Pallbearer gets this, calmly demonstrating its slow, mournful mastery on second slab Foundations of Burden. The Little Rock, Ark., quartet avoids the sinister reverberation of Black Sabbath and progeny, instead trucking in melancholic self-absorption, majestic tunesmithery, and guitar tones baked hot and fresh. “Watcher in the Dark” evokes the vast mysteries of space and time through a melody by turns somber and soaring, while “The Ghost I Used to Be” surrounds its solipsism with lush heaviness. “Vanished” dives stark naked into the epic prog pool. Brett Campbell and Devin Holt weave woolen tapestries of guitar licks as bassist Joseph D. Rowland and drummer Mark Lierly never stoop to mere thud. Campbell’s croon lends unquestioned conviction to even the daftest lyrics he and Rowland concoct. The dolorous gloom of Foundations of Burden should be oppressive, but Pallbearer turns pain into beauty. ****

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Michael Toland started writing about music in 1988 on the Gulf Coast, moved to Austin in early 1991, and has inflicted bylines upon the corporeal and digital pages of Pop Culture Press, The Big Takeover, Blurt, Amplifier, Austin.citysearch, the Austin American Statesman, Goldmine, Sleazegrinder, Rock & Roll Globe, High Bias, FHT Music Notes, and, since 2011, The Austin Chronicle.