You catch more flies with honey than you do with vinegar. A lesson to which Lucifer himself has apparently taken heed when inspiring his charges in the German/Swedish rock’n’roll diabolists who’ve taken his name. While all manner of ungodly, sinister noise has been made in his honour, the vibey retro metal and effortless cool at play on the band’s fifth album is just as good and seductive a vehicle for getting the listener to have a good sin. The heaviness is of the ’70s school, built of flashes of Sabbathian dread (the doom at the heart of At The Mortuary), Judas Priest’s muscular strut (opener Fallen Angel’s revving main riff) and flights of mystical fancy from the book of Blue Öyster Cult (basically every chorus). Atop it all, Johanna Sadonis’ vocals add a wi...