Scale the Summit
V


3.6
great

Review

by Thompson D. Gerhart STAFF
September 27th, 2015 | 57 replies


Release Date: 2015 | Tracklist

Review Summary: While solid at a level that few bands ever achieve, it's difficult to shake the feeling of wanting something more from V.

Some small part of me is starting to wonder if Scale the Summit is running low on steam. It's definitely not for lack of effort or talent - both are present in no small supply on the simplistically titled V. But it's an album that feels a little too familiar. More than a handful of themes and hooks hearken back to previous albums, while the striking edge of aggression that possesses most of the album makes it feel as though the band are re-imagining their debut, Monument, with the benefit of experience. Whether or not that's a good thing is really up to you, the listener, and what you're listening to this album for.

Are you familiar with Scale the Summit? You're likely to find anything and everything that could conceivably be called a hallmark of the band on this album. Sweeping guitar solos? Check. Open soundscapes? Check. Provocatively somber tapping passages? Check. Some of the best rhythm and low-end instrumental prog has to offer? You'd better believe that's a check. The razor edge and speed of Monument, as mentioned before, makes a bold return to the band's sound as well, marking the biggest "change" in sound for the band since The Collective dimmed the sun on the mostly bright atmosphere of Carving Desert Canyons.

Speaking of which, Carving Desert Canyons has likely been the band's least homogeneous album to this point in terms of mixing and combining the elements that make Scale the Summit the band that they are. And V easily snatches that label from the sophomore outing. So do you prefer a mixed offering of airy and aggressive; upbeat and a little gloomy? Then V will fulfill your appetite. But if you're looking for the masterful cohesion of The Collective, you'll be at least slightly disappointed.

Are you listening for the tone of lushness fellow Sputnik reviewer Jacob Royal once so aptly used to describe the band on The Migration? You'll find it dialed back here to meet with the sharp bent of aggression. Lushness and aggression, like a rain forest canopy and a team of bulldozers, seem destined to be at odds with one another, though Scale the Summit do a commendable job of bringing the two together on tunes like "Soria Moria" and "Pontus Euxinus." Tracks where it's more chainsaw and less dense forestry? "Trapped in Ice" and "The Isle Of Mull," to name a few.

Now here's where things get tricky. On a band's fifth outing, do you look to hear something new and refreshing, or something well-known and well-developed? There's no questioning that Scale the Summit are great musicians. Every composition on V is technically and musically solid. They all pass the groove and headbang tests. By every ostensible measure, V and every track on it is a great, even superb piece of musical work. And genuinely, truly, I enjoy it at this level, the level I've rated it at, and I encourage you to enjoy it at this level too.

But on another level, I have to encourage Scale the Summit to keep pushing. Because at this level, the next level that the band that created The Collective is capable of, the sound of V is the sound of a band becoming comfortable. The aggressive tone of the album, while initially jarring, does not expand the band's territory beyond any established boundaries. Portions of "Soria Moria" sound much too close to "The Levitated." A rather distinct lick in "The Golden Bird" is taken directly from "The Great Plains" and slowed down. And rather than the reprises these should be, whether for lack of a vocalist to add lyrical refrain to the reprise or not, they feel like genuine oversight.

While solid at a level that few bands, let alone bands sans vocalist, ever achieve, it's difficult to shake the feeling of wanting something more from V. So that nagging little part of me continues to wonder if Scale the Summit are getting to the end of their bag of tricks here. But a wiser part of me knows that the engine of power and invention behind this band is far from done and that there are better days and stronger albums yet to come from them. As for V? Well, in my book, it will remain a solid, if less frequently revisited entry in the band's discography. Nothing more, nothing less.




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user ratings (258)
3.5
great
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lelandbay (3.5)
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Comments:Add a Comment 
AtomicWaste
Moderator
September 27th 2015


2888 Comments

Album Rating: 3.6

Had a hard time articulating this one.

climactic
September 27th 2015


22742 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

great review, rating is what i'm expecting this to be



this band and style in general have grown off me a lot, but i still feel obliged to check out their new stuff when it comes out. there are always some gems

BlacKapes
September 27th 2015


1962 Comments


boring as shit

SmileNerd
September 27th 2015


495 Comments


Great read, I'll check this album out.

CaimanJesus
September 27th 2015


3815 Comments


Great review. Still haven't bought an album by these guys. Where should I start?

AtomicWaste
Moderator
September 27th 2015


2888 Comments

Album Rating: 3.6

Start with Carving Desert Canyons, then listen to The Collective, then The Migration.



If you still like what you're hearing, check Monument, then this, in my opinion.

CaimanJesus
September 27th 2015


3815 Comments


Thanks. Will likely take a few years if I do go all in, because I like to have a physical copy. I liked the 2 tracks that I have heard off of The Migration.

theacademy
Emeritus
September 27th 2015


31865 Comments


yasssss

KILL
September 27th 2015


81580 Comments


boring as shit

Calc
September 27th 2015


17339 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

74k comments jesus christ

Ocean of Noise
September 27th 2015


10970 Comments


how many prog metal bands have albums called V now jesus christ

KILL
September 27th 2015


81580 Comments


no i have 1176 learn to read

beefshoes
September 27th 2015


8443 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Great review.

I am still enjoying this album for the instrumentation alone (especially the bass), but it lacks the passion that Carving Desert Canyons and the Collective have. With the exception of the opener and Stolas, everything just blurs together. I'll probably end up bumping this down too.

jfromnj
September 27th 2015


116 Comments


I loved "The Collective" and don't think they've topped that since. I felt that album was more direct, song-oriented, while still technical. There's a cut/paste element to the past 2 albums, imo. But, I've read reviews discussing the opposite, saying these are more streamlined efforts. For whatever reason, the past 2 just haven't hooked me like "The collective".

AtomicWaste
Moderator
September 27th 2015


2888 Comments

Album Rating: 3.6

beefshoes and jfromnj, I completely agree with you guys.



I was actually re-listening to The Migration in part while I was (finally) writing this last night, though, and re-discovered a love for the songwriting, sound, and cohesion of that album. I think it's easy to forget that one in the shade of The Collective, but it's a really good one. I feel like V is as close as StS get to autopilot, which is still a lot better than the majority of other albums out there.

bloc
September 28th 2015


69987 Comments


I don't really know what else you can expect this band to do. They've essentially been doing the same thing since their first album. Like I could already tell what this album would sound like before listening, and I'm pretty sure any one of us can accurately predict what VI will sound like too. Solid stuff indeed, mind you.

RadicalEd
September 28th 2015


9546 Comments


really boring album. Not gonna rate because I couldn't finish the songs.

Review was a good read though.

dbizzles
September 28th 2015


15193 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

I think this album is pretty good, but it almost all blurs together. The bass tone on one of the tracks annoyed me big time, but there a few songs on here I know I'll have in rotation over the next couple weeks.

jmh886
September 28th 2015


2931 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

it's always so nice to hear the bass in the mix on a metal album. plus he's really good.

dbizzles
September 28th 2015


15193 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

I love me some audible bass, but the tone is bad in that song. Only stuck out in one song, I will figure out which song it is later.



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