Sever the Wicked Hand is the ninth studio album by American sludge metal band Crowbar.
[1] It was the band's first studio album after Lifesblood for the Downtrodden, released exactly six years before in 2005.
Sever the Wicked Hand was the first album that frontman Kirk Windstein recorded sober.
[3] Writing for Popmatters, Adrien Begrand praised Crowbar for ensuring that its ninth album "sound so fresh while sounding so comfortably familiar at the same time", and gave particular accolades to Kirk Windstein's vocals on "Let Me Mourn", the emotional intensity of "Echo an Eternity", and the soulful closing track, "Symbiosis".
[5] Situating the album in the context of Windstein's recent recovery from alcoholism, Eduardo Rivadavia wrote for AllMusic that, while there are "no great revelations or revolutions" on Sever the Wicked Hand, Windstein's "spirit and inspiration have clearly been revitalized, and the end results amount to a quintessential Crowbar album" among the strongest of the band's career.