With
Kyuss now long gone,
Monster Magnet traveling distant galaxies, and
Fu Manchu driving their graffiti-decorated vans over groove-
rock desert highways somewhere in the distance, are
Nebula the last of the prototypical
stoner rock Mohicans? Strictly speaking, no, since they themselves were relative late arrivals to the scene, having sprung fully formed from the bowels of the aforementioned
Fu Manchu in 1997 -- but in terms of the mostly unadulterated '90s-style
stoner rock (
psychedelic and
space rock-infused, sure, but ultimately grounded in '60s
garage and '70s
hard rock) heard on their fifth full album,
Apollo, quite possibly. Despite what trends would tell you, said '90s movement is alive and well in staple
Nebula numbers like
"Loose Cannon," "The Alchemist," "The Eagle Has Landed," and
"Decadent Garden" -- all of them boasting catchy, crunchy riffs from main man
Eddie Glass,
Bonham-esque percussion from ever-faithful drummer
Ruben Romano, and solid if inconspicuous support from new bassist
Tom Davies. Laid-back numbers -- half-
psych, half-
blues -- like
"Future Days" and
"Wired" provide mellow detours for nice, diversifying effect, but it's ultimately naturally self-combustible concoctions like
"Lightbringer," "Ghost Ride," and
"Trapezium Procession" that stand out of the pack -- along with turbocharged, post-Detroit
garage rock fare like
"Ghost Ride" and the brilliant,
Saints-reminiscent
"Fever Frey." The latter, in particular, also serves to remind listeners of
Glass' always impressive six-string chops (see also the slash-and-burn bookends
"Orbit" and
"Opiate Float") -- arguably second only to
Monster Magnet's
Ed Mundell in terms of innate, guitar hero-type inspiration within their generation. And as long as he's in the driver's seat,
Nebula will likely be out there, flying the
stoner rock flag -- more power to them if the records keep coming out this well. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia