Qobuz Store wallpaper
Categories:
Cart 0

Your cart is empty

Graveyard|Graveyard

Graveyard

Graveyard

Digital booklet

Available in
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo

Unlimited Streaming

Listen to this album in high quality now on our apps

Start my trial period and start listening to this album

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Subscribe

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Digital Download

Purchase and download this album in a wide variety of formats depending on your needs.

Under normal circumstances, some of the modern heavy rock bands owing their entire musical blueprint to early-'70s dinosaurs like Black Sabbath and Pentagram could very well be forgiven for recycling someone else's ideas because the statute of limitations for prosecuting them, so to speak, expired long ago. But in the specific case of Gothenburg, Sweden's Graveyard, similar accusations may prove a little more difficult to avoid, since they obviously follow in the footsteps not only of those aforementioned '70s groups but also those of their much more recent and similarly retro-obsessed countrymen, Witchcraft. Of course good music will always cure what ails you (well, unless what ails you are lawsuits), and, to that point, although they're as derivative as the day is long in the middle of a Scandinavian summer, Graveyard display a natural instinct and élan for dissecting and rebuilding their heroes' works -- arguably with greater consistency than Witchcraft's debut, at least. And Graveyard's music does differ from that of their compatriots in small but discernible ways, especially by not being as leaden and doomy in general, but rather infused with a certain bluesy, post-psych swing. These traits, when topped with a nice, sticky frosting of distortion, breed instantly memorable riffs into hard-driving proto-metal nuggets like "Evil Ways," "Don't Take Us for Fools," and "Submarine Blues" (all of them very indebted to the aforementioned Pentagram); and when scaled back for a more blissful, psychedelic vibe, they yield memorable, stoned out contemplations like "Right Is Wrong" and "Blue Soul." Both of these personas converge on the near perfect "Blue Soul," which has pretty much everything going for it: staccato riffs, undulating grooves, and a fluidly bluesy guitar solo coda ("Thin Line," meanwhile, is another valiant try for balance that isn't quite as successful). But Graveyard's focus also falters every now and then, and most obviously during the Captain Beyond-esque "As the Years Pass By, The Hours Bend," where their acid trip goes awry midway through, and the closing "Satan's Finest," which may be fundamentally sound of music, but feels forced and gratuitous of lyric (who knew too much Satan could be a bad thing?). Nevertheless and all things considered, Graveyard's debut is as solid as it is entertaining -- even after one detracts a few points from the band for their borrowing ways.

© Eduardo Rivadavia /TiVo

More info

Graveyard

Graveyard

launch qobuz app I already downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS Open

download qobuz app I have not downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS yet Download the Qobuz app

You are currently listening to samples.

Listen to over 100 million songs with an unlimited streaming plan.

Listen to this playlist and more than 100 million songs with our unlimited streaming plans.

From 12,49€/month

1
Evil Ways
00:03:27

Joakim Nilsson, Composer, Author - Graveyard, Artist, MainArtist - Axel Sjöberg, Composer, Author - Rikard Edlund, Composer, Author - Jonathan Ramm, Composer, Author

2011 Nuclear Blast 2011 Nuclear Blast

2
Thin Line
00:05:24

Joakim Nilsson, Composer, Author - Graveyard, Artist, MainArtist - Axel Sjöberg, Composer, Author - Rikard Edlund, Composer, Author - Jonathan Ramm, Composer, Author

2011 Nuclear Blast 2011 Nuclear Blast

3
Lost in Confusion
00:03:23

Joakim Nilsson, Composer, Author - Graveyard, Artist, MainArtist - Axel Sjöberg, Composer, Author - Rikard Edlund, Composer, Author - Jonathan Ramm, Composer, Author

2011 Nuclear Blast 2011 Nuclear Blast

4
Don't Take Us for Fools
00:04:01

Joakim Nilsson, Composer, Author - Graveyard, Artist, MainArtist - Axel Sjöberg, Composer, Author - Rikard Edlund, Composer, Author - Jonathan Ramm, Composer, Author

2011 Nuclear Blast 2011 Nuclear Blast

5
Blue Soul
00:06:16

Joakim Nilsson, Composer, Author - Graveyard, Artist, MainArtist - Axel Sjöberg, Composer, Author - Rikard Edlund, Composer, Author - Jonathan Ramm, Composer, Author

2011 Nuclear Blast 2011 Nuclear Blast

6
Submarine Blues
00:02:24

Joakim Nilsson, Composer, Author - Graveyard, Artist, MainArtist - Axel Sjöberg, Composer, Author - Rikard Edlund, Composer, Author - Jonathan Ramm, Composer, Author

2011 Nuclear Blast 2011 Nuclear Blast

7
As the Years Pass By
00:04:40

Joakim Nilsson, Composer, Author - Graveyard, Artist, MainArtist - Axel Sjöberg, Composer, Author - Rikard Edlund, Composer, Author - Jonathan Ramm, Composer, Author

2011 Nuclear Blast 2011 Nuclear Blast

8
Right Is Wrong
00:04:26

Joakim Nilsson, Composer, Author - Graveyard, Artist, MainArtist - Axel Sjöberg, Composer, Author - Rikard Edlund, Composer, Author - Jonathan Ramm, Composer, Author

2011 Nuclear Blast 2011 Nuclear Blast

9
Satan's Finest
00:05:32

Joakim Nilsson, Composer, Author - Graveyard, Artist, MainArtist - Axel Sjöberg, Composer, Author - Rikard Edlund, Composer, Author - Jonathan Ramm, Composer, Author

2011 Nuclear Blast 2011 Nuclear Blast

Albumbeschreibung

Under normal circumstances, some of the modern heavy rock bands owing their entire musical blueprint to early-'70s dinosaurs like Black Sabbath and Pentagram could very well be forgiven for recycling someone else's ideas because the statute of limitations for prosecuting them, so to speak, expired long ago. But in the specific case of Gothenburg, Sweden's Graveyard, similar accusations may prove a little more difficult to avoid, since they obviously follow in the footsteps not only of those aforementioned '70s groups but also those of their much more recent and similarly retro-obsessed countrymen, Witchcraft. Of course good music will always cure what ails you (well, unless what ails you are lawsuits), and, to that point, although they're as derivative as the day is long in the middle of a Scandinavian summer, Graveyard display a natural instinct and élan for dissecting and rebuilding their heroes' works -- arguably with greater consistency than Witchcraft's debut, at least. And Graveyard's music does differ from that of their compatriots in small but discernible ways, especially by not being as leaden and doomy in general, but rather infused with a certain bluesy, post-psych swing. These traits, when topped with a nice, sticky frosting of distortion, breed instantly memorable riffs into hard-driving proto-metal nuggets like "Evil Ways," "Don't Take Us for Fools," and "Submarine Blues" (all of them very indebted to the aforementioned Pentagram); and when scaled back for a more blissful, psychedelic vibe, they yield memorable, stoned out contemplations like "Right Is Wrong" and "Blue Soul." Both of these personas converge on the near perfect "Blue Soul," which has pretty much everything going for it: staccato riffs, undulating grooves, and a fluidly bluesy guitar solo coda ("Thin Line," meanwhile, is another valiant try for balance that isn't quite as successful). But Graveyard's focus also falters every now and then, and most obviously during the Captain Beyond-esque "As the Years Pass By, The Hours Bend," where their acid trip goes awry midway through, and the closing "Satan's Finest," which may be fundamentally sound of music, but feels forced and gratuitous of lyric (who knew too much Satan could be a bad thing?). Nevertheless and all things considered, Graveyard's debut is as solid as it is entertaining -- even after one detracts a few points from the band for their borrowing ways.

© Eduardo Rivadavia /TiVo

About the album

Improve album information

Qobuz logo Why buy on Qobuz...

On sale now...

The Studio Albums 2009 – 2018

Mark Knopfler

Tutu

Miles Davis

Tutu Miles Davis

Your Mother Should Know: Brad Mehldau Plays The Beatles

Brad Mehldau

Live 1978 - 1992

Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992 Dire Straits
More on Qobuz
By Graveyard

Innocence & Decadence

Graveyard

Lights Out

Graveyard

Lights Out Graveyard

Peace

Graveyard

Peace Graveyard

Hisingen Blues

Graveyard

Hisingen Blues Graveyard

6

Graveyard

6 Graveyard

Playlists

You may also like...

i/o

Peter Gabriel

i/o Peter Gabriel

Money For Nothing

Dire Straits

Money For Nothing Dire Straits

Now And Then

The Beatles

Now And Then The Beatles

Rumours

Fleetwood Mac

Rumours Fleetwood Mac

Dark Matter

Pearl Jam

Dark Matter Pearl Jam