The
Zakk Wylde-led, heavy riffage machine's tenth full-length, and the follow-up to 2014's well-received
Catacombs of the Black Vatican,
Grimmest Hits is not the cherry-picked best-of that its winking title would suggest. Instead,
Wylde and company have crafted another chugging set of
Sabbath and
Zeppelin-inspired originals that are executed with extreme prejudice. Opener "Trampled Down Below" sneaks in on a wave of bass-anchored sonic mysticism before dropping its payload via a full-court press that sees all four members locking in for a seismic doom blues jamboree with a little post-grunge posturing tossed in for good measure -- vocally,
Wylde is often a dead ringer for late
Alice in Chains frontman
Layne Staley. It's a formula that's applied liberally throughout, but as far as straight-up, in-your-face guitar rock goes, it's hard to argue with the quality of the results, especially on neck-snapping standouts like "Seasons of Falter" and "Room of Nightmares." The classic rock underpinnings that are so prevalent in the heavier tracks also find their way into less decibel-crushing numbers like "The Day That Heaven Had Gone Away," "The Only Words," and "Nothing Left to Say," the latter two of which echo the soulful Southern rock of
the Marshall Tucker and
Allman Brothers bands. ~ James Christopher Monger