Swindonโs one-man red-hot chilli pepper, Webb is about to blow your mind, speakers and pants off with his new EP Disenchanted; Iโve heard it, and live to tell the taleโฆ.
First impressions last, and Iโm having one of those mornings. Perpetual drizzle, darker mornings conspicuously drawing nearer, and other trivial irritations which I canโt quite put my finger on, are building to a generally low-spirited mood. Tedious has the eighties pop mix Iโm listening to become, even nostalgia cannot help me. I stop for a break, knowing Iโve got Ryan Webbโs new EP Disenchanted to review, which promises to mark the emergence of WEBBโs new, heavier direction. This is displayed by the forename being dropped, saving as Webb.

I consider playing the Lost Trades, for their folky calmness will do wonders for my wellbeing, and I suspect Disenchanted might have the opposite effect. Though I acknowledge it will be of high quality, Ryanโs sound has always been substantial, heavy rock or metal isnโt my bag, and Iโm usually highly critical of it. Donโt do it, I deliberate, last thing they need is for me to be set to whinge mode. But I did anyway, and given all algorithms, I worried this could head south rather quickly.
The five track EP includes the previously released track โDONโT!โ, which we reviewed in May last year. I didnโt headcount the tracks but noted, after a while, Iโd heard the one playing before; itโs gone around on repeat unnoticed, Iโve been sucked in, and it surpassed my preconceptions by a country mile. Ha, turns out it did suit the mood after all, in fact, it fitted all too well, and is, essentially a magnificent piece of music.
Now, given all Iโve said, about heavy rock not being my cup of tea, and this is something rather special even to me, if you are partial to the heavier weight of rock, itโs got your name all over it.

So, now Iโve awarded my mind the task of figuring out why it works so well. And to do this is to honestly unravel why I maintain qualms about metal. Donโt get me wrong, after the hip hop boom in the eighties became somewhat tiresome, like many I looked towards the soft metal genre for solace; I was shot in the heart too, just like Bon Jovi, longed for crazy, crazy nights, and if Heart sang how can I get you alone one more time when all they had to do was ask me, Iโd be content. And as student years rolled in, I lost myself in the classics. Noting if it was compulsory for every soft metal band to sound like Jimmy Page, which while this is no bad thing, the vocal trend over time seemed to metamorphize into a hackneyed caricature of the voice of Satan. My qualm begins here, you donโt know if Satan actually sounds like that, all coarse and demonic, he could have a camp voice for all you know!
There it is, the negativity, the hellish themes of death and destruction, and the long hair; I donโt want to bring my, or anyone elseโs daughter to the slaughter, if you donโt mind. Even if itโs tongue-in-cheek, times when I want to push the extensive fringes of metallers from their foreheads so they might see the beauty in life, the positives. Nu-metal, I say, feels like a long stretch to the elements I favour, the frenzied driving passion of Zeppelin, of The Ace of Spades, even Black Sabbathโs Paranoid Iโll give you.

And hereโs where Disenchanted fits; contemporary with nods to the classics, the vocals more on Page than Beelzebub, and Webb can hold a note like a tenor, while sublime drums roll over it blissfully. This fits because it’s precisely the opposite of mindless headbanging for headbanging sake, it’s composed and constructed with clarity and a truckload of talent.
The reason the EP rolled on unnoticed is because it captures all that is positive, all the elements I appreciate of the genre. Webb says, โIโm really excited about Disenchanted. Itโs an EP that I am really proud of, and I feel that now I have found the right direction for my music,โ and proud he should be, for in technical jargon, Disenchanted can be summed as oomph; here, have a bit of that.
It amplifies a quote from my review of the single, โa one-man red-hot chilli pepper.โ Ryan wrote, produced, sang, wailed his guitar, recorded and mixed this track in his studio. The only collaborators being Dave Collins on Don’t, the mastering engineer for Metallicaโs last album, and Pete Maher who mastered the whole EP; heโs mastered the Rolling Stones and the Killers to name but a few.
Within seven seconds it pounds, the stunning lead single Concrete Beds; oh, those rolling drums, proficient howling guitars and Webbโs mighty soulful vocals; it rocks. Disenchanted demonstrates the multi-instrumental talent that makes him unique.
Thereโs acute narrative to boot, Concrete Beds aptly homelessness themed, Iโm Standing Here erotically scorching, the third track though, Secrets is a haunting ambient caution to bottling up, and debatably the most poignant on the EP. When Darkness Falls lifts the tempo once more, and is heavy, but Iโm still engrossed, then the finale, Donโt rips you a new arsehole, the riff beguiling, the considerable power and passion launched into this is exceptional.

The test of good โdrivingโ rock is just that, your footโs tension on the accelerator is judge and jury, and Disenchanted will have your pedal to the metal. Itโs unleashed to the world next Saturday, the 14th August, and tickets are now available for the launch show at The Vic, Swindon.
CD pre-orders are available directly from WEBBโs online store: https://www.webbofficial.com/product/disenchanted-pre-order
You can also pre-save/pre-add to your favourite music platform https://ditto.fm/disenchanted
I suggest you do, then hold on tight to the nearest thing nailed down.




