Location: Raleigh, North Carolina
Country: USA
Genre: Doom rock, southern rock
Full length: Good God, Baad Man
Format: Digipak CD, vinyl, digital
Label: Nuclear Blast Records
Release date: April 3, 2026
I've been a fan of Corrosion of Conformity since their socially and politically charged era; “Eye for an Eye,” “Animosity,” “Six Songs with Mike Singing” and “Technocracy.” These releases established their sound and helped lay the groundwork for hardcore punk in the 80s. In the 90s, they shifted toward a traditional doom rock style, finding their niche and beginning a long process of reinvention.
When I heard their longstanding lineup; drummer Reed Mullin, bassist Mike Dean, and guitarist Woody Weatherman; was ending their late 2000s hiatus to perform live and record again, and that they were considering reforming as a four-piece with guitarist/vocalist Pepper Keenan, my interest was reignited. After they released “Corrosion of Conformity,” “IX” and “No Cross, No Crown” (featuring Keenan), Mullin passed away in 2020, and Dean left the band in 2024. Weatherman and Keenan began writing with a new lineup to do Mullin’s memory justice.
Realizing they’d accumulated a diverse collection of songs, more than could fit on a single album, they decided the best path forward was a conceptual double album. Thus, “Good God, Baad Man” was born. Each song, crafted with patient delivery and gritty production, was written in casual circumstances that reflected the mood of the band at the time.
Drawing from Beatles-like psychedelia, Black Sabbath-style doom, stoner metal, southern rock, rhythm and blues, post-punk and something entirely new for them, the album is unified by the raw sound engineered by Warren Riker, who has experience producing Cathedral, Down, and Fugees.
The band’s improvisational approach, sometimes improvising between songs, gives the album a lived-in, edgy and infectious feel. Several writers pointed out songs that spoke to them on different levels. For me, one was "Run for Your Life," one of the album’s longer songs. Evolving organically from doom rock, it bore similarities to Jimi Hendrix, Ted Nugent, Pink Floyd, The Obsessed, Bongzilla, and Cathedral. Difficult to categorize, it showcased the band’s potential for continued evolution.
Another experimental track, "Asleep on the Killing Floor," also resonated with similarities to Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, Butthole Surfers, and Black Sabbath. "Surviving the Amplified" featured unexpected turns, hypnotic melodies, and background vocals inspired by soul music, evoking Saint Vitus at times. –Dave Wolff
Lineup:
Pepper Keenan: Guitar, vocals
Woody Weatherman: Guitar
Bobby Landgraf: Bass
Stanton Moore: Drums
Track list:
1. Good God?/Final Dawn
2. You Or Me
3. Gimme Some Moore
4. The Handler
5. Bedouin's Hand
6. Run For Your Life
7. Baad Man
8. Lose Yourself
9. Mandra Sonos
10. Asleep On The Killing Floor
11. Handcuff County
12. Swallowing The Anchor
13. Brickman
14. Forever Amplified









