Sunday, November 23, 2025

Full Length Review: Emperors & Angels "IIII" (Curtain Call Records) by Dave Wolff

Country: USA
Genre: Rock, metal
Full Length: IIII
Format: Digital
Release date: 2025
Over the last five years, the close-knit friends comprising Emperors & Angels have cultivated a career by self-producing their albums, fueled by the internal gasoline they ignite to overcome obstacles and setbacks they face daily. Confronting personal demons stemming from interactions with others, they find strength sharing these experiences with each other and the listener. The extent to which their musical preferences are intertwined reflects their shared commitment and unity of purpose.
What classification, then, works for "IIII"? Is it pop punk? Is it late 80s metal? Is it alternative rock? Is it grunge? Is it blues rock? Is it emo? Is it funk rock? Is it nu metal? Or a blend of all these? Specific labels start to seem trivial as the band’s unapologetic boldness becomes more apparent. Regardless of what influences you hear in their songwriting, the anguish of betrayal and the determination to move forward are vividly expressed in every drum hit, every guitar and bass note and every vocal line.
Emotive, gritty and anthemic, "IIII" comes across as a seamless outpouring of edginess. Emperors and Angels create appealing assaults that flow through your eardrums and into your brain. Sometimes evoking Lenny Kravitz, sometimes Soundgarden, sometimes Coheed and Cambria, they appear to have an instinctive wavelength to reach fans of Candlebox, Five Finger Death Punch, Anthrax, and Alice Cooper, whom they opened for, or more likely an understanding that music is music and a rejection of labels.
What binds their personal tastes together is not only a sense of diversity, but also a sense of solidarity and mutual respect for the contributions each member makes to the writing process. This proves the value of forming a band with people you're friends with and feel comfortable being informal and having beers with. Spending this kind of time together, eventually picking up instruments to create music together, will flow naturally through your stereo, and the results will easily speak to you.
The guitar lines, bass lines, lead guitars, and verses blend together to create multifaceted pieces contrasting just enough to add multiple textures without negating the catchiness they aim to express. This arrangement, in its own way, draws more emphasis to lyrics phrased with the intensity and melody nu metal and pop punk fans expect. While the lyrics are intended to reflect personal experience, this arrangement also helps them to be relevant on an equally personal level.
As varied as the music is, the message presented to you is enhanced by how they support the lyrics. This as much as the band expresses their thoughts without taking down to you. After the lines and verses resonate with you, those whose resolve is bolstered by failure or disappointment will find something to relate to. Emperors & Angels will always be able to connect to their listeners, regardless of how much recognition they attain. –Dave Wolff

Lineup:
Matthew Nevitt” Vocals
Bela McKnight: Guitar
Jason Hedrick: Bass
Brett Huntley: Drums

Track list:
1. Here’s to Now
2. Only Way to Be
3. Someone Anyone
4. Welcome to the Show
5. What Kills
6. It’s Like That
7. Lifeline
8. Dark Skies
9. Dangerous
10. Bury the Hatchet
11. Worry Bout Me!

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