Serpentine Fire

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
The Madman's Dream 00:00 Tools
Instrumental 00:00 Tools
Pain 00:00 Tools
Out To The Light 00:00 Tools
The Game 00:00 Tools
Metal Magic 00:00 Tools
The Angel With Regrets 00:00 Tools
Insanity 00:00 Tools
The World As We Know It 00:00 Tools
Hypocrisy of Life 00:00 Tools
P.S. Social Paranoia 00:00 Tools
Parental Alienation 00:00 Tools
The Madmans Dream 00:00 Tools
Serpentine Fire 00:00 Tools
Earth, Wind & Fire 00:00 Tools
Earth, Wind & Fire - Earth, Wind & Fire: Greatest Hits (1998 Album) 00:00 Tools
  • 3,582
    plays
  • 184
    listners
  • 3582
    top track count

The band formed in 2005. Hailing from Macedonia of all off-the-beaten track places, Serpentine Fire (no relation to the Earth, Wind & Fire song of the same name) play a strikingly and well-produced concoction of mid- to uptempo traditional metal with subtle thrash underpinnings (if you’ll pardon the oxymoron-like couplet “subtle thrash”). In other words, this is somewhat akin to “power metal” as it was known in the mid-eighties: the chunk-riffed median between plain ol’ heavy metal and all-out thrash. I’m feeling Vicious Rumors and Onslaught here, for sure, and if it loses a point or three with regard to originality, then it certainly carries the day with track-to-track playability and proficiency. Guitar leads, in particular, have more dynamics and melodic nuance than anyone asked them to have, whether solo or in tandem. Vocalist Igor Panev reaches for the high end of his register like a junior Eric Adams, and a good time is had by all. Economy of length, intelligent sequencing, (mediocre) lyrics attached, all capped by the charming inanity of titling a song Metal Magic, a move not recommended to anyone after 1983 not looking to elicit giggles, Brothers Abbott included. (written by Matthew Kirshner) They released their first album Out to the Light in November 2008. Official Myspace Page Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.