Pentagram – Lightning in a Bottle
Pentagram – Lightning in a Bottle
Heavy Psych Sounds Records
Release date: 31/01/2025
Review by: Alun Jones
8.75/10
Pentagram are a band that refuse to die. With roots going back some fifty years, and every kind of catastrophe from band splits, arrests, and hard drug addiction, it’s some feat that we’re here to discuss a new album at all. Like a bizarre hybrid of 80s slasher movie antagonists, Pentagram keep coming back to life. Now, with “Lightning in a Bottle”, the band are back: the life support has been thrown on, this time by mad scientists Heavy Psych Sounds.
The band’s only constant member is founder/frontman/vocalist Bobby Liebling, a complex and controversial character. On this excursion, he’s joined by a new bunch of musicians who are venturing to keep the name and legacy of Pentagram alive. Tony Reed is on guitar and production duties, Henry Vasquez on drums and Scooter Haslip handles bass. All three have sturdy pedigrees earned from other bands, and their contributions here make them light years past being mere hired hands.
Liebling’s story is both chaotic and scandalous, but this isn’t the time or place to cast stones. Interestingly, on the track ‘Lady Heroin’, the singer explores the theme of his addiction in a mournful, self-torturing manner. There’s no bravado here, with Liebling openly pondering on the destruction that addiction has wrought. Musically, the song marries a solid riff with a forlorn middle section.
‘I’ll Certainly See You in Hell’ follows this track, with a strutting pace and Liebling wailing like a deranged preacher. After that we get ‘Thundercrest’ with its ruthless, pounding riff – forming a triumvirate of the best songs in the middle of the album. Not that the rest of “Lightning…” is lacking: whether its aptly titled opener ‘Live Again’ with its head nodding urgency or the crawling doom fest of ‘Walk the Sociopath’, Pentagram have all bases covered.
The biggest fear was always going to be Pentagram pissing on their legacy. They are, after all, one of the great Doom Metal bands that are responsible for the development of the sub-genre. Absolutely no fear of that here, though: “Lightning in a Bottle” sees this version of Pentagram releasing a reassuringly strong album. The musical reputation of Pentagram continues to thrive.
TRACKLISTING:
01. Live Again
02. In The Panic Room
03. I Spoke To Death
04. Dull Pain
05. Lady Heroin
06. I’ll Certainly See You In Hell
07. Thundercrest
08. Solve The Puzzle
09. Spread Your Wings
10. Lightning In A Bottle
11. Walk The Sociopath
12. Start The End (bonus track)
13. Might Just Wanna Be Your Fool (Bonus Track)
14. Lady Heroin (Bonus Track – rough mix)
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