Burzum – Fallen

Posted in Reviews on March 7th, 2011 by General Blaspheme

Burzum - Fallen

Genre: Black Metal
Label: Candlelight Records

Varg Vikernes needs no introduction. The man returns with his second album since his release from prison, and it’s everything one expects it to be: grim as fuck, while still pushing the boundaries of what black metal is and could be. Still seemingly not concerned with what anyone thinks, and stepping to the forefront of the genre with no fear, Varg delivers what could be his best album ever.
Fallen takes the listener through several moods, most of which is melancholy with a sense of hope, an anxiousness that is not generally one of Varg’s best known moods. It’s amazing to hear such music from the man, who has played some of the most bleak and misanthropic black metal ever.
I love Fallen, and eagerly await the next album.
10 out of 10.

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Woe – Quietly, Undramatically

Posted in Reviews on February 27th, 2011 by ANTI

Woe - Quietly, Undramatically

Genre: Black Metal
Label: Candlelight Records

Now, there’s already a review of Quietly, Undramatically up on this site, but as my first review I wanted to get off to a good start, and thought I’d go for a release I really loved. Curiously enough, it was through reading on this website that I was introduced to Woe, so I figured where better to start? Here goes…

Woe are one of those bands that absolutely everybody seems to love at the minute. and 22 seconds into Track 2 of Quietly, Undramatically (“The Road From Recovery”), I can see why, this shit’s killer. It’s like a well produced Vordr or to make an even better comparison, it’s pure Under The Sign era Bathory, in terms of the actual music, it’s definitely Black Metal, but also very thrashy (read: VERY thrashy) and very Hardcore at the same time. It conforms much to the typical song structures of Black Metal, little in the way of verse/chorus/bridge/verse/chorus, but also the band wears its influences on its sleeve, the little breakdown in “The Road from Recovery” could have been on a Black Flag album 30 years ago but of course, everyone knows it is the spirit and atmosphere of a Black Metal record that makes or breaks it, rather than strictly the musicianship. In terms of Musicianship, if you want to hear basically the same album as Quietly, Undramatically but much less polished, go listen to Fuck Off And Die’s Anti All (2008, ). The difference between Woe and other such Punky/Thrashy BM outfits is definitely the atmosphere. Close your eyes when listening to this album and you could be standing in the room with the band when they recorded it, you can feel the energy literally flowing from your speakers, the whole thing has the air of a train that could derail at any second, whether it’s at a fast segment, a mid-paced atmospheric riff or even the slow, hardcore punk-ish breakdowns, it gives the impression it could explode into literally just frantic noise at any moment, but doesn’t, it keeps you on that razor’s edge of “oh shit what’s coming next” and “wow, they went there?!” without fucking up once, and it’s very rare that an album manages to pull this off on any tracks, let alone all of them.

The absolute stand-out moment of this album is the melodic/atmospheric clean section from 4:20 onwards in the track “Quietly, Undramatically”. Within seconds of this segment starting you can see why they named the album after this track, it’s probably the most ingenious bit of Black Metal I’ve heard in a long time. It is literally a case of Woe has taken musical ideas very often applied to progressive Hardcore Punk, think Dead Swans, Throats or La Dispute, multiplied by the atmospheric polyrhythm of progressive metal such as Fellsilent, and applied them to Black Metal, in a way I believe is completely unheard of. The clean vocals are a complete surprise, and the guitar that flows in and around them is beautiful and melancholy at the same time, the drums syncopated yet pounding, it’s literally hypnotic, and the only track I can name that it sounds anything like is “Oblique” by Fellsilent, which is the same idea but applied to a genre other than Black Metal. And then it kicks into pure raw black metal fury. Fucking beast.

Now, let’s talk about production. If there’s a bassist in this band, then I don’t think anyone would notice if he quit. I can hear 2 audible guitars, a vocalist and a drummer. Whoever produced this certainly knows what they were doing, the drums have a thick, earthy sound that’s more like modern Hardcore or Death Metal, yet the way they are mixed, they ebb and flow around and underneath the guitars, never masking them or diverting from them, they support them rather than play over them. The guitars are also mixed very well, unless each guitar is playing the same thing its always clear which one is doing something, and the vocals, while a little loud at first, by the end of the album whoever was mixing has them perfectly in the mix. It’s also very rare to have catchy hooks in BM. Half an hour after turning off this record I still have the floating, flowing and mesmeric riff from “A Treatise On Control” stuck in my head. Beasty. All in all, this album easily lives up to the hype that it has gained, and If they put out another like this then Woe ought to cement their place as leaders of the new USBM scene, I can only imagine people trying to sound just like this but not quite pulling it off for the next 10 years (Just like when Xasthur appeared and then every USBM band copied them for a little while, I think Woe will be the next band everyone rips off).

I would give this a 10 out of 10, but there’s no such thing as a perfect record, one man’s amazing is another man’s utter shite. And for the reasons why I would give this a 10, im sure many kvlt purists would score this a 0. Well, fuck them. This peculiar blend of modern Hardcore Punk, Thrash and atmospheric BM is fucking amazing. Buy it now, if you can.

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Die Krupps – Als wären wir für immer

Posted in Reviews on January 10th, 2011 by General Blaspheme

Die Krupps - Als wären wir für immer

Genres: Industrial, Industrial Rock, Industrial Metal
Label: SPV/Synthetic Symphony

Starting off with a solid industrial rock song “Beyond”, a collaboration between Die Krupps and Chili’s Vigilante, Als wären wir für immer is promising to be one of the biggest releases Die Krupps have ever put out, and it’s not just because they’ve been so quiet with new material of late. It’s because of how awesome this EP is.
“Chameleon Man” is going to slaughter dance floors for a long time to come, with it’s catchy beat, straight industrial pulses, and of course the voice of a god coming from the speakers telling me he wants “…to spend a day inside my head…”.
“Die Macht” reminds me a little bit of old Marilyn Manson and Rammstein, with a sing-along chorus and perfect stomping beat. The old school fans of Die Krupps are going to love this track, and I’m sure it will help to bring in some new fans too.
Propaganda’s “Dr. Mabuse” is redone and not just done justice, but made into a Die Krupps song as well. It’s rare for a band to take a cover and make it completely their own thing, but it’s just more proof that Die Krupps can do anything.
The title track of this mini-album, “Als wären wir für immer”, starts off nice and slow, a headbobber beat that reminds me a little bit of Massive Attack. That soon switches up to add more industrial and it reminds me of KMFDM and Rammstein, keeping a bit of the Massive Attack feel during non-vocal parts. Really awesome.

Die Krupps

The next three tracks are all remixes of “Beyond”, “Chameleon Man”, and “Dr. Mabuse”.  The Unheilig remix of “Beyond” slows the original down and turns it into a more melancholic, gothic version with some gorgeous keyboard work. I can see this version still kicking ass on dance floors, but with a definite different flavor. Vigilante’s “Chameleon Man” remix, however, takes an upbeat song and keeps it there, but with a totally different sound. The final track, Memphis’ remix of “Dr. Mabuse” again takes a song and changes it drastically. Truthfully, I think I like the remix more than the original.
At the end of the eight tracks, this EP broke my eardrums a little more, and my dancing may have pissed off my downstairs neighbors. This is a perfect way to spend forty minutes or so, and I don’t see any of these songs getting old any time soon.
10 out of 10.

Die Krupps on MySpace.


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Pale Chalice – Afflicting the Dichotomy of Trepid Creation

Posted in Reviews on January 6th, 2011 by General Blaspheme

Pale Chalice - Afflicting The Dichotomy Of Trepid Creation

Genre: Black Metal
Label: Flenser Records

In a mere 6 minutes and 13 seconds, Pale Chalice’s FIRST SONG, and title track, has more black metal inside of it than some bands have in an album. It’s very structure is made from ordered chaos and lyrically is fucking awesome. (“Eyes corroding from the dark/Falsely aware of its embrace…”, “…Feast unto me/Devour my adorned flesh/And absorb you I will…”, etc.)
“Command of the Formless” somehow slows the speed down to a funeral dirge in comparison and yet keeps the same energy going. It’s as grim as possible, while taking in some depressive elements into the music. Again, the lyrics are very original, taking a spacey, otherworldly approach to black metal rather than a straight forward attack.
“Caressed by a Feeble Flame” speeds up again with a lead riff that for whatever reason reminds me a little of classic 70′s and 80′s metal without being classic metal. The rest of the riff structure is more of a traditional black metal throughout the song, with such great guitar tone. This one is probably my favorite track on the EP, with “Command of the Formless” right behind it.
“Ascend the Idyllic Sphere” keeps the speed up and adds more ordered chaos. Most akin to the title track musically, this is a headbanger of a black metal song, with a nice thrashy riff section that’s a fingerburner for the guitarist, an odd spot compared to most black metal’s pure barbarism. The lyrics truly steal the song this time, rather than being a perfect part of it.
For example: “Pale memetic photophorm/Asymmatic deriviation of the void/Entranced sidereal luminosity/Enslaved through synthetic design…” And that’s the opening verse! The whole thing is just mindblowing.
Pale Chalice take a huge win with Afflicting the Dichotomy of Trepid Creation. Beyond effective, beyond affective.
10 out of 10.

Pale Chalice on MySpace.

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Darkblack – Midnight Wraith

Posted in Reviews on November 30th, 2010 by Typhon

Genre: Heavy Metal, Power Metal, Speed Metal
Label:
Stormspell Records

About a year ago, Darkblack released an album under the name, The Sellsword… and it was glorious. So for me and many others, Midnight Wraith’s release is an epic event in and of itself. Ah, but here’s the rub; will it live up to it’s magnificent metal masterpiece of a predecessor? The answer: Oh good lord, YES!

Right off the bat there’s a noticeable improvement: they fixed the mixing problem I bitched a little too much about in my review of The Sellsword. So now, Tim Smith’s pitch perfect for preaching the metal pipes are out front where they belong! Not to be outdone, Anthony Crocamo’s axe swingin’ is tip-top notch, akin to that of maybe a Glenn Tipton and a energetic Kyle Shutt. And since Midnight Wraith’s tempo never shifts too far from mid paced, so you’ll get some thick riffs from time to time, but he never skip on the groove. Ohhhh yeah!

Other than the obvious length issue, I have nothing to gripe about.  Midnight Wraith blends all of the truly classic forms of metal into a super metal that cannot be stopped! Darkblack RULES! Period.

Overall: This release is everything I’ve come to expect from Darkblack and am damn glad that the need for anything, even an EP went answered. They read my emails! (Only kidding folks.)

10/10

Darkblack On MySpace

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