A study in despair, domineered by the promise of agony …

•June 11, 2014 • 7 Comments

A simple task for the followers of Wormness this week … take a squinty-eyed look at your collection. We all know that the visual aesthetic of metal has a part to play in our enjoyment of the music; thus, what albums display your most favorite music-related artwork, and why does said artwork continue to resonate with you? To aid in your decision-making, take a moment to peruse this weeks’s WG offerings to the ungods: Rytkonen reviews the ‘chopped-up mess’ of Abbey ov Thelema, the Stockholmish-sounds of Ending Quest, and the flute-love of the (at least for now, still) Ukranian band Zgard, while Cliftonium hails yet another Shatraug emission (Mortualia) and the I-can’t-belive-it’s-not-boring (seriously, it really isn’t) thrash of Shards of Humanity. Post comments! Post playlists! Pursue happiness (You will fail)!

Marty Rytkonen Playlist
Over Kill – S/T 4 song MLP (Many thanks Aaron for this gem!)
Nuclear Assault – Game Over/The Plague
Nuclear Assault – Survive
Nuclear Assault – Handle With Care
Holy Terror – Mind Wars
Taake – All (Such a killer and consistent band! One of my Norwegian faves)
Panopticon – Roads to the North (On repeat! So dense and compositionally amazing!)
Ending Quest – The Summoning
Dark Angel – Leave Scars
Ahamkara – The Embers of the Stars

Jim Clifton Playlist
Opthalamalia – A Long Journey(demo)
Order From Chaos – Rehearsal 10.02.1992
Bad Brains – Quickness
King Diamond – Them
Dark Angel – Leave Scars
Corpsessed – Abysmal Thresholds
Weakling – Dead As Dreams
Iron Maiden – Piece of Mind
Ifing – Against the Weald LP
Binah – A Triad of Plagues 7”

Abbey ov Thelema – Liber DCLXVI

•June 11, 2014 • 1 Comment

abbeyovthelemaWith a no rules applies framework, the music of Abbey ov Thelema is a scattershot mish-mash of cut up structures, inverted time signatures, disjointed sounds and carnival-esque synth and electronic implementation that reeks of Mr. Bungle just as much as it does Dodheimsgard influenced modern black metal. Satanic Art on heavy drugs? Sure. The real trick to schizophrenic music such as this, is to embrace the craziness in your sound, but never lose site of creating songs with a clear vision or strand of sanity spinning throughout as if to keep the listener interested and grounded. With Liber DCLXVI, Abbey ov Thelema know where they are going, but we do not. As the synthetic drum lines decay and explode with reckless abandon, the music follows suit with maddening sounds and nonsensical/abstract “riffs” strung together as if by putting all the parts to the song in a hat and the order in which they were drawn from the hat, they committed them to the recording and added harsh vocals. In other words, this band is trying way too hard at sounding arty. It works for some, but for Abbey ov Thelema, they have created an album that is difficult to listen to. NOT because they have tapped into some dark and extremely sinister energy/creativity here. No… Liber DCLXVI is simply a mess that lacks form or interest. -Marty
Wraith Productions

Ending Quest – The Summoning

•June 11, 2014 • Leave a Comment

ending questWith 2 demos and this debut full-length now tucked behind Stokholm’s Ending Quest’s bullet belts, this power trio have successfully upheld the classic Swedish death metal sound/formula and spirit perfectly with The Summoning. This album could have easily been released in the early 90’s with its organic and filthy guitar tone and production. Ending Quest have mimicked the sound effortlessly AND have the songs behind them as well to back it all up. Memorable riffs and elevated guitar harmonies dig deep to be further perverted with creepy keyboards to perk the interest of fans of Gorement, Dismember and the like. Gut wrenching vocals devour the earth around the grave and sound like they were born of the deepest hells. Perhaps all of this isn’t offering a new DM vantage point creatively, but I have to respect the sound and the fact that everything is so well done on this album that one may acknowledge the influences that comprise the sound, but not be bothered or disappointed by it.

If the track Sumerian Invocation doesn’t furiously bang your head and snap it clean off at the brain stem, you may already be dead, for the energy and blasting fire in this song envelops the old spirit, but injects Ending Quest’s own downright aggressive manipulation of decades of damn impressive songwriting with a lot of their own spirit in all of this as well. Ending Quest channel the death metal beast like elite veterans on The Summoning and I will likely be purchasing this slab for the collection, for GOOD Swedish death never gets old or sounds tired. The tone on this album is just plain crushing. -Marty
FDA Rekotz

 

Mortualia – Blood of the Hermit (reissue)

•June 11, 2014 • Leave a Comment

MortualiaThe name Shatraug conjures up a cavalcade of kvlt thoughts for the black metal enthusiast; among them: Horna, Sargeist, Behexen, et al. Until Moribund’s re-release of Blood of the Hermit came across my inbox – Mortualia’s second album, reissued – I had been unaware of that particular Shatraug one-man project or its discography. Thus, for other unknowing fans of utter-misery –laden black metal, I am … er, ‘happy’ to share my experience of this amazing work of negativity with you.
Imagine waking under a pine in the woods of Finland, alone, freezing, near death. Your pulse – like the measured pacing of Mortualia’s music – reverberates slowly, never quickening, as the screeching sound of the wind, much like Shatraug’s piercing, screaming voice, cuts through your aching skull, deep into the depths of what’s left of your forsaken soul. Turning your head, you see the too-thin flank of a wolf some distance away, and know that its hunger matches the intensity of your fading. Sensing your watchfulness, the wolf’s gaze meets your own. But whether too tired to attack, or too unbelieving that such easy prey could lurk this close by on such a deadly night, the wolf simply raises its jaws to the air and unleashes a howl of sorrow and multi-layered, forlorn blackness, not unlike the dissonant, repeated, always-descending tri-tone riff-suicides that pour forth from Shatraug’s guitar, the heart of Blood of the Hermit’s sound.
Back in Northern Michigan, on this rainy day wherein the throes of Summer frivolity has temporarily retreated in favor of gray-skyed hopelessness, this sad, slow, inward-facing black metal anti-opus has attached itself to my subconsciousness with talons of polished ebony and will not let go. Mortualia’s music will meet you too, in both mood and color, wherever and whenever you need the solitude of a spirit-eviscerating quiet place. Just be sure to leave the lights on for when you’re looking for the way back. -Jim
Moribund Records
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A9or0e_Ay0g

Shards of Humanity – Fractured Frequencies

•June 11, 2014 • 1 Comment

ShardsOfHumanityI’ve noticed a pattern in my listening habits. When my cup runneth over from too much black metal and death metal, well-executed thrash cleanses the ear-pallette best for me. So when I had reached my black/death saturation point for the week, I was primed and ready for the promo of Memphis, Tennesee’s Shards of Humanity. Mark your calendars: their debut Fractured Frequencies arises from the underground September 2nd, and if you enjoy the likes of Sadus and Massacra with a small dose of Arghoslent’s melodic sensibility, you’ll give this album a spot on your wish list. SoH’s eschew the ear-splintering tendency of most modern-era thrash to ‘treble’ your ears to a bleeding death, grasping hold of warm guitar tone that matches the dusky atmosphere of their around-the-neck wanderings. The riffs employ all the picking techniques that denote the thrash style without forsaking the importance of memorability; the opening / title track’s frenetic convergence of Tasmanian-devil drumming and technically frenetic riffery displays the Massacra influence on its ‘chorus’, while on ‘Aphoticism’, the slides and fifths of the band’s guitars build to a crescendo wherein single-note, doom-evoking vibrato pushes your remaining resolve to not headbang right over the goddamn cliff. As expertly-played scales a la Swallowed In Black race back and forth across your aural periphery, you’ll take pleasure most in the sense their placement makes in the composition, rather than the jaw-dropping efficacy of the performance itself (a blessing, as wankery for wankery’s sake has the effect of an Ambien overdose upon this writer). On ‘Internal Rot’, guitars lock step with in-the-pocket, semi-blast beats bringing to mind blitzkrieging moments of Hornets of the Pogrom, albeit here with Todd Cochran’s (guitar, vocals) Schuldiner-like throat howl directing the march toward miniscule but definitely-there bits of melody.

Shards of Humanity listened to all the right bands beneath the mould and then emerged with a collection of songs sure to aid the resurrection of the thrash genre’s bloated corpse. Their Tennessean speed metal could be just the right Autumn enema for washing the filth out of your extreme metal colon, likely clogged with an overabundance of black/death. -Jim
Unspeakable Axe Records
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fSDhckosg2U

Zgard – Contemplation

•June 11, 2014 • Leave a Comment

zgardSole visionary Yaromisl from Zgard certainly isn’t blazing a path for war with his music, but there is a grandiose feel emitting from the heart of his pagan metal that is more along the lines of “victory after the battle” celebration. Comparisons to older Nokturnal Morutm/Kroda could be made upon hearing Contemplation, but I find Zgard to be a lot less experimental while his synth work centers on a warm uplifting of the compositions rather than flamboyant embellishment. Layered choral singing as on Incarnation Memory gives this recording a very cinematic scope and presence for the blackened metal to provide a solid foundation and the various traditional instruments to unleash a strong folk influence. All the vibrant elements sit quite comfortably together on this album and are further developed by Yaromisl’s diverse vocals. A black rasp is of course the core delivery, but throat singing and a shouted/pitch singing style does further offer an eclectic spirit to empower Contemplation with a noticeable desire for humanity to return to its ancient ways. It works quite well and appeals to both the pagan black and Viking era Bathory worshipping side of my metal appreciation.

One has to wonder how the violence and unrest currently ripping the Ukraine apart is going to affect the arts down the road. War always inspires and torments the darker side of peoples muses and with a bulging at the seams pagan black metal scene, there is no doubt that the hatred will flow and the flutes will bleed out a chilling call for vengeance. Zgard are among the pagan metal elite in their country and if you haven’t taken the time to track down one of their 3 full-length albums, Contemplation is a fine place to start if folk influenced black metal is your thing. In tracks like Wedge of Cranes, there is an uplifting lightheartedness… dare I say “hopeful” quality in the songwriting and atmosphere which certainly isn’t a trait experimented with often in this style of music and it sets Zgard apart. -Marty
Svarga Music

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JHLZQ_Ab04k

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G7xoJkkSkQg

I have taken within myself the spirits of my fathers, long time gone.

•June 4, 2014 • 13 Comments

10 years ago yesterday marks the passing of Quorthon, easily one of the most important and influential musicians to ever grace and mold the metal world. I think we all connect to artists who impact our lives, some more than others, but Mr. Forsberg’s body of work still has a lot of pull in the Worm realm… especially the Viking metal Era. Albums like Hammerheart and Twilight of the Gods are so monumental, timeless and genre sculpting world builders, they never sound dated or stale to me. But it was Blood on Ice… that lost in Quorthon’s closet gem, dusted off, retooled and finished for the ages that rings true as one of my all time favorite albums. Hitting play instantly takes me on the journey. Those massive choirs. Unshakable choruses. Simplistic and amazing layering/riffs. Quorthon was the master. When he picked back up on the Viking theme with the Nordland albums, it was clear that his talent and passion for creating this music defied the ages and his own limitations as a flashy player, and once again demonstrated just how amazing of a songwriter he was. He is sadly missed and I am still pissed and saddened that we will never get to experience “The Vikings”… the album he was working on/writing for when he passed.

So for this week’s update, we have a handful of reviews for you guys to check out but our thoughts are with Ace as he chases those lovely Valkyries around the giant hall. What was your entry point into the Bathory pantheon (mine was The Return)? Thoughts on the man’s body of work and arguments for his best album will now be heard, though you are likely wrong 😉 Hail the Hordes! Hail Quorthon!

Share those those playlists friends!

Marty Rytkonen Playlist
Bathory – Blood on Ice
Panopticon – Roads to the North
Kiss – Various year compilations from that big rarities box set they put out when the reunited with Peter and Ace
Dead Congregation – Promulgation of the Fall
Falls of Rauros – Believe in no Coming Shore
Darkest Era – Severance
Marduk – Panzer Division Marduk
Marduk – Heaven Shall Burn When we are Gathered
Anacrusis – Reason
Celestial Season – Forever Scarlet Passion

Jim Clifton Playlist
Agalloch – The Serpent & The Sphere
Dead Congregation – Promulgation of the Fall
Spectral Lore – III
Zealotry – The Charnel Expanse
Aeternus – … And So The Night Became
Dead Can Dance – s/t
Incantation – Dirges of Elysium
Bolt Thrower – … For Victory
Ifing – Against This Weald
Panopticon / Falls of Rauros split LP

Darkest Era – Severance

•June 4, 2014 • 1 Comment

darkesteraIreland’s Darkest Era are an amalgamation of styles that coexist within a traditional metal construct. Folk elements and some faster, more aggressive speeds/aggression help to sculpt the palatable and easy on the senses Severance album, the bands 2nd full-length release. By “easy”, I mean the songs are skillfully composed, powerful and generally enjoyable to comprehend. The bands sense of melody and creating free floating riffs further points to a folk metal influence, and it really gives tracks like Songs of Gods and Men a spaciousness that finds dual guitar harmonies interacting in a playful, yet darkness encrusted sense of melancholy that is the underlying current spun throughout the core of this music. Krum’s vocals are clean, unique and within a mid-ranged croon that does reach to higher notes, though he never finds himself past the point of no return. His ear for sticking with the verse riffs for impact is sensible, but he finds interesting variations and melodies independent of the main flow to deliver the lyrics. It all works perfectly well together, further heightening the masterful level of songwriting on this album with some truly passionate twin guitar solo work to give this album a deeper, even playful edge.

Darkest Era are definitely their own band, and a damn good one at that, but one cannot deny the darkened doom sensibilities of their sound is Candlemassian. The folk spirit and and occasional hard hitting edge in their more intense passages are touched by the passion emitting from the really great Primoridal albums. DE blend it all together really well and with truly fantastic tracks like Beyond the Grey Veil with it’s moving/endlessly saddened guitar work and Krum’s equally emotional performance, Severance has introduced me to a very solid band that will likely find their way into my weekly rotation as this album takes a deeper hold. Excellent, well rounded and heartfelt metal. -Marty
Cruz Del Sur Music

Incubus – s/t (1987 demo reissue)

•June 4, 2014 • Leave a Comment

IncubusAnyone deeply familiar with the mid- to late ‘80s Floridian death metal scene will recognize at least one or two of the names: drummer Mike Browning (ex-Nocturnus, ex-Morbid Angel), bassist/vocalist Sterling von Scarborough (ex-Morbid Angel), and guitarist Gino Marino (ex-Nocturnus). In 1987, produced by polarizing figure Jim Morris of Morrisound Studios, the trio of Incubus unleashed their three-song demo Incubus upon an unsuspecting world, and years of inspiration and obliteration would follow. Opening with the uncompromising ‘God Died on His Knees’, the frenetic and (for the time) incredibly fast skin-bashing of Mike Browning complemented perfectly the Possessed-on-meth riff meanderings of Marino, creating the perfect backdrop for Scarborough’s ultra-blasphemous, thrashy barks and yells. As unrelenting in tempo and attack as same-era greats Sarcophago, there’s no time for breath-taking as ‘Reanimator’s Mutilation’ opens with a speedy, skilled bass run before diving into back-and-forth around the neck power chords, blasting snares, out-of-key and exceedingly entertaining screams, propulsed by blast-beat abandon. Marino’s solos, especially on third track ‘Engulfed in Unspeakable Horrors’, are well-wrought; noisy but phrased sensibly, technical but maniacal.
Vic Records chose a no-brainer re-releasing this flawless underground classic. Replete with liner notes from George Marino and hard-to-find photos, this digipak CD is a must-have, 27-year-old glance over the shoulder for early death/black fanatics. –Jim

Vic Records

Loudblast – Burial Ground

•June 4, 2014 • Leave a Comment

loudblastI would love to enter this review with a nostalgic arsenal of Loudblast tunes rattling around my head to compare and contrast Burial Ground, the bands 7th full-length album since 1985, and really hold this death metal slab to the fires of judgement. It seems weird for me to say that this is the first material I have ever heard from this French quartet, especially since I have been such a die hard seeker for this kind of thing since the 80’s. Bands just slip through the cracks and maybe I gave up my French DM conquest upon being leveled by Mercyless’ excellent Abject Offerings back in the day. Those were the years when searching wasn’t as easy in a small Northern Michigan town since the Internet wasn’t around yet, money was much tighter then, and Loudblast releases were always restricted by steep import prices. But I digress and unleash Burial Ground for the first time. First impression time…

You can tell there are old souls at the heart of Loudblast for their brand of death metal doesn’t initially strike me as being blatantly influenced by anyone. Tracks range from uptempo and aggressive scorchers with really innovative solo work, only to corrode into a minor death-n-roll freedom with dissnonant chord embelishments when the riffs strip away slightly complex fingering for a solid power chord groove. Loudblast’s music does get busier, but never falls into perplexing tech death which bodes well for the interesting flow and structure within their songs. I find myself time and again being surprised where the songs go. You think you have Loudblast figured out and they keep on throwing in atypical changes or riff ideas that keeps them in a surprising realm all their own. Discernible mid-range death growls are the main delivery on Burial Ground, but not limited to them as a more aggressive shouting style and other variations on the death theme intertwine to further offer up multi-dimensions for Loudblast to explore.

Burial Ground is a difficult beast to hammer down. Loudblast is an entity that feeds from the oldest part of the cemetery, but isn’t afraid to envelop their sound and some of the more forward thinking ideas with a modern metal sound. It’s a challenging mix, for this band isn’t overly brutal, technical, groovy, or Swedish sounding… dare I say they present themselves in a very “French” way in their quest to stand alone? For this I applaud the band for their efforts and have enjoyed Burial Ground for the most part, but there is just something going on here that I can’t put my finger on that prevents me from fully embracing what they are doing. Is it too different? Burial Ground certainly isn’t way out in left field, but skewed just enough to make me indifferent since I again lack a history in evolving with this bands long and rocky past. I think what it is in closing… as the album progresses, it loses it’s overall punch, relying on the aforementioned power chord rhythms and it does eventually start sounding a bit barren in light of the more complex tracks found at Burial Ground’s beginning. This could be a grower. We shall see. -Marty
Listenable Records

As we dismember you, we shall remember you …

•May 28, 2014 • 6 Comments

Mass shootings, stabbings, threats of war … yep, just another week in the world at large, and I am once again glad to have metal at my side to meet and cancel out the push of violent (and virulent) human darkness listed daily on the interwebs. Barring the assumption that music choices largely depend on listener mood, how much, if at all, does the misery displayed in the news media affect your weekly listening selections? Let us know! Also, enjoy an all-black metal reviews week covering the new Mayhem, Funereal Presence, and a few others that are as of yet unknown to me, heh heh. Onward!

Jim Clifton Playlist
Motörhead – Overkill
Motörhead – Iron Fist
Motörhead – Orgasmatron
Motörhead – Rock ‘N’ Roll
Venom – Welcome to Hell
Venom – At War With Satan
The Misfits – Box Set
Horn – Naturkraft
Vex – Memorious
White Medal – Guthmers Hahl

Marty Rytkonen Playlist
Svarti Loghin – Empty World
Svarti Loghin – Drifting Through the Void
Taake – Gravkamre, Kroner go Troner
Strid – S/T
Timeghoul – 1992-1994 Discography
Howls of Ebb – Vigils of the Third Eye
Slough Feg – Atavism (My 4 yr old son LOVES some songs on this album. So does dad)
Sacrilegium – Sleeptime
Infernum – Farewell
Ancient – Svartalvheim

Funereal Presence – The Archer Takes Aim

•May 28, 2014 • 3 Comments

funereal presence - coverThe latest from Funereal Presence, solo project of drummer Bestial Devotion (of post-punk be-speckled black metallers Negative Plane), smacks you in the face with yet another unapologetic homage to ’90s BM gods, but showcases more than enough non-black ingredients and compelling Negative Plane weirdness to warrant attentiveness on the part of the seeker. For while The Archer Takes Aim‘s production remains Darkthrone-esque throughout, with bass warbling underneath guitars and that rehearsing-in-the-next-room overall sound, BD’s guitars clang and clatter at odd moments, conjuring up a ‘happier’ Joy Division tone (and maybe a melted Man Or Astroman LP or two) without leaving behind any of the Scandinavian spookiness. And Funereal Presence’s placement of well-executed black/thrash elements, heard first upon the closing moments of album opener ‘The Tower Falls’, are reminiscent of Possessed and, perhaps even more so, their respected grandchildren Aura Noir. These speed sounds add more fuel to an already potent fire; Bestial Devotion incorporates them to great effect upon track ‘Gestalt Des Endes’, wherein thrash is stitched to even more classic metal tropes. Five minutes into this sixteen minute opus, a marching yet melodic riff joins hands with a vibrato-ridden male vocal, setting up the forthcoming simple, catchy, nigh-NWOBHM solo/harmony line that tears down those aforementioned ‘practice room walls’ in favor of a far more expansive cavalcade of metal hyperbole, one fraught with hammer-ons and proggy, chorded guitar overlays.

Organs, clean vocals, clanging bells, black metal riffs underpinned with canonic styles and non-metal influences … if, with Funereal Presence, Bestial Devotion set out to separate himself fully from Negative Plane, that may not have happened here, but no matter – music fans have been gifted with a USBM album that refuses to be filed in the garbage with most modern black metal. A solid full-length debut following the 2011 10” EP, The Archer Takes Aim 12” LP has earned a spot in this writer’s earholes (and is a steal at $14 from Ajna Offensive). -Jim

The Anja Offensive

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_RO_ZMfRNVk

Hellgoat – End of Man 7″

•May 28, 2014 • Leave a Comment

hellgoat2 songs of charred black metal from Atlanta are unearthed on this, Hellgoat’s 7th release (not including demos). Barbaric and well considered songwriting flows in and out of poignant tempo shifts and moments when destructive spells unlock bludgeoning chaos as on the grating attack of this 7″‘s title track. Vicious vocals and a full bodied guitar tone give Hellgoat a lot of life and tortured spirit for that live in the studio sound. You can tell these guys are an actual band rather than a project, for they come off as being very tight and strong musicians and it gives these 2 songs a vibrant energy that would go down like a blasphemous storm live. Tremolo dissonance meets power chord heavy movement. Hellgoat certainly aren’t reinventing the wheel, but they do uphold the banner of savage American black metal with pride and conviction. -Marty
Boris Records

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Hellgoat/359498710801448

Mayhem – Esoteric Warfare

•May 28, 2014 • 1 Comment

mayhemMayhem, the influential entity and musical force as we all know it refuses to die. Vocalists come, go, die, come back again… yet Mayhem forges on. Main songwriters perish or quit, yet Mayhem endures the hardships that come along with the passing of time and bizarre relationships that congeal at the core of a band. 30 years of soldiering on, with only 1 original member at the helm (Necrobutcher/bass), you’d think each serious change in personnel would bring with it a stylistic shift, or deviation from a set formula. Mayhem isn’t without it’s evolution. From the crusty death punk eruptions arising from the 80’s, to Euronymous’ embracing and perfecting of the black metal aesthetic, Mayhem struggled to find themselves during their formative years. When they did, a new generation of black metal was forged with Norwegian steel. With the introduction of Blasphemer on Wolf’s Lair Abyss, the past was indeed alive, but his musical innovation and vision maintained the core blackness that was Mayhem, while pushing the sound into coldvoid realms of synthetic modernity. Enter new guitarist Teloch (Nidingr among others), who has seemingly picked up in this story where Blasphemer left his bookmark, and continues onward with Esoteric Warfare with nearly the same cold and calculating sound that was experienced on the ever impressive/chaotic Ordo ad Chao, though it suffers in the shadow of such a chaotically grand statement.

To be completely honest, if you told me that Blasphemer was still in Mayhem, upon hearing this album in its entirety, I would believe you, for Teloch has emulated his predecessors style quite effectively with clinical/dissonant guitar noises/attack on harmony and a precision playing style that cuts through regardless of speed or chugging slow/mids as found on the wandering track MILAB. This song in particular feels like a stylistic emulation of Grand Declaration of War mixed with Ordo ad Chao. It is interesting to the senses, but the song, along with other tracks on this album strike me as more “sound” driven than focused on creating actual content with impact or memorable song qualities. Teloch has the chops and the sound/style down, but Blasphemer’s legacy in Mayhem triumphs as it is apparent he was the better and more creative songwriter. Ordo ad Chao was a lethal art piece, even with its muddy production and layers of audial insanity, the songs held up on their own as potent, even vital entities with something to say. On Esoteric Warfare, the faster songs like Throne of Time and PsyWar feel much more in league with quality Mayhem material, leaving the slower tracks to wallow within the confines of a predetermined sound and production, really not taking flight or relying on the true weapons within this band; namely the percussive genius of Hellhammer and equally nuts vocal stylings of Attila Csihar. On the slower songs, it even sounds like Attila doesn’t know what to do with them, holding back on his delivery as if to let the song unfold and take root… something that sadly never fully happens. The aforementioned Throne of Time and Posthuman are great tracks, finding Attila doing what he does best by contorting his pipes through all the unique ranges in his vocal arsenal to portray a mind riddled with madness. That deeply sinister croak still does it for me.

Esoteric Warfare is undoubtedly a Mayhem record for those of you who were concerned about yet another substantial line-up shift, but it strikes me as a release that demonstrates a band that knows what it’s supposed to be, but hasn’t yet eclipsed the songwriting quality found on albums like Ordo ad Chao, Wolf’s Lair Abyss, or the insanely creative A Grand Declaration of War. Granted, Esoteric Warfare also begs for repeated listens and I get the impression that it was structured to be a full experience album, but I can’t help but be dragged down by the slower, dare I say boring moments radiating from a good portion of this album. Thanks to Attila’s performance, I will keep spinning this album and try to work through my annoyances with it, so as I become more accustomed to the songs, perhaps my impression of Esoteric Warfare will fare much more favorably. In ending, I found myself really not being to concerned or caring about the future of Mayhem, for I was so completely satisfied with the last album, that I felt that this band had said all it needed to say within this particular framework, sound and personnel. It’s going to be interesting to hear how this album is received. -Marty
Season of Mist

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y42HryOTVts

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kbkQyIRAkr8

Strafk – Phaseshifting

•May 28, 2014 • Leave a Comment

strafkOpen minded black metal dominant music from the Russian duo Strafk, yet there are dark undercurrents of rock and the avant gard swirling around within this projects core. Track one on this MCD, (Void)stare, benefits from an awkward playing style that rides atop a choppy beat, only to spin off with clean guitar lines for a delivery and sound that certainly borrows from decades of black metal, but this band is striving to achieve a different approach to the same old formula. Mission accomplished. I found the heavily effected and cloaked in darkness vocal approach to add something extra special to the sound and mystery of Phaseshifting. The creeping mid-ranged BM croak still works well here thanks to all the technological embellishments. Inner Distortion continues deeper into the bizarre with more slightly off time signatures and a clean guitar line that piles on the atmosphere while reverb and other song strengthening sounds/experimental elements seep in to haunt this forward thinking blackness. Death and Decay of your Identity finds even more stripped down and mystical vibes arising from a barren song structure, but at this point in this material I find myself still enjoying the performance and style, but I ended up craving a change in tempo and dynamics. I needed a hook or shift in intensity to grab onto to shake this suffocating feeling of nightmares come to life.

As Strafk end these 4 songs with a metal/guitar-less experimental track, The New Embodiment, it is evident that this band certainly isn’t your get drunk, pump your fist and headbang level of black metal, and for that I am appreciative. This duo has created something new, fresh and engaging on an emotional level. The older I get, I will always have a special place in my heart for the classics and the tried and true formula, but when bands come out of nowhere with something this dark and expansive, it really is a welcomed escape from the norm. I hope on future releases that they grow to embrace more dramatic shifts in their songwriting/structure, as a full-length album like this would become quite tiring by the end. With the creativity fully in effect, I’m sure Strafk will sort this out as well as they push on deeper into the esoteric. -Marty
Wraith Productions

Vanhelga – Langtan

•May 28, 2014 • Leave a Comment

vanhelgaFeaturing 2 former members of Lifelover (Vocalist and live bass player) along with members of Skogstron and Taketh, Sweden’s Vanhelga is a polluted and strange take on classical piano meets black metal music. Airy and unique, Langtan appeals to me thanks to a no holds barred descent into adventurous songwriting in a very similar fashion to Lifelover, though that band always took things off the charts into realms of perverse creepiness. Vanhelga may not be as tormented, but possess a gift of creating something out of the ordinary.

Langtan feels like to albums simultaneously sewn together. Fuzzed out black metal buzzes at the foundation of these songs, with dominant acoustic/clean guitar and piano/synth providing the harmonies/hooks for these songs to burrow deep within your thoughts. Vocalist J. Gabrielson acts as the psychotic thread holding this all together as he shrieks, moans and contorts his misery into an interesting performance of extremes and further drawing similarities to Lifelover. His performance alone perfectly alternates between the 2 personalities of this bands music and not only is that a tall order to fill for a vocalist, it is a downright impressive feat while further giving this album a bold sense of creativity and fearless experimentation. In spite of the dense weightiness each song unveils within its layers and overall sound, the clean instrumentation found soaring over the top often allows beautiful, even lighthearted melodies to come in and act as hooks for each song. Langtan is like a nursery rhyme in hell, or the endless struggle for death to overtake life as it mires everyday triumphs with subtle hints that nothing matters in light of that inevitable end.

Having said that, we turn to a statement from Vanhelga: “With Längtan, we have each sought, either with our words or our music, to give voice to our hatred of life. And our love of life. A life that is a prison full of slaves. If we don’t embrace the end of this life, and transcend the limitations imposed on us by this world we live in, then we will never be free. Because freedom can only exist once we have broken free from the material world and the strictures imposed on us by society. To attain it, we must become one with all and none. It is a state we can only attain through death. Längtan is about longing. Längtan is about death. It is about facing death without fear and without regret, because death is another chapter in our life, not the ending of it. It is the definitive chapter in our lives. Lives that are lived as half lives, fake lives, because we are forced to live them within the only reality that this fucked-up world allows us. It is an existence we want to escape from in order that we may truly start to live. So that we may find peace. A peace we can only find after death. A life we can only live after death. A life we can live forever. Längtan is about longing. Längtan is about death. Längtan is about the longing to die.”

Perhaps we have heard all of this rhetoric before from bands that have come before Vanhelga, but to this critics ears, they have created an album, their 3rd full-length since their 2009 inception, that mirrors their mission statement perfectly. Even though it seems that Langtan loses some focus and potency as it progresses, this is an interesting and engaging release meant for those late hours when we all tend to wrestle with our own depressions. Fans of Lifelover and older Bethlehem take note! -Marty
Art of Propaganda

A spirit wasting away like rivers to the sea…

•May 21, 2014 • 15 Comments

We’re crawling through your world one more Wednesday. Tired. Beaten down. Though resilient and eager to pick up and forge on. We have been pretty hit or miss, but looking towards healthier updates in the weeks to come. Perhaps…

3 reviews this week. Thanks for keeping with us.

There was going to be a topic proposal here involving racism and music, but perhaps this opening of that old can of worms isn’t something we feel like associating with. So 2 other sub topics…

-10″ vinyl… what’s the point?

-Posters… hang them suckers high, or keep em in the LP collector style?

Cya next week friends! Keep those playlists fresh and listen to the new Triptykon!

 

Marty Rytkonen Playlist
Triptykon – Melana Chasmata (utterly fantastic album!)
Slough Feg – Digital Resistance
Ahamkara – The Embers of the Stars
Panopticon – Roads to the North
God Macabre – The Winterlong (reissue)
Drowning the Light – The Serpents Reign
Lord Wind – Forgotten Songs
Wodensthrone – Curse
Infirmary/Aetherium Mors -Split
Skogen – Svitjod

Jim Clifton Playlist
Binah – A Triad of Plagues 7”
Dead Congregation – Promulgation of the Fall
Incantation – Dirges of Elysium
Deceased – Supernatural Addiction
Hammers of Misfortune – 17th Street
Panopticon/Falls of Rauros split LP
Tyrants Blood – Into the Kingdom of Graves
Crown of Asteria – Through the Birch and Beyond the Lakes (demo)
Funereal Presence – The Archer Takes Aim
God Macabre – The Winterlong (reissue)

Jack Hannert Playlist
Stefan Wesolowski – Liebestod
Vault Dweller – Messenger of Doom
Barghest – s/t
Kinit Her – Storm of Radiance
Loone – Laughter Over the Water
Death – Sound of Perseverance
Urfuast – Der Freiwillige Bettler
Merkaba – Bones of the Sacred Forest
James Blackshaw – O True Believers
Manilla Road mix tape from Marty

Agalloch – The Serpent & The Sphere

•May 21, 2014 • 1 Comment

Agalloch_The_SerpFour years after their last full-length Marrow of the Spirit, Agalloch have returned, carrying on their backs a record that takes the best moments of their earlier discography and uses them as the foundation upon which their development continues. Press play and, when opening track ‘Birth and Death of the Pillars of Creation’ begins, you will be greeted with the contemplative expanse of The Mantle, replete with that familiar emotional depth and neo-folk focus. As you reach ‘The Astral Dialogue’, as elsewhere on the album, you’ll note that the rhythmic gallop of Pale Folklore holds sway over The Serpent & The Sphere‘s pacing, here firmed up significantly by Aesop Dekker’s memorable tom- and cymbal-work, and general time-keeping mastery. The album’s clean, clear production recalls Ashes Against the Grain, that clarity now fired further with deeper frequencies in the mastering and the omnipresent place in the mix of Jason William Walton’s bass, rounding the sound off with a pervasive warmth.

So what has changed? Concept, and a voice of blackness. Conceptually, these Portland natives have not only lyrically left the confines of Earth concerns for literary influences, but with The Serpent & The Sphere, have also sloughed off their mortal coil, coming face-to-face with the universe’s end:

I have peeled away layers of my humanity
No longer a being, the core of entity
For each layer reveals the key to the gates of the multiverse
…the macrocosm has revealed itself as a towering serpent spire…

And a propulsive force takes Agalloch (and you, by extension) to a place outside of all that is, and that force is John Haughm’s voice. His throat’s bilious, venomous quality lords over the instrumentation, leaving no doubt that beneath all the folk, post-rock, and doom, it is the demonic black metal influence on The Serpent & The Sphere‘s vocal performance lending urgency to celestial themes already trodden by full-on ‘space’ or ‘cosmic’ black metal bands. His new-found energy, coupled with moments of slow riff-dissonance (as on ‘Vales Beyond Dimension’), help to balance the hefty amounts of melodic guitar lines that have become the bands hallmark.

Now if Agalloch, as a band, hasn’t yet secured a spot amongst your collection already, it’s unlikely that The Serpent & The Sphere will convince you to do so, as these songs remain the pure, unfettered extrapolation of four musicians finely honing their art, without upending that which has brought them to the level they thrive in today. Nevertheless, I highly recommend you give this album it’s due diligence, for The Serpent & The Sphere represents what care, thought, skill, and attention to detail can mean for a metal album. And that is greatness. -Jim

Profound Lore

Incantation – Dirges of Elysium

•May 21, 2014 • 1 Comment

incantation_elysiumWhere Vanquish in Vengeance shared a renewed spark of creativity and intensity within with the world and John McEntee’s vision for the Incantation death machine, Dirges of Elysium finds said spark raging like an inferno. The creative core of John and Kyle Severn remain solid, and you can easily tell this is an Incantation album through and through, BUT John has embraced more of an adventurous spirit on this, the bands 10th full-length.

Dirges of Elysium sounds like a band reborn. The foundation remains the same, but the riffs feel filthier at times, and more melodically vibrant in the same breath as witnessed on the rich harmonies of tracks like Bastion of a Plague Soul. The structures and overall presence/delivery of these songs feels new… like a once tired soldier finding hope and lust for the fight again. John has always been a solid, if not “innovative” riff writer, but it seems like with this release he decided to not worry so much about what Incantation “is”, and write a full album of doom laden vibrant crust that slithers and detonates with interest and structural surprises. Incantation is a band that I still spin frequently and have come to predict shifts in music before it happens. Not anymore. John is thinking outside of the box and it sounds fantastic. His vocals finally feel perfect in this band, for the deeply guttural vocalists in Incantation’s past left their unfuckwithable mark. John has found his comfort zone and identity with the brutality, and continues to hurl in higher register shrieks for a nice impact. With the colorful unfurling of this new and inspired direction, Incantation in 2014 strikes and once again amazes with a full album of well considered death metal that truly does stand along.

Though there is very little chance that anything to ever come in Incantation’s future will dethrone Diabolical Conquest as my favorite album, Dirges of Elysium is an exciting slab that hasn’t had me this fired up for this band since Diabolical Conquest. Well done! Hail the Incantation institution! Bring on the doooom! -Marty
Listenable Records

Stefan Wesolowski – Liebestod

•May 21, 2014 • Leave a Comment
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Weslowski is a Polish composer who is new to me, but this record has already made it through quite a few spins already. This is modern classical, but when approached from more of a dark ambient or experimental viewpoint, it still works quite well. Not being overly familiar with modern classical myself, I tend to go on feeling with this one.

The first track, Ostinato, is very dark. String heavy with drones sliding up into the mix. This is the track that sold the album for me. It feels like the soundtrack to a tour of ruined or abandoned government buildings. You can feel the weight of it all. The strings carry you along down empty hallways toward empty rooms. Dogs barking outside are your only company.

More of the same for the second track. Fairly dark. It begins with a simple piano note played over and over, and is followed by a rich string section. Layers build up, but slowly. The piano continues through the back end, almost menacing. Past the halfway point you get a piano burst of sunshine followed by some serious tuba.

The third is where things get a bit weirder. It starts out with a very prevalent electronic beat. A slow one, but one that took me off guard. I’ll admit, it irked me through the first listen. It just seemed so out of place, but the more I listen, the more I can appreciate how it melds into the rest of the track.

Liebestod, the fourth and title track, takes its name from Tristan and Isolde by Wagner. If the music references this, I don’t know. Its a quicker more gentle piece.

Tacet, the fifth, has guest soundscapes by Michal Jacaszek. A great noisy wash with the sound of voices trying to creep through the horn and piano, but buried in the murk. This still has the classical sound, but in a black metal outro kind of way.

As we get to the end, we have a slow moving beautiful piano piece. A very pastoral finish to the album with strings coming up through a simple repetitive piano loop. This one keeps bringing to mind a field of grain swaying gently. At just under 6 minutes, I could take another 10 minutes of this one.

Ok. I typically am not into reviews that go track by track, but this album covers so much ground in six tracks, I couldn’t do it justice otherwise. Even with the breakdown, my lack of knowledge of modern classical is probably not helping matters here. Hopefully the moodiness of the album is coming through. Really, it is an intensely emotional and cinematic album. It feels vibrant, nostalgic, crushing at times. The string quartet and piano feels very classical. The inclusion of brass, a baroque bassoon, and the field recordings help this feel more accessible to the general fan of experimental music. I still have my qualms about that electronic beat in the third track, but I’m dealing with it. It does have its place here. An album well worth your support. -Jack

Important Records

http://stefanwesolowski.bandcamp.com/

 
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