not a member? click here to sign up

Scorpio Rising

DIV have found themselves a somewhat mellower groove

Paul Nolan

Death In Vegas’ sophomore effort, 1999’s The Contino Sessions, was one of the best albums released anywhere that year, an awesome pre-millennial soundscape of crunching dance beats, goth-tinged blues riffs and suitably threatening vocal contributions from punk figureheads like Iggy Pop and Bobby Gillespie.

This time round, DIV core members Richard Fearless and Tim Holmes have largely moved away from the sinister atmosphere which permeated both Contino and its predecessor, Dead Elvis, and found themselves a somewhat mellower groove. Tellingly, all but two of the guest vocalists this time around are female, and the collaborations with Liam Gallagher and Paul Weller (the former a mid-paced garage-rawk plodder, the latter an uninspired cover of a Gene Clark song) are by far the weakest tracks.

Those two slightly Dadrock-ish tunes apart, Scorpio Rising makes for absolutely thrilling listening. If the early DIV sound could be said to have had its spiritual home in one of the dingier dives in James Ellroy’s LA Quartet novels, reverberating to Dick Contino’s blues, the group have now headed eastward to explore the icy atmospherics of ’70s Krautrock and the mystical string motifs of the Indian subcontinent, as conducted here by George Harrison/Ravi Shankar collaborator Dr L Subranamian.

The Teutonic vibe is picked up on the Kraftwerk-like motorik groove of ‘Hands Around My Throat’, the first single and a standout track.

‘Diving Horses’ sees Fearless’ girlfriend Dot Allison deliver an angelic vocal over an unspeakably gorgeous mix of chiming guitar and Cocteau Twins-like ambience, whilst the closing ‘Help Yourself’ is a symphonic celebration with former Mazzy Star singer Hope Sandoval (who also features on the wondrous acoustic number ‘Killing Smile’) repeating the mantra “Help yourself love” over a stirring string arrangement.

Scorpio Rising confirms DIV as one of the most consistently innovative acts around.

Artist Related Content

Latest Related Articles For This Artist

Fearless whisper

It’s no wonder all has been quiet on the Death In Vegas front these last few years. Since 2004’s Satan’s Circus, the band’s only permanent member Richard Fearless has had to contend with the death of their tour manager while on tour, a stint at uni and a heavy workload of side-projects and production work.


Interview: 2011-09-01

Death In Vegas for Galway + Dublin [updated]

Death In Vegas will host the eleventh in the series of Heineken Green Room Sessions in Galway


News: 2004-09-15

Trinity Ball line-up revealed

Death In Vegas, Alabama 3, Mundy, Aslan, Berkeley and loads more confirmed for the annual student piss-up


News: 2003-04-18

Viva los Vegas

What do Hope Sandoval, Liam Gallagher, Susan Dillane, Dr. Subranamian and Paul Weller have in common? They all guest on the new Death In Vegas album, as DIV’s Richard Fearless and Tim Holmes explain


Interview: 2002-11-15

Death In Vegas

check this: a full band rig – including live drums, bass and guitar – on the stage. If I didn't know better, I'd say these boys were planning to rock


REVIEW: 2002-11-04

Latest Related Videos For This Artist

Contact Us

Hot Press,
13 Trinity Street,
Dublin 2.
Rep. Of Ireland
Tel: +353 (1) 241 1500

Email:info@hotpress.ie

Click here for more contact information.

Hot Press always welcomes feed back so if you've got something to tell us click here.

Advertise With Us

For more detail on how to advertise with Hot Press click here or call us on +353 (1) 241 1540