SOLACE – Further (2025 Reissue)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

When Further first dropped in 2000, it marked the arrival of Solace as one of the East Coast’s most punishing and inventive stoner doom outfits. Twenty-five years later, Magnetic Eye Records has given the record a new lease on life, remastering the band’s debut and pairing it with a treasure trove of bonus material. Sadly, this reissue doubles as an unintended tribute to original frontman Jason L., who passed away earlier this year. His presence looms large across the record—raw, feral, and commanding—and this edition ensures his voice will continue to rattle speakers for years to come.

If Further were released as a brand-new album today, it would still feel like a major statement. The remaster sharpens its edges without sanding down the grit, giving the riffs more bite and the low end more weight.

The album’s opening run of songs sets the tone brilliantly:

“Man Dog” erupts with chugging riffs and Jason’s throat-tearing vocals, a track that feels halfway between Motörhead’s reckless charge and Sabbath’s oppressive stomp. It’s the kind of opener that makes a mission statement loud and clear.

“Black Unholy Ground” follows with a darker, more lumbering feel. The riffs here are suffocating, crushing down like concrete slabs, while Jason’s vocal delivery leans into apocalyptic sermon territory.

“Followed” drags things into the swamp. The tempo sinks, the distortion thickens, and the song oozes menace—perfect for fans who prefer their doom with an extra layer of grime.

“Whistle Pig” kicks the energy back up, riding a surging groove with a riff that borders on classic rock swagger, though twisted through Solace’s dirt-metal filter. It’s one of the album’s more driving tracks.

“Hungry Mother” pivots again, starting with a slow, foreboding build before exploding into one of the record’s heaviest climaxes. The song embodies Solace’s signature push-and-pull between sludge and fury.

This pendulum swing between ferocity and sludge, between heavy rock swagger and doom-laden crawl, is what keeps Further gripping even as it stretches past the hour mark.

Highlights from the remainder of the set include “Suspicious Towers,” which slips in a spoken-word lift from the cult sci-fi flick The Creation of Humanoids. Normally a gimmick, here it lands with eerie effectiveness, a perfect prelude to the song’s lurching menace.

The reissue doesn’t stop at polishing the core album. Six bonus tracks expand the picture, including covers of Iron Maiden (“Another Life”), Lynyrd Skynyrd (“On the Hunt”), Misfits (“We Bite”), and James Gang (“Funk #49,” captured live in Tokyo back in ’98). Far from throwaways, these renditions showcase Solace’s ability to bend other genres into their own brand of what they once called “dirt metal”—part doom, part hardcore muscle, part Jersey grit.

The remastered Further clocks in at over 90 minutes, but it never feels bloated. Instead, it plays like a reminder of just how vital this band was at the turn of the millennium—and how much Jason L.’s guttural roar defined their sound. This reissue doesn’t just honor an album; it honors a legacy.

Verdict: A powerhouse debut given new fire, Further (2025) is both a fitting tribute and a record that still competes with the best of the genre today. Pour one out for Jason, crank this loud, and let Solace’s dirt metal thunder roll.

Tracklist
1. Man Dog (2025 Remaster)
2. Black Unholy Ground (2025 Remaster)
3. Followed (2025 Remaster)
4. Whistle Pig (2025 Remaster)
5. Hungry Mother (2025 Remaster)
6. Angels Dreaming (2025 Remaster)
7. Suspicious Tower (2025 Remaster)
8. Heavy Birth/2-Fisted (2025 Remaster)
9. Another Life
10. We Bite
11. On the Hunt
12. Heavy Birth/2-Fisted (Distanced from Reality version)
13. Dirt
14. Funk #49 (Live in Tokyo ’98)

Recording line-up
Jason – voice, lyrics
Tommy Southard – guitars
Bill “Bixby” Belford – drums
Rob Hultz – bass