
This one gave me some difficulties.
I hated it at first.
And I like Black Tusk a lot, don't get me wrong.
I liked the previous LP, Taste the Sin,  I saw them live and thoroughly enjoyed their show, particularly their  energy-- I don't even care how much they sound like Kylesa.
I went so far as to write most of a review of my hating it, which I discarded. Here are the high (low)  points:
"Brewing the Storm" starts with a cool, low-gain sludgy-disco riff, and then proceeds to play it too long.... "Bring Me Darkness" starts with a "six-six-six" chant over a riff that starts great but by 1:32 has overstayed its welcome.
vaguely malevolent, apocalyptic sorcery lyrics comically contrast with lightweight, almost whimsical southern metal.
no great power here; sound like kids
Then I think I had that click experience. I was listening to Set the Dial wrong.
Black Tusk--
are a comic book band!
Now, this is said not with disdain but with love-- as someone who loves and still reads comics.
Like  most characters in comic books and graphic novels-- they're larger than  life and not  really meant, generally, to take seriously, but, in an odd way, are  just as serious about their art as anyone. E.g., "Yeah, I'm writing  about things we both know don't exist, but I'm using them as serious  props."
Maybe this will sum up my paradigm shift: Set the Dial is like the experience of going into a Haunted House commercial attraction for Halloween-- and not an actually haunted house (like, say, listening to Reign in Blood might be).
It's not gonna found any religions, but it will scare [rock] the shit out of you while you're listening.
"Carved  in Stone" great, as is "Set the Dial to Your Doom" and "Crossroads and  Thunder" [in retrospect, the song titles should really have tipped me  off as to the tongue-in-cheek-ness on display here]; the sound overall  of Set the Dial is  much more stripped-down, production-wise, than previous LPs-- it's  almost live-sounding, and it really suites their music:  the energy and  enthusiasm I saw them display live actually comes through the speakers.
--Horn 
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