Doleful Lions - 7
ALL
MUSIC GUIDE: "The Scott brothers sound
re-energized by their new musical shift; the genuinely lovely
waltz "White Lotus Day" is one of the Doleful Lions'
finest, sounding like a collaboration between a particularly
stoned Brian Wilson circa Friends and early 20th century mentalist
Edgar Cayce. It will do little to assuage those who suspect
Jonathan Scott has become the post-millennial Roky Erickson,
but 7 shows that the Doleful Lions are still capable of surprise."
After clearing the vaults with their previous album, Song
Cyclops Volume Two, Doleful Lions return with a new lineup,
direction, and wisdom. Their new album 7 represents the next
step in the evolution of Doleful Lions, marrying their keen,
classic pop sensibilities with an adventurous new sound. The
usual folksy guitar strummings of their previous releases
have been replaced with an eclectic mix of electronics, epic
song structures and a focused lyrical intensity. Instead of
striving for uniformity, 7 allows the Lions to give each song
its own unique sound. “Magic Without Tears” plays
like an Aleister Crowley fronted New Order. “Don’t
Ever Hide Your Enchantment” is a fuzzed-out Michael
Jackson track. “Winfield Walker” is champagne
jam featuring a coked-out Giorgio Moroder producing the Flaming
Lips. These pop masterpieces sit next to moody instrumentals
like “Screams in the House of the Deranged” and
mid-tempo burners like “Hazlehurst.” After the
limited palettes of their previous albums, Doleful Lions have
used 7 to explore new sonic horizons.
Lyrically,
much has changed in Jonathan’s worldview, but like the
Voltron head, he’s still always on point. Having abandoned
the monster movie motifs of The Rats are Coming! The Werewolves
are Here! and the traditional spirituality of Out Like a Lamb,
the Lions have embraced the occult as defined by the teachings
of Theosophy and Freemasonry. “The Luminous Sons of
the Manvantaric Dawn” describes the origins of the universe
as taught in Stanzas of Dzyan, an ancient tome popularized
by H.P. Blavatsky in The Secret Doctrine. “Here Come
the Star Nations” expresses a true desire for the long-awaited
harmonic convergence promised by humanity’s first contact
with an extraterrestrial intelligence.
7
is a truly adventurous album in all regards; an album that
has ventured further beyond any music created by the Doleful
Lions in the past. It is their spiritual manifesto demanding
a world filled with love for one another and the acceptance
of all religions as the one true religion. It is a message
that is needed now more than ever.
Doleful Lions Parasol
Dioscography

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