Upon release in 1972, Vertigo Records proclaimed, "
Dead Forever is better in quality, production and music-wise than
Black Sabbath's
Vol. 4." While hyperbolic marketing is nothing new, this statement is largely misguided, unfair to the band, and generally misrepresentative of
Buffalo's powers. The mighty
Sabbath are their most obvious influence, but for the most part they're better when attempting something other than primal heavy metal. The record opens with a satisfyingly dreamy, otherworldly tone that recalls post-
Barrett Pink Floyd (oddly, they don't explore this style further), before making an abrupt and clumsy segue into
Sabbath land, sounding like awkward teenagers struggling to emulate their heroes. But
Buffalo is more accomplished than that, and they quickly prove it with "Suzy Sunshine," a cloudless blues-rock number that possesses a vocal closely resembling one
Ozzy Osbourne -- minus the doom-and-gloom. Guitarist
John Baxter's talent becomes apparent here as well, an impression confirmed with his tasteful,
Hendrix-inspired intro for "Pay My Dues." This
Blues Image cover later features a nice trade-off between the two lead vocalists (yes there are two, yet neither plays an instrument), and during
Free's "I'm a Mover" one or both of the vocalists hit high notes that would do any metal fan proud. "Ballad of Irving Fink" is a near-glam boogie rock tune with more fine vocalizing, and "Bean Stew" finds the group at the crossroads of late-'60s garage and early-'70s hard rock. A definite highlight. "Forrest Rain" is another detour, this one a moody, melancholy piece with a light psychedelic soundtrack and an
Ozzy-like lyrical honesty. But the whole album seems like a warm-up when the awesome title track appears, a wobble-inducing
Black Sabbath homage where the unit beams despite the morbid subject manner (led by
Baxter, who really gives
Tony Iommi a run for his money), and appears worthy of the extravagant publicity.