Valient Thorr – Looking Glass: Just as every good city in America needs a great heavy metal band to cheer for, every great heavy metal band needs a legendary van. When Wilmington, North Carolina wants to rock, it turns to Valient Thorr, a ferocious, funny, thought-provoking combo that has been roaring away in the South and beyond since the beginning of the millennium. When Valient Thorr takes to the road, the group has at its disposal a van that can roll through the infrared spectrum, leap planets, and distort time and space. That van is on display in the delirious clip for βLooking Glassβ, the latest single from the newest album from Valient Thorr, and a heady trip from the Bible Belt to the celestial realm.
If that all sounds far-fetched to you, well, maybe youβre unfamiliar with these guys and the crazy, physics-stretching powers they possess. To hear them tell the story, theyβre only here on Earth by accident β theyβre from Venus originally, theyβve crash-landed on this rock, and theyβve formed a heavy metal band to bide their time (and spread the thunder) while they get their spaceship repaired. During their stay, theyβve also made some stunning videos, too β clips that make the interstellar ambitions of the group manifest while never taking the project too seriously. And over the bandβs run, Valient Thorr has picked up plenty of support from influential earthlings: the All-Music Guide called their 2013 album Our Own Masters βa breath of refreshing, if sweaty, airβ and Pitchfork praised the group for its shout-out-loud anthems and frenetic live shows.
Old Salt, the new set, picks up right where Masters leaves off β the catchy choruses, piledriver drums, screaming six-string, and subtly incisive lyrics are all back and better than ever. βLooking Glassβ catches Valient Thorr at the bandβs most tuneful, but thereβs still a stinging guitar solo that firmly anchors the song in the murky harbor of hard rock. The new clip reunites Valient Thorr with frequent collaborator Jethro Waters, the visionary Asheville filmmaker who directed the Mortal Kombat-inspired throwdown video for βMirakuruβ, another standout from Old Salt. As uproarious as that one was, this one is even further over the top: Waters captures the musicians as they drive their space-van through a streetscape of shifting portals. Volcanoes, eyeballs, and heavy metal rockers appear in the archways of churches, the windows of the van, and on the sky itself. Thereβs also a cameo that ought to be appreciated by all fans of theatrical metal β Bonesnapper, the extraterrestrial slaver of GWAR, makes a diabolical appearance as the orchestrator of Valient Thorrβs capture in a dimensional prison!





















