Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Target Earth (album)

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Released
  
January 22, 2013

Producer
  
Voivod

Artist
  
Voivod

Label
  
Century Media

Length
  
56:35

Target Earth (2013)
  
Post Society (2016)

Release date
  
22 January 2013

Target Earth (album) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumbc

Recorded
  
2010-2012 at Wild Studio, Saint-Zénon, Quebec, Canada

Genres
  
Thrash metal, Progressive metal

Similar
  
Voivod albums, Thrash metal albums

Voivod target earth full album


Target Earth is the sixteenth album, and the thirteenth studio album by the Canadian heavy metal band Voivod, which was released on January 22, 2013. This is the first Voivod studio album to feature Daniel Mongrain on guitar (replacing the late Denis D'Amour) and the only one since 1991's Angel Rat with Jean-Yves Thériault on bass.

Contents

Voivod target earth official video


Background

After the 2005 death of Denis "Piggy" D'Amour, Voivod created two albums to realize the song ideas that he had left behind. With that material having been transformed into songs (as heard on Katorz and Infini), Voivod did not know what its future would involve. However, the band eventually decided to continue provided that the band, according to Michel "Away" Langevin, could "preserve the Voivod essence" and keep "Piggy's spirit intact."

The main songwriters on Target Earth were Jean-Yves "Blacky" Theriault, in his first songwriting credit with Voivod since 1991, and Daniel "Chewy" Mongrain, who replaced Piggy. As Langevin explained, Mongrain's role was both challenging and natural: "He [Mongrain] had to think from his point of view how Voivod should sound like nowadays...He learned to play guitar listening to Voivod, and he knows all the albums, he's a fan of all the eras, so it feels very natural for him to write Voivodian material."

Mongrain, a long-time fan of Voivod, was openly reverent about the role that he would play in succeeding Piggy as the guitarist for the band.

I started off thinking 'What would Piggy do with this part?' or 'What would Piggy write?' and I ultimately let go of that and let the essence of Voivod take over. At the beginning I was pretty stressed but after a while, it came very naturally for me. Voivod's been my favorite band since I was 11 years old. I've listened to them more than any other band in my life! I realized I don't want to copy Piggy. Piggy's unique. He's a unique musician. A unique human being. Piggy was a genius. I cannot be Piggy, I can only be the Voivod fan I am doing my best to write Voivod music that I can. This is what Voivod sounds like from my perspective of what I think a new Voivod album could and should sound like.

Part of realizing that distinctive sound involved breaking down Piggy's approach into its constituent elements, according to Mongrain. Mongrain specifically referenced the signature chords of King Crimson as giving Voivod its "color". "Piggy was a big progressive music fan," Mongrain said. "These chords are the most dissonant you can get and in Voivod, Piggy would throw them everywhere. It has that crazy, chaotic, end-of-the-world, post-nuclear vibe that's really associated with Voivod now." Langevin also specifically references the "progressive thrash metal" sound of Target Earth, which he contrasts to the "stoner-punk-metal" approach of the previous three albums that Voivod completed with bassist Jason Newsted.

Reception

Target Earth has received generally positive reviews, including a metascore of 84/100 on Metacritic based on 7 critics.

Allmusic proclaimed that "older fans can breathe a sigh of relief: Target Earth is not only better than we had any right to expect, it's relentlessly creative, inspired, and manic." Exclaim praised Dan Mongrain's ability to play in Piggy's style without being merely imitative and noted that fears that Voivod would be unable to recapture the classic magic were "shattered within moments of the title track." Popmatters opined that, "were it not for the modern production you would be led to believe Target Earth is the natural successor to Nothingface in terms of being more rhythmically complex, forceful and lively than Voïvod have sounded in an age."

However, The Quietus criticized the album for failing to connect with the listener, speculating that fans of War and Pain and Killing Technology "may find Target Earth laborious, even alienating in its prog meanderings and long running time."

Track listing

All lyrics written by Denis Bélanger; all music composed by Voivod.

Voivod

  • Denis Bélanger (Snake) – vocals
  • Daniel Mongrain (Chewy) – guitar
  • Jean-Yves Thériault (Blacky) – bass
  • Michel Langevin (Away) – drums
  • Production

  • Produced by Voivod
  • Mixed by Sanford Parker
  • Recorded by Pierre Rémillard and Jean-Yves Thériault (Blacky)
  • Mastered by Colin Jordan
  • Artwork by Michel Langevin (Away)
  • Songs

    1Target Earth6:05
    2Kluskap O'Kom4:24
    3Empathy for the Enemy5:46

    References

    Target Earth (album) Wikipedia