
This is something of a spectral take on the Gothic folk mini-genre, crammed full of the sort of Brothers Grimm meets the darkest of American folk tales kind of imagery which we've come to expect from this sort of thing. I've pigeonholed it fairly mercilessly there, but I don't mean to imply that you can nail this EP to the mast with a single glib sentence, because there is more to it than that. It's only four songs long and each song has its own character. The first track, Hand of Doom, perhaps fits the above description the [...]