Haken released
Virus in July 2020 after being forced off the road due to the COVID-19 pandemic. For
Haken it proved especially frustrating, as the unnervingly titled
Virus (recorded before COVID) was a direct conceptual sequel to 2018's
Vector. There was nothing to do but stay home and write. The members of
Haken set parameters for one another as songwriters: Each song was assigned to an animal and reflected the subject's interaction with the human world. Following the departure of keyboardist
Diego Tejeida in 2021,
Haken re-enlisted their original keyboardist
Peter Jones, who had played on demos before leaving for an academic career.
Jones, a restless electronic explorer, and guitarist
Richard Henshall played in
Nova Collective together and released 2017's
Further Side for
Metal Blade.
Jones' adventurous sonic palette adds immeasurably to
Haken's progressive metal approach on
Fauna. He's not as interested in atmospherics as
Tejeida was, he's more directly vamp- and riff-oriented, and loves to experiment with intricate chromatics.
Opener "Taurus" (one of four advance singles) is introduced by weird, clanging synth sounds before the band enters with a monstrous djent riff and shapeshifting rhythms, resulting in a melodic, hooky chorus. "Nightingale" commences with an electric piano before bird song, electronics, and the band enter. Juxtaposing power chords with syncopated time signatures and a jazz-inflected melody, it all commingles in the explosive chorus and a vocal bridge that borrows from
Gentle Giant. "The Alphabet of Me" is a set highlight. One of the most purely progressive tunes in the band's catalog, it offers interlocking harmonics and rhythms in slippery cadences held together by
Ross Jennings' multivalently stacked vocals underscored by a multi-voice choir and synth/guitar interplay in the bridge. The tenderness and wonder expressed in it contrast beautifully with "Beneath the White Rainbow." The latter's polytonal riffs from
Henshall and
Charles Griffiths introduce an angular, almost subliminal melody.
Jones guides drummer
Raymond Hearne and bassist
Conner Green, employing elastic tempos and key changes, syncopated polyrhythmic pulses, and contrasting sonics.
Jennings effortlessly adjusts and resonates with each change in musical direction. While "Lovebite" explores new wave-ish '80s terrain, its interchangeable guitar, keyboard, and vocal hooks extend its reach. At nearly 12 minutes, "Elephants Never Forget" is the set's longest track. It is actually suite-like, stacking cadences, tonalities, modes, textures, and dynamics -- and solo spots -- that flow into and out of one another dreamily. Its staccato vocal sections recall
Gentle Giant's
Free Hand. "Eyes of Ebony" commences as a staccato guitar ballad with both players in intricate, staggered interplay as
Jennings' voice juxtaposes the white rhino's near extinction with the death of
Henshall's father in an extended metaphor. The band stretch the chromatic harmony.
Green's dubby bassline guides the guitarists and
Jones as
Hearne accents, counters, and fills the remaining space.
Fauna is often dazzling in its kaleidoscopic, intricately detailed weave of prog, djent, and metal. The phenomenal easter egg-laden cover art by
Dan Goldsworthy underscores the abundant quality on offer here. ~ Thom Jurek