
EP Review: The Vice - A Great Unrest
Reviewed by Dan Barnes
A little more than a year after the release of their Dead Canary Run album, Swedish blackened gothic pop metallers, The Vice, begin the quest to explore new sounds and textures in their music with this five-track EP, A Great Unrest.
Featuring three new songs, a cover and a reimagining of an established track, The Vice have also become a quartet with the recruitment of a second guitarist, Joel Öhman, giving their sound here a lusher and inviting vibe.
Opening with the title track, the listener is greeted with an instant, pounding, rock & roll statement of intent, which blends in some eerie, gothic sensibilities from the outset. Rikard’s vocals are hushed for the most part, creating a darkly enticing character to the tune. From the Barricades follows, a snappy guitar and a serpentine slither over an insatiable beat.
Sure to become a crowd favourite is Tropic of Coal, which arrives with fatter and more prominent guitars, even managing to slot in the EP’s only solo as it settles itself into being A Great Unrest’s central, defining tune.

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