ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

‘Used Future’: The Shackles Were Off For The Sword’s Sixth Album

‘Used Future,’ The Sword’s sixth album, was dystopian in vision and wide-ranging in scope, setting the group on a brand new trajectory.

Published on

The Sword Used Future album cover
Cover: Courtesy of Concord Music

Austin, Texas, quartet The Sword have been chained to the doom metal tag by critics in the past, but the shackles were well and truly off for their sublime sixth album, Used Future.

Rush 50 Anthology
Rush 50 Anthology
Rush 50 Anthology

Listen to Used Future on Apple Music and Spotify.

Led by guitarist/vocalist and primary songwriter John Cronise, the band’s mission statement has been to “cut out boundaries since day one.” They’ve never concealed their love of pioneering metal forbears such as Black Sabbath and Blue Cheer, yet they significantly broadened their palette on 2015’s High Country: a record which placed a far greater emphasis on keyboards and vocal harmonies, and even found The Sword eschewing some of their trademark downtuned guitars.

Not that their desire to stretch blunted The Sword’s edge. Indeed, after the brief, scene-setting “Prelude,” Used Future kicks off purposefully with “Deadly Nightshade.” A menacing ode to arcane poisoning methods, built around looming riffs and Bryan Richie’s fuzzy, Geezer Butler-esque bass motifs, it’s the first of a generous spread of sterling old-skool hard rockers also including “Book Of Thoth” and the dynamic “Twilight Sunrise,” which is redolent of the Dio-helmed Sabbath.

Elsewhere, the confident Texan combo gamely pursue their muse wherever it decides to roam. Lyrically, both the cautionary “Don’t Get Too Comfortable” and the technological overload envisaged by the album’s titular song (“Robots riddled with rust, circuits gathering dust”) reflect a dread-fuelled, dystopian modern world, yet the former wallows in an irresistibly swampy groove and the album’s title track bowls along with the infectious economy of Free at their most imperious. The band’s native Lone Star state, meanwhile, looms large over “Sea Of Green,” wherein a plangent, semi-acoustic intro gradually morphs into a sturdy, ZZ Top-esque workout.

The Sword - Twilight Sunrise (Official Lyric Video)

Click to load video

As they did with High Country, The Sword again effectively temper Used Future’s best tracks with impressive vocal harmonies, and they also strategically deploy synthesizers on “Twilight Sunrise” and the record’s all-instrumental twin peaks, “The Wild Sky” and the grandiose, “Kashmir”-esque “Brown Mountain.” Cronise and company’s evocative catalogue has previously earned them high-profile syncs in movies such as Jennifer’s Body and Jonas Åkerlund’s Horsemen, and it would be surprising if at least one discerning director doesn’t pick up on Used Future’s “Nocturne”: a slice of film noir-esque chill reminiscent of early 80s Tangerine Dream, which underlines the fact that these guys have far more to offer than simple brute force and metallic KO.

Having risen to challenges ranging from sharing stages with metal titans Metallica and Opeth, through to cutting acoustic versions of their High Country songs, it seems there’s little The Sword can’t achieve. With Used Future they again fashioned a record imbued with steel and subtlety which anticipates tomorrow’s landscape, yet sounds utterly thrilling today.

Used Future can be bought here.

Click to comment
Comments are temporarily disabled and will return shortly.
Frank Zappa
Frank Zappa
Cheaper Than Cheep
Super Deluxe Edition Box Set
ORDER NOW
ABBA
ABBA
ABBA (50th Anniversary)
Color Vinyl Box Set
ORDER NOW
Mariah Carey
Mariah Carey
The Emancipation of Mimi: 20th Anniversary Edition 5LP Box Set
ORDER NOW
Keyshia Cole
Keyshia Cole
The Way It Is
Limited Edition Rose Garden 2LP
ORDER NOW
Yusuf / Cat Stevens
Yusuf / Cat Stevens
Saturnight (Live in Tokyo)
Limited Edition LP
ORDER NOW
Steely Dan
Steely Dan
The Royal Scam
LP
ORDER NOW
uDiscover Music - Back To Top
uDiscover Music - Back To Top