by Cosmo LeeSlough Feg's blend of classic heavy metal and Celtic folk is as if the '80s onwards never happened. Such quirky anachronism, though, has earned the group a devoted cult following. If before the band's fusion of influences was charmingly messy, Hardworlder finds the mix focused and balanced. The record has a space pirate theme, but it reaches way back, faithfully covering old-school heavy metallers Manilla Road's Street Jammer and Celtic folk rockers the Horslips' Dearg Doom. In a world of death and black metal, this metal is hardly heavy. However, it rocks hard in a very '70s fashion. Frankfurt-Hahn Airport Blues uncorks tough blues rock riffs; Insomnia bounces along like a sprightly Black Sabbath. The majestic chords of Tiger! Tiger! are positively anthemic, while Galactic Nomad has Thin Lizzy-esque guitar harmonies and the grandeur of pre-synthesizers Rush. Even the production is a throwback, capturing instruments with natural clarity. Metal can be epic without clichés; this record is ample proof.