OCEANS OF SLUMBER Remake Wicked Game into Dark, Cinematic Coda

OCEANS OF SLUMBER
Remake Wicked Game into Dark, Cinematic Coda

The Houston metal band are performing their upcoming new album at Metal Injection Festival and Mad With Power 
“One of modern metal’s brightest hopes” – Metal Hammer
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Oceans of Slumber – “Wicked Game” (Official Audio) 2024

Since their star turn in 2016, OCEANS OF SLUMBER have included a cover song on all of their albums. As expected for a band that defies any and all conventions, the list of covers spans far beyond the metal realms, ranging from goth to blues rock, baroque pop and classic American folk.

While they always planned on ending their upcoming eighth album with another cover, a last-minute change of heart led Oceans of Slumber to revisit Chris Isaak’s signature sleeper hit. By stripping the song down to its chilling core, the band turned “Wicked Game” into the melancholic end credits score to the dark, cinematic experience of Where Gods Fear to Speak.

Hear Oceans of Slumber cover Chris Isaak’s “Wicked Game”:

https://youtu.be/DhT0hIEEVqA

Where Gods Fear to Speak comes out September 13 on Season of Mist.

Pre-order & Pre-save:

https://orcd.co/oceansofslumberwheregodsfeartospeakalbum

“Wicked Game” was on Oceans of Slumber’s list well before Where Gods Fear to Speak. But when the Houston metal band arrived in Columbia to record their new album with GRAMMY nominee Joel Hamilton, they had already decided on covering the country-meets-Brill Building staple “Crying”. Which would’ve made perfect sense; after all, Roy Orbison was a fellow proud Texan.”I’m sure we’ll cover ‘Crying’ at some point down the line”, says Cammie Beverly. “But in the end, this album called for something more unexpected”.

Oceans of Slumber’s well-laid plan for finishing Where Gods Fear to Speak changed during their last session at Audiovision Studios. Having already recorded for nine and a half hours straight, the band were running out of time and energy. “My voice was so tired”, Cammie reveals. Despite having one of the cleanest and strongest voices in all of metal, Cammie was exhausted from the long day and the pressure that Columbia’s altitude put on her breath control. She was frustrated with not being able to re-record “Poem of Ecstasy” at Audiovision (the version that’s on the album was recorded during the demo sessions).

Unsure how to settle her nerves and disappointment, Cammie consulted her husband and drummer Dobber Beverly about what to do next. Dobber reminder her that they still had the cover song, though he had a new idea for what to do.

“When we were in Columbia, I heard a club remix of ‘Wicked Game’ while out at a restaurant”, Dobber says with a smile. “It was so bad that I needed to go and make things right in my head”. The band didn’t have a moment to spare, either; like all of the songs on Where Gods Fear to Speak, they tracked this cover live, nailing the final take within their very last hour of studio time.

All jokes aside, “Wicked Game” proved to be a match made in heaven with Where Gods Fear to Speak. “We realized that the album needed to end on a note that was still familiar but also a bit unsettling”, Cammie says. Chris Isaak wrote and released “Wicked Game” as a single off his third album in 1989, but the song didn’t climb all the way to #6 on the Billboard Hot 100 until an Atlanta radio host heard it featured in David Lynch’s 1990 romantic crime drama Wild at Heart.

As its spellbinding title track unveiled, Oceans of Slumber still deliver more of the fiery death, doom and black metal that long-time fans have come to expect, but this new album expands their progressive vision to dark, cinematic heights. “We’ve taken the raw and heavier direction of our last two albums and elevated it to the scale of a blockbuster IMAX movie”, says Dobber. “Our cover of ‘Wicked Game’ is the song that plays over the end credits”.

Still, it wouldn’t have been all that surprising if Oceans of Slumber had stuck with the dazed, vaguely tropical vibe that Isaak nailed on the original version of “Wicked Game”. After all, they had just spent two weeks soaking up Bogotá’s sultry, sunny atmosphere. Alex Davis adds a lovely Spanish guitar line, but the band’s chief composer took the out-of-nowhere hit in a bone-chilling direction.

Underground metalheads will always worship him as the drummer for grindcore legends Insect Warfare, but Dobber is also a classically trained pianist who arranged all 10 songs on Where Gods Fear to Speak. In his well-calloused hands, “Wicked Game” proceeds slowly, gracefully, as if welcoming a ghost, which allows Cammie plenty of breathing room. “No, I don’t want to fall in love“, she sings amidst the softest reaches of her upper register. Chris Kritikos joins in on back vocals, recasting the song’s memorable refrain into a haunting coda of the doomed romance at the album’s heart.

“With ‘Wicked Game’, we’re sending the characters off into the sunset with a cliffhanger”, says Cammie and Dobber. “Nobody loves no one”.

Oceans of Slumber – “Where Gods Fear to Speak” (Official Music Video)
Oceans of Slumber – “Poem of Ecstasy” (Official Music Video)

To celebrate the release of Where Gods Fear to Speak, Oceans of Slumber have three special performances planned for later this year.

In August, Oceans of Slumber will battle alongside their new label mates Oak, Ash & Thorn at Madison, Wisconsin’ Mad With Power Festival. The band will then reconvene with producer Joel Hamilton at Studio G Brooklyn, where they’ll treat a small but lucky group of fans to reimagined versions of new and old classics.

“During this exclusive evening at Studio G, we’ll be graced by esteemed guest musicians and a captivating string quartet”, Dobber says. “Each song will be reinvented, breathing new life into the songs our fans cherish”.

Come September, Oceans of Slumber will join forces with fellow Houston heavies Necrofier at Metal Injection Festival.

“We are thrilled to celebrate Metal Injection’s 20th anniversary at this year’s festival”, says Cammie. “We’ll be sharing the stage with amazing bands like Jinjer, Converge, God Forbid, 3 Inches of Blood, Hanabie, Cave In, Rivers of Nihil and our good friends in Necrofier. We can’t wait to rock out with you and hit the streets of New York City”.

Mad With Power Festival 
Saturday, August 3 – Madison, WI [TICKETS]

Live at Studio G w/ String Quartet + Special Guests
Saturday, August 10 – Brooklyn, NY [SOLD OUT]

Metal Injection Festival
Sunday, September 22 – Brooklyn, NY @ Brooklyn Monarch & Meadows [TICKETS]

Tracklist
1. Where Gods Fear to Speak (6:25) [WATCH]
2. Run From the Light (5:15)
3. Don’t Come Back From Hell Empty Handed (8:28)
4. Wish (3:53)
5. Poem of Ecstasy (6:33) [WATCH]
6. The Given Dream (3:36)
7. I Will Break the Pride of Your Will (5:27)
8. Prayer (5:03)
9. The Impermanence of Fate (6:20)
10. Wicked Game (5:26) [LISTEN]Style: Dark Cinematic Metal
FFO: Jinjer, Lacuna Coil, Ne ObliviscarisMore praise for Oceans of Slumber“A band that nails a unique balance and has the potential to do whatever they want” – Angry Metal Guy (4/5)

“Masterful compositions that reveal more secrets with each listen” – Metal Injection (9/10)

“Dark, turbulent, and above all, incredibly emotional” – New Noise (4/5)

“They are the new Southern gothic, and you need to pay attention” – Distorted Sound (9/10)

“This band is truly something special” – Ghost Cult (8/10)

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Photo by Zach Johnson

More than a decade has passed since the release of Oceans of Slumber’s Aetherial debut album, and a lot has changed. After recruiting Cammie Gilbert (now Beverly) in 2014, the Houston, Texas crew’s trajectory took a natural, upward tilt, fueled by the hugely positive response received by second album, Winter (2016). Masters of dark-hearted brutality and gritty, melancholic song craft, Oceans of Slumber transcended the usual genre limitations, favoring a progressive and boundary-less approach. With each successive record, the combination of founder, drummer, pianist and chief songwriter Dobber Beverly’s brooding, dynamic onslaughts with Cammie’s charismatic presence and elegant, sonorous vocals garnered widespread acclaim and an international fan base. Monuments to a restless creative spirit, the band’s third and fourth albums, The Banished Heart (2018) and Oceans of Slumber (2020) raised the stakes ever higher.

Nobody said it was going to be easy, however. Buoyed by the praise of critics and the love of increasingly rabid admirers, Oceans of Slumber proved true to their progressive reputation when they released fifth full-length Starlight & Ash in 2022. Although still palpably drawn from the same well of dark and daring influences that had informed previous records, the new songs were pointedly bereft of the crushing metal tropes and elaborate song structures of old. Instead, Oceans of Slumber stripped things to an ornate and earthy take on gothically-inclined songwriting and melancholy modern prog. Starlight & Ash was praised in metal and prog media, but drew the ire of the band’s big label paymasters, who were rather unimaginatively hoping for more of the same. Reaching an impasse, band and label parted ways, leading to Oceans of Slumber’s newly-forged relationship with the notoriously open-minded Season of Mist. Now armed with a brand new studio album, Where Gods Fear To Speak, these intuitive radicals have gone where they will be understood.

“The thing is, we never said we’re never going to do something heavy again,” shrugs Cammie. “People panic when a band puts out an album that does something different. It was a weird time. It came during a time when our music was different from everything else, and I think the record was a bit lost on some people – people that mattered in our realm. The fans got it, and it was received really well, just not by the label!”

Starlight should’ve been an easier way for us to branch out to a different audience,” adds Dobber. “But the label didn’t care and we didn’t try to capitalize on it. With Where Gods Fear To Speak, every time you make a new record, you think it’s the best, but there’s a couple of songs on this record that are definitely the best songs we’ve ever written, easily. There’s an energy to them that’s palpable. It sounds like an energetic, pissed-off band, with enigmatic storytelling and all those magical things.”

Recorded in Bogota, Colombia, in 2023, Where Gods Fear To Speak is a multi-faceted entry into Oceans of Slumber’s burgeoning legacy. Many of the melodic and textural elements that made Starlight & Ash such a revelation are still present, but scabrous brutality and complex, cultured arrangements are back with a vengeance. With Cammie’s astonishing vocal blend of vulnerability and abominable power, these songs are the best possible showcase for a band on an unerring mission to win the world over.

“I think Cammie is the best singer in America by far, but if she’s at such a top level and we still can’t break through, that just means that if we want to stay where we are, we’ve got to work harder!” Dobber admits, candidly. “We know how good we are, and how good the music is, but it doesn’t pay off for us all the time and the new record reflects that. It’s aggressive, it’s aggravated, but it tells a story. The closing song, “Impermanence Of Fate” – that’s the tag. It means that what you have it isn’t a fatal flaw or a mortal wound, and you can change things and work around these setbacks. So a lot of this record is fight songs.”

A colossus in both conception and execution, Where Gods Fear To Speak eschews the usual modern metal sounds in favor of an overwhelming, wall-of-sound production. As songs like the thunderous title track and the grim and sprawling “Don’t Come Back From Hell Empty Handed” cast their meandering, malevolent spells, every instrument leaps out with laser-like clarity, and the vast, emotional heft underpinning Dobber and Cammie’s lyrics is brought rivetingly to the fore. Meanwhile, standout gems like “The Given Dream” and “Poem of Ecstasy” showcase Oceans of Slumber’s still-evolving core sound, with soaring melodies and jaw-dropping dynamics that casually blur the boundary between the accessible and the avant-garde, while basking in the brooding glow of Cammie’s unique voice. Produced in collaboration with esteemed studio guru Joel Hamilton at Audovision Studios in Bogota, it emerges as a self-evident labor of love for all of those involved.

“We did the most extensive pre-production demoing that we’ve ever done for this record. Everything was finished, the vocal lines were 98% done in advance,” Dobber notes. “Then we got into the studio and I threw curveballs at Cammie to piss her off and get her to land these certain vocal sections. There has to be some element of this that is created in the moment. It’s not magical otherwise. I did all the synthesizers and orchestrations at home, but then we recorded the rest of it at the studio in Colombia. Joel’s done a lot of work with big hitters, but also with Neurosis and bands like Sleepytime Gorilla Museum. So when I said we were going to make a heavy record, I wanted it to sound like all hell’s breaking loose. We wanted a very natural production and for everything to be as organic as it could be.”

From the doom-laden opening chords of “Where  Gods Fear To Speak” – released as the album’s first preview single, and revealing Cammie’s feral death growls for the first time – to the dying, desolate embers of grand finale “Impermanence Of Fate”, the new Oceans of Slumber album is simply the most immersive and fascinating piece of work the band have made. As added intrigue, guest stars Mikael Stanne of Swedish melo-death legends Dark Tranquillity, and Moonspell’s iconic frontman Fernando Ribeiro lend their vocal talents to “Run From The Light” and “Prayer” respectively. Steeped in the oppressive atmospheres of doom, death and gothic metal, but rendered using a spinning kaleidoscope of progressive musical shades, Where The Gods Fear To Speak idly defies categorization, while strenuously redefining the artistic formula that Oceans of Slumber have spent so many years refining. Meanwhile, these songs paint such vivid pictures that it comes as little surprise that Where Gods Fear to Speak is a certified concept work, with a cinematic streak a mile wide.

“This album is a dystopian western or a post-apocalyptic survival movie, somewhere between The Handmaid’s TaleThe Dark Tower and Cormac McCarthy,” states Dobber. “The whole idea is that Where The Gods Fear To Speak is a movie, and we’ve written the soundtrack. If the world was taken over, like in movie The Book Of Eli, and Gary Oldman had found the Bible and the true power of it, and he was wielding the power of the lord over everybody, those people that were maybe just into their traditional spiritualism or people that were not religious at all, they would be the defectors, so the record is written from the viewpoint of the defectors. The ending credits are our version of “Wicked Game” by Chris Isaak. We wanted to take it back to when the music in movies set the tone for everything.”

Wildly evocative and bulging under the weight of its countless razor-sharp melodies, Where Gods Fear To Speak proves that Oceans of Slumber will not let the occasional setback put them off their creative stride. Both the heaviest and the most sophisticated record they have made yet, it covers all bases to deliver an emotional, life-affirming musical journey like no other. Some people will love it. Others may not. But what is abundantly clear is that Oceans of Slumber remain a formidable force to be reckoned with, and When Gods Fear To Speak may be their masterpiece.

“We just hope to grow the band. We’ve had a problem with reaching the next level, but I’m hoping this record makes the difference, and people just give us a shot,” Dobber concludes. “The band is great and it’s tight, and Cammie is such a great performer. When people really get to see the real thing in front of them, which they don’t a lot of the time, it just works, intrinsically. There’s just a natural response to it. So if we can get in front of the audiences we should, then we’ll win them over and the band will grow. That’s all we want. It’s a mechanism for survival at this point.”

Lineup:
Cammie Beverly – Vocals
Dobber Beverly- Drums, Piano
Semir Ozerkan – Bass
Alex Davis – Guitar
Chris Kritikos – Guitar, Synth

Recording:
Audiovision Studios in Bogotá, Columbia
Assistant engineering at Audiovision by Deyra Castillo and David Dueñas Piña

Production:
Produced and engineered by Joel Hamilton
Mixed by Joel Hamilton at Studio G in Brooklyn, New York
Additional engineering by Chris Kritikos
Assistant engineering by Justin Termotto

Artwork:
Giannis Nakos – Remedy Art Design

Biography:
Dom Lawson

Follow Oceans of Slumber:
Website: https://oceansofslumber.com/
Bandamp: https://oceansofslumber.bandcamp.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/oceansofslumber/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/oceansofslumber/
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/oceansofslumber
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/2JSza6IRxLr1Ez3wqKd0SY

Pre-order & Pre-save:

https://orcd.co/oceansofslumberwheregodsfeartospeakalbum

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