For a band such as Serpentine Path it seems nigh impossible to seperate the members past from their current works. Being that the band is comprosed of the whole of Unearthly Trance coupled with members whose former bands include Electric Wizard and Winter. If that doesn't read like doom metal supergroup I have no idea how you would quantify such a notion otherwise. So here we are presented with their second full length record.
With a more defined sound and direction for the group they have managed a more forceful and dense record overall. Allowing the guitars to drone when needed and with Bagshaw and Flam leading the charge we get graced with intelligent riffs and overwhelming solos. This gives the songs a more defined reason to spread over the course of their lengthy structures. Lipinsky's vocals generally take center stage giving an evil growl to match the weighty rhythm section. All of this comes together to form an entirely dense doom record that makes most others sound amatuerish in comparisson.
Songs like "Treacherous Waters" give you a nice mix of both catchy guitars and utter mind bending heaviness. The lead cuts through and gives something extra for the listener to sink their teeth into. The guitarists pedigree routinely shines through with their past experience giving way to even smarter songwriting than their first record and certainly more so than most of their peers. When things slow down even further in songs such as "Claws" the rhythm section gets to shine moving things forward in a constant rumble. While the guitars move above and create sweeping dual riffs that rise above the murk the rhythm section never allows the listener free from said murk everything dark and completely earth shaking.
The grit of the production as a whole gives further depth to the record making everything sound that much darker. This is a fantasic doom record given to the listener. This is what mroe doom should sound like just heavy beyond words, dark but without negating the need for hooks and true talent. This is something special in a genre that looks for heaviness above all things. Proving one cannot forget the importance of something as simple as a good hook.