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Royal Blood

Royal Blood in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $15.99
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Size: CD
The bludgeoning opener to
Royal Blood
's self-titled debut, "Out of the Black" is a riff-fueled onslaught that belies their two-piece status; with just a heavily processed bass guitar and a drum set between them, they make some four-piece rock bands look inconsequential. Their bustling career started just 24 hours after drummer
Ben Thatcher
picked up vocalist/bassist
Mike Kerr
after he touched down from a trip to Australia with a show in their hometown in Brighton, and they didn't look back. In roughly a year together
have learned quickly, and tour dates and the early support of
Arctic Monkeys
-- who themselves were thrust quickly into the limelight -- influenced tracks such as "Blood Hands," which has all the cocksure swagger of the Sheffield outfit. Combining crushing drums and
Kerr
's hybrid bass setup -- which is ingeniously split through both a bass amp and a guitar amp, with pitch-shifters, modulation, and heavy distortion bolstering the rugged sound -- the duo draws immediate comparisons to luminaries
the White Stripes
, with "Loose Change" bearing significant familiarity, while there are nods at various times to
Muse
and
Two Gallants
as
pummel their way through "Figure It Out." When
Thatcher
aren't pounding their instruments hard, the limitations to their sparse setup does leave songs feeling a little flat, with "You Can Be So Cruel" and "Ten Tonne Skeleton" suffering slightly to fill the dynamics, but at the same time strains of early
Queens of the Stone Age
creep into the rolling guitar riffs and
's voice is stretched to its limits. However, it's not all guitars and drums, and singles "Little Monster" and "Come on Over" illustrate their aptitude for well-crafted structures and melodies, and the moody delivery of
's wholehearted vocals is prominent in the radio-friendly mix. The whirlwind year that took the duo from obscurity to 2013's Glastonbury Festival is akin to the full-throttle rock music
create, and there is little time for respite during their breezy debut album that bridges the gap between heavy-hitting rock and digestible pop/rock. ~ Scott Kerr
Royal Blood
's self-titled debut, "Out of the Black" is a riff-fueled onslaught that belies their two-piece status; with just a heavily processed bass guitar and a drum set between them, they make some four-piece rock bands look inconsequential. Their bustling career started just 24 hours after drummer
Ben Thatcher
picked up vocalist/bassist
Mike Kerr
after he touched down from a trip to Australia with a show in their hometown in Brighton, and they didn't look back. In roughly a year together
have learned quickly, and tour dates and the early support of
Arctic Monkeys
-- who themselves were thrust quickly into the limelight -- influenced tracks such as "Blood Hands," which has all the cocksure swagger of the Sheffield outfit. Combining crushing drums and
Kerr
's hybrid bass setup -- which is ingeniously split through both a bass amp and a guitar amp, with pitch-shifters, modulation, and heavy distortion bolstering the rugged sound -- the duo draws immediate comparisons to luminaries
the White Stripes
, with "Loose Change" bearing significant familiarity, while there are nods at various times to
Muse
and
Two Gallants
as
pummel their way through "Figure It Out." When
Thatcher
aren't pounding their instruments hard, the limitations to their sparse setup does leave songs feeling a little flat, with "You Can Be So Cruel" and "Ten Tonne Skeleton" suffering slightly to fill the dynamics, but at the same time strains of early
Queens of the Stone Age
creep into the rolling guitar riffs and
's voice is stretched to its limits. However, it's not all guitars and drums, and singles "Little Monster" and "Come on Over" illustrate their aptitude for well-crafted structures and melodies, and the moody delivery of
's wholehearted vocals is prominent in the radio-friendly mix. The whirlwind year that took the duo from obscurity to 2013's Glastonbury Festival is akin to the full-throttle rock music
create, and there is little time for respite during their breezy debut album that bridges the gap between heavy-hitting rock and digestible pop/rock. ~ Scott Kerr