Tying Poverty Metal together, though, is a natural skill with darkness that makes it cool, rather than cloying. The evil magic of Destroyer, with its crawling, Sabbathy riff, is powered by a Tarantino-ish charisma and badness that’s inviting and appealing, rather than nasty and repellent. Which is what you’d expect of a song called Nihilist, which instead is a moody, almost alt-pop song for dancing to at the end of the world.
This is what Henrik is an expert in, and what he explores brilliantly and with creative fascination here. More than just a great guitar player, he is a truly superb and identifiable artist in his own right, and Poverty Metal captures his incredible musical voice perfectly.
Verdict: 4/5
For fans of: Grave Pleasures, Rope Sect, Queens Of The Stone Age
Poverty Metal is released on October 16 via Svart