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Visualizzazione post con etichetta Alejandro Morgoth Valenzuela. Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione post con etichetta Alejandro Morgoth Valenzuela. Mostra tutti i post

giovedì 20 settembre 2018

Lilla Veneda - S/t

#FOR FANS OF: Black/Death
Black/death metal is king when we talk about fusion success of the genres, we have several of the best bands ever among this mixing of aggression, violence, technique, and boldness from death metal; while ambient, darkness, melancholy and emotion from black metal, bands such as Dissection, Behemoth, Dawn or Sacramentum to name a few. But there is a difference, believe it or not, if we change the order of the mix to death/black metal, then we have a focus on instrumental extremity, violence, production, and heaviness but less of a direction to the atmosphere and cathartic element proper of the black art, nevertheless we have aswell great bands like Belphegor, Azarath, Necrophobic or Unanimated.

Now, when we find a band like Lilla Veneda is hard to say where they want to land and what their music is about because they seem to want to take a direction towards darkness, grimness and melancholy in some points, and being violent, visceral and bestial in some other parts without finding their middle ground.

Lilla Veneda is a Polish band that at first sight looks like a black metal band, their lyrical themes are related to philosophy, romance and misanthropy, their art direction allude obscurity and sadness (check the album cover art), but they play a sophisticated yet indefinite mix of many things. I wouldn't say they are a blackened death metal band, because it is interesting how they combine the elements of their music, however, it is difficult to pigeonhole them in a concrete genre and in this case is not a virtue, and that problem is present in the whole album.

Lilla Veneda's second record is bold and full of good music, right from the opener song "Divination" you can tell they are talented musicians, the structure of their compositions is complex and well thought, guitar riffs are diverse and powerful, the bass line is solid and drums are creative, the vocals, however, stays behind at some points, since the music overshadows it. The guitarist especially shines offering a great collection of heavy riffs and extreme moments.

Tough clearly this album has a sublime production and exquisite mastering, the band does too little to transmit their message, maybe I'm going to hard on Lilla Veneda, but to me, the album as good as can be, can't convey me much. However, the complex instrumentation and the skilled musicians aren't enough to create the art that can touch and affect others, take a brutal/technical death metal band for instance, as impressive and superb their music is, it remains sterile. To me that's the problem with this album, I feel little to nothing with its music, and maybe someone can be very touched with this album tracks and technique, but I'm a black metal head, emotion is important in my music, and darkness as ambiguous as it can be, contributes with an important element of thrill.

There are some songs that stand out and seem to express more, songs like "Divination", "Martyranny" and "Wheel of misfortune", something worth mentioning is the presence of a violin to add ambiance to the music and more specifically to this songs. Guitar solos are short but well executed, and the guitar work shines in the melodic parts. Impressively how the shortest and last song is the highlight of the album, "Chmury" is a song where they crafted black/death metal more coherently: is heavy, fast, rampant yet grim and dark, this song has essence, soul and a motive, we get to listen to black metal riffs and some sort of angry melancholy, the lyrics are dismal and poetic.

In the end, Lilla Veneda's second album is not a bad effort, but it seems lost, indecisive in the objective, the band seems unsure if they want to crush it and be fierce and savage or to be more emotional, cathartic and grim. We can only wait and see if the band finds its way and perfection their formula because this album could have been a masterpiece if they had focused more in the expression of ideas and feelings than in the delivery of dexterous performance. (Alejandro Morgoth Valenzuela)


(Via Nocturna - 2018)
Score: 65

https://lillaveneda.bandcamp.com/

domenica 18 febbraio 2018

Forgotten Woods - The Curse of Mankind

BACK IN TIME:
#FOR FANS OF: Atmospheric Black Metal, Burzum
I discovered this album ten years ago and it was already twelve years old at the time, twenty-two years after its original release and it is still one of the greatest works in black metal history. Along with a few bands such as Burzum, Forgotten Woods was the pioneer of the now called “depressive/suicidal black metal”, but if you listen to this mastodon record, you’ll find barely a gleam of that genre, the most notable being Thomas Torkelsen vocals, but 'The Curse of Mankind' is aggressive, heavy, ever-changing, challenging, epic and captivating.

A black metal masterpiece far away from the DSBM dull records, since it is not focused on those topics proper of this - at the time - unknown genre, 'The Curse of Mankind' is more melancholic, artistic and progressive. Every aspect of this record seems to be there for a specific reason, you can feel that the musicians were comfortable with each other, that the ideas flowed between them naturally. And even when the production was low-fi, you can listen and appreciate every instrument, even the bass line is perfectly listenable, the addition of acoustic guitars mixed with the raw distortion of the electric ones, make a perfect “forest-ish” ambiance. I feel that in this new edition where they improved the mastering a little, and the vocals, at least to me, sound better.

I don’t like labeling Forgotten Woods music as depressive black metal, because as you listen to their catalog, you realize their sound was violent, full of strength and passion, nevertheless they also expressed their sorrows through that music, with beautiful melodies and complex passages, so I have always said, Forgotten Woods plays melancholic black metal, a genre that obviously is non-existent, but I could name bands in the same vein being these ones: Dawn, Peste Noire, Drudkh, In the Woods… (first record), Miserere Luminis, Nagelfar (Germany), Angmar (France), Baptism (Finland), Vinterland and more; all of them share those aspects of aggressiveness, complex compositions, epic long hymns and sadness, but never falling into the depressive/suicidal department. Their music is, as I said, melancholic. Take 'La Sanie des siècles - Panégyrique de la Dégénérescence' the first album by Peste Noire, it is raw, brutal, enigmatic and ruthless and even so there is beauty in the music, acoustic guitars, calm parts, moments of sadness and mourning, just followed by terrific guitar riffs that make you shake your head and start head-banging. And I could say the same of every other band mentioned before.

“Overmotets Pris” is a perfect example of the melancholic black metal genre I was talking about; it starts with a blast beat along with some trve black metal tremolo, after a few compasses it’s followed by a change of pace to let the grim vocals howl your ears, and that’s enough to create ambient, the next you know is they got back to the first tremolo for speed, after that you feel a very dark atmosphere emerging, but out of nowhere the rhythm change again, a beautiful arpeggio in acoustic guitar escorts the electric guitars in a slower tempo, clean spoken vocals hit you like a thunder, a new change, an enjoyable black metal/punk drumming follows, and your head is dancing to the music rhythm; we are only 3 minutes inside an almost 13 minutes length song, and it keeps growing, it keeps amazing you, there is no repetitiveness, no dull song writing, no boring structures in the music, is unpredictable, it is overwhelming. Not even a single second is wasted. There is beauty in darkness.

And the ending… God damn it! That ending! Near the minute nine of the song, you are already familiar with their music, they use that beautiful acoustic arpeggio from the beginning again and you are expecting the end as if an orgasm, as if it enough, but it is never enough for this geniuses, a black metal riff of war, full of power destroys the calm and it gives the song a new path, and it is not over yet, we get a new riff, the drummer is playing as if there is no structure in the music, then blast beats, all the strings creating a harmonic chaos, the vocals calling you from the abyss - silence - a bass line, here we go again with a malevolent riff, and before you know it, the song is over.

To me the only thing DSBM bands learned from Forgotten Woods was the vocal style, I’d like to know a depressive black metal band with such rich songs and complex music. Back then to my time a listened to a lot of DSBM, I know that scene, and there are great bands like Nyktalgia, Gris, Mourning Dawn, Penseés Nocturnes, Hinsidig just to name some of them, but check them in the encyclopaedia or their own pages and they play black metal, melancholic black metal if you ask me. Bands like Happy Days, Make a Change... Kill Yourself or Trist make slow, simple, long tedious songs, even Nocturnal Depression plays black metal! The only two true depressive bands I know capable or greatness are Silencer and Eiserne Dunkelheyt but they are long dead, I could mention Thy Light but they have only one song that is a monument to the genre. Anyway, I can’t see any other aspect DSBM bands took from this particular record to make it its flag as the pioneer of that music style.

One thing you need to know about 'The Curse of Mankind' is that it has a very particular song. “With Swans, I’ll Share My Thirst” is an unexpected piece of music in a black metal album. It is an instrumental song, after a lot of thinking I couldn’t decide on a genre, but it is just beautiful, you could say is classical rock, post-rock (ahead of its time) or even a folk/post-rock/avantgarde song, sounds crazy I know, but musically it is a piece of art, it starts sad and sullen, relaxing almost, but at the end is full of joy and grace, a mouth-organ (or harmonic) is the protagonist of the last part of the song. The first time I listened to it as a fifteen years old who wanted to be trve, I thought it was the weirdest thing it ever happened to an extreme metal album, he even thought it was a mistake, nevertheless he knew it was pure art, he knew it then and he knows it now. One of my lifetime favorite songs.

To close this masterpiece, we get the malevolent “The Velvet Room”, a song with a strong, evil leading guitar riff that takes you to hell, but enough catchy to enjoy and headbang to it. The drums in this song are superb, kind of a jazz effort; I challenge you to predict them even after listening to the song several times. A true masterwork.

In conclusion, 'The Curse Of Mankind' is a must listen not only for black metal enthusiast, but for extreme metal fans in general, as it has everything a metal album must have, great guitar riffs, long songs, terrific vocal efforts, a cohesive collection of tracks, challenging paces and rhythms and some kind of magic it'll make you say it is a classic. (Alejandro Morgoth Valenzuela)

martedì 13 febbraio 2018

Digir Gidim - I Thought There Was the Sun Awaiting My Awakening

#FOR FANS OF: Cosmic Black, Deathspell Omega
I decided to check this record out for the great cover art and the superb title, I mean 'I Thought There Was the Sun Awaiting My Awakening' sounds truly epic and interesting. However, my expectations were too high for this album. Digir Gidim plays a dissonant black metal with cosmic and space influences from the genre, also evoking bands such as Deathspell Omega and The Ruins of Beverast, just to mention a couple. Their music is dense and complex at times, but repetitive and just too long in some other parts. And this can be a problem, I struggled to listen to the whole album at once, the massive tracks and the music production makes the album way to heavy and boring throughout.

The first track is twelve minutes long, I personally enjoy long anthems and long records, but I couldn’t properly enjoy this one due to the structure of its songs. “The Revelation of the Wandering”, for example, plays with the same idea over and over again, this done properly can create a masterpiece but a gifted and experienced mind is needed to succeed in this craft. "Det Som En Gang Var" from Burzum’s 'Hvis Lyset Tar Oss' is a great example of a repetitive but great song.

The production and the mix of this work is decent for the genre, nevertheless after several sessions listening to the album with high-quality headsets, I couldn’t determinate if the drums were programmed or played with a proper drum set, at times the sound of the percussions is sharp and organic such as the double bass passages, but the blast beat sounds electronic at full speed. Maybe it is just the mastering and echoing sound they used for the final work, or Utanapištim Ziusudra is a capable drummer I’m misjudging.

“The Glow Inside the Shell” is the highlight of the album, the best song in music, structure and composition. With this track Digim Gidim delivers what — I think — they wanted to do with the whole album: truly enjoyable epic music that invites to reflection and deep thoughts, forcing the listener to put all his attention to every single note they play which are leading our journey. Clean chants, dissonant guitars, bestial drumming and a distant synth create the cosmic ambiance the art cover and the album title evokes.

'I Thought There Was the Sun Awaiting My Awakening' is filled with good ideas and great execution of the black metal art. However, it fails at delivering reflective and meditational long enjoyable anthems, saved for a couple outstanding songs, the album is a good debut album that could have been a marvelous one if they only had shortened some songs and sacrificed some notions and vices of the genre. Anyway, this band is a promising addition we must keep an eye on.(Alejandro Morgoth Valenzuela)


lunedì 18 dicembre 2017

Tongues - Hreilia

#FOR FANS OF: Black/Death, Necrophobic
A special talent is needed just to play death metal, while talent, skills and technique to play good death metal; passion, intelligence and a singular taste for darkness are necessary to craft the black metal arts; elegance, melancholy and sophistication are essential to creating doom metal. However, to mix the three of them and succeed gloriously is a task just true legends have achieved. The trinity of extreme metal captured musically is not just ambitious, but arrogant, and if it fails, the fall is endless and terrible. Most bands that have tried this fusion haven’t overcome the expectations and demands of their own music. In my knowledge there is only one band that has risen over the corpses of the others and prevails to reclaim the throne of this unique combination, being this band the British monster Abyssal with three outstanding full-lengths in their repertory. But now, I’m pleased to say that there is another band rising to this moorland: Tongues.

'Hreilia' is the debut album of the Danish black/death/doom metal band Tongues. It opens with the subtle sound of the water reaching a shore, a shore filled with corpses depicting the splendid cover art, and then a guitar plays an enigmatic — almost cosmic — melody, slow drums in the background, a mysterious voice talks of forgotten ages, while the pace and melody evolves creating anxiety along with chants, suddenly it stops, a new guitar tune appears bringing with its speed, percussions become stronger, unexpected a horrific scream of a tormented soul burst into chaos. Blasting and magnanimous metal is presented to us in a rich, complex and strong combination of ideas, riffs and violence. Tongues plays its music with passion and strength, the compositions are compound and full of surprising changes, besides an atmosphere of evil and darkness is present all the time.

From the very beginning the album sounds like a classic, I can’t believe this full-length is released in 2017, it is out of this age, to me it is in the vein of legendary bands such as The Legion, Lord Belial or Necrophobic. The production and mastering sound like an album from the golden age of Swedish black/death metal. The second song, “Theophagous Wounds Of Earth”, starts with this bombastic bass line that inevitably reminded me of the forgotten mythical band Blot Mine and their first record 'Porphyrogenesis', sharing this kind of cosmic elements in the music with Tongues debut album and the solid presence of the bass guitar. This Danish band has not only accomplished mix the genres superbly but also has accomplished recreate the sound of the golden age of metal.

As aggressive as it can get, as violent or fast, 'Hreilia' is a pessimistic album, I wouldn’t call it melancholic or depressive because it is not, due to the nature of its music, it never gets lost in the melancholy of a passage or riff to lose its death metal core, it never slows down to sadness so much to lose its black metal touch and give way to a depressive structure. Meditation is suggested but barely present, contrary of a doom metal anthem. And this last line leads me to the music combination, and I have to say that black and death metal are the dominant forces of this band, doom metal is never in the lead, but always present, either in the guitar tuning or the slower moments, but never in the main path.

Tongues debut is impressive and crushing. One aspect I have to mention, is the outstanding vocal performance, it sounds so natural and faithful to the music that it seems to be another music element. The guitar work is glorious, and besides the three main genres this band claims to play, you can find trash metal and more classical metal influences in the form of guitar solos or catchy riffs.

The lyrics are dark and enigmatic; they talk of epic and cosmic tales. My favorite song of the album is “Grove Of Mithridate” which starts with an evil riff, almost psychedelic, it feels cursed and devastating at the same time, it has a tragic feeling that the music communicates perfectly, it’s aggressive and brutal, yet decaying and miserable. But the best song of the record is the longest as well: “Acumen Numinous” every good thing Tongues does in the previous songs is present here, but this song has a different structure and notorious progression, the guitar solo is superb and the drum performance is formidable. Close the half of the song we get this change of rhythm and a confusing guitar line resembling chaos — the end is near — and a colossal ambience is presented to us with solid guitars and chants in the background, is cosmic and delusional.

'Hreilia' is a mastodon of a debut, probably will become a classic in the future, and I can only wait to see what this band is going to release in the years to come. A must listen to fans of black metal, death metal and metalheads in general. (Alejandro 'Morgoth' Valenzuela)


mercoledì 22 novembre 2017

Profetus - Coronation of the Black Sun/Saturnine

BACK IN TIME:
#FOR FANS OF: Funeral Doom, Ahab
This was Profetus’ debut, originally released on April 29th, 2009, back then — and still now — is a masterpiece and a lesson in funeral doom metal. This re-release and limited edition includes the band’s debut and their first and only demo 'Saturnine'. Altogether make over 90 minutes of decaying and devastating anthems. An astonishing colossus of a record, where the album and the demo are two different entities that can be listened separately.

'Coronation of the Black Sun' is dark as the chasm, mystical music for a ritual of death, where there is no room for hope or light, and the cover artwork epitomizes this feeling superbly. As your eyes set in the artwork, you know this is something obscure and serious.

Funeral doom metal is a complex and difficult genre that challenges the listener and demands patience, and sometimes, very skilled bands reward patience with towering riffs and mythical passages. This is the case with Profetus debut. Unpretentious but confident guitar riffs take the lead, powerful chords make ambiance and the keyboard work creates a melody and an atmosphere so dominant that evokes the feeling of a black cathedral lost in the limbo.

A particular talent is needed to create gigantic anthems in length and keep your listening interested and heedful to the music, no easy task for sure, both to keep a pace and to be aware of your tempo as a musician. This is why funeral doom metal is so respected even though when is humbler than other genres and styles.

"Eye of Phosphoros" is the supreme song of the album. From the very beginning, the deep abyssal growls take you to the darkest of your thoughts, almost as ritualistic music, as a desolated landscape of doom and dark draws in the mind. It is monotonous and hypnotizing. Makinen’s vocals are really fitting to the music; the keyboards emulate a pipe organ adding a funerary aspect to the song. And the last 5 minutes… When the pipe organ strikes at the end of the song, is like something terrible, dismal and tragic has happened. The beauty of the last five minutes of the song is outstanding and once it hits you, it will keep inside you; female chants join as they were angels claiming for a lost soul. In funeral doom metal standards, this ending is perfection.

“Coalescence of Ashen Wings” is as gloomy as the previous one, but shorter. The highlight of this song is the atmosphere the melancholic guitars create as it is a more repetitive song, lacking an exceptional change of rhythm, although it has this passage where the guitars take control and deliver a sullen melody of doom, along with some heavy riffs and percussion work.

The last and catchiest song is “Blood of Saturn”, which is another masterpiece. This song, in particular, has a faster rhythm than previous ones, and it proposes a mournful melody from the very start, a melody that will take leadership throughout several moments of the song. In the second third of the song, we get a sudden change of pace that leaves the drums in the spotlight, reminding me a little of the funeral doom metal band Ahab. After this passage, we get back to the main musical theme, and we will have a moment of reflection minutes after, just to sink in the deepest of our thoughts as the song slowly dies.

'Coronation of the Black Sun' is a rock solid magnum opus of the funeral doom metal genre, but as this edition includes also the 'Saturnine' demo, I found something annoying, even though is just a little thing but it bothered me, and this is that in the demo the sound is stronger and heavier. Don’t get me wrong, it is not better, the main album is fine mixed and well mastered, but the demo sounds more aggressive and powerful, the drums are so authoritative that it sounds more proper to the music. 'Saturnine' has this claustrophobic sound that reminded me again of Ahab’s debut 'The Call of the Wretched Sea', and I think that this strength in the drums would have been perfect for 'Coronation of the Black Sun'. Musically, it is far from what they became and achieved, though. In conclusion, this is an album for posterity that will be revisited for years to come. (Alejandro "Morgoth" Valenzuela)

sabato 18 novembre 2017

Hornwood Fell - My Body, My Time

FOR FANS OF: Post Black Avantgarde
'My Body, My Time' is the third effort from the Italian black metal band Hornwood Fell and it is, indeed, a very surprising record. From the artwork itself, the whole release becomes interesting, but the music and the compositions make it a solid record that creates a unique sound. Hornwood Fell started as a black metal band with its roots nailed deep in the Norwegian black metal movement of the early 90's, evoking bands such as Ulver, Burzum, Satyricon and even Darkthrone, that style was captured in a fantastic way in their first record. But now things have changed, and they changed for good.

When I listened to the album for the first time, I was very surprised by the fact that there are no harsh vocals or grim screams in the record, it is a risky step for a black metal band, but their choice works. It seems that the band found a new way to express their ideas, keeping true to their art and genre. It is possible to understand this evolution listening to their previous album 'Yheri' and more specifically to the final song of the record, “Them”, which is a progressive and technical song starring clean vocals only, it is a fine piece of work, very enjoyable, and now the whole new album is like that.

With their third record, Hornwood Fell bet on a new path in their music, this one takes a more post-black metal sound than a progressive one, but is still aggressive and raw. In general, 'My Body, My Time' has a great production and it is superbly mixed, especially the bass guitar, which is in the middle of everything, can be heard and followed in every moment and on each song. I love the way the drums sound, it is dense and powerful. At times the vocal performance is brilliant and melancholic, but in a few moments, the music demands more aggressiveness. Take “The returned” for example, the first song of the album: it is dark and gloomy yet fast and hostile, the vocals, at first, are a perfect element mixed with the music, but at the end of the same song, you get a potent guitar riff and a blasting drum performance which call for a horrifying scream to get the whole idea, but it never comes. Nevertheless, when you get used to the vocals, it is possible to enjoy the music and to understand their new approach, and if you ask me, I can say that it is original and risked.

The highlight of the album is the music structure and the compositions; every song has its own ideas and elaborated variations, although the first songs start as a typical black metal song: with furious tremolos and blast-beat drumming. This time the drums shine as a complex element ever-changing. The strings work is delightful; the melodic passages are psychedelic and heartrending.

“The Livid Body” is a terrific anthem that involves every aspect of the new sound with elegance and superiority; it starts with a psychedelic violent riff inducing madness and distress, after a while it gets more speed just to make way to the clean vocals and a change of pace, drowning the thoughts into desperation. After that, a more optimistic riff brakes in, but it is brief and ethereal, unforgiving the song keeps changing and the vocals are declaiming more than singing, creating a dark atmosphere. Finally, clean guitars surprise our ears and a post-rock melody ends the agony.

But, by far, the best song on 'My Body, My Time' is the last song, “Hidden Land”: it sounds like a black metal song, it has a post-black metal structure, technical guitars and a brutal drum line. Furthermore, it transmits its mood and ambience with perfection, crafting the new style of the band. Here in particular, the vocals are really fitting, mournful chants set an epic feeling at the beginning, then they evolve to a Bathory Quorthon’s style. The ambience is the key in this song, and even the music sounds purple — in a figurative way —, representing the artwork. It ends abruptly enough to make you want to listen to it again.

'My Body, My Time' is a solid and interesting record, one you would likely listen over and over again and you would keep finding new riffs to enjoy, definitely a record that will stay with you. Nevertheless is not perfect, a really good album, but the lack of harsh vocals and typical black metal screams could be disappointing for some listeners, besides that, at times the vocal effort sounds like a more hardcore style or a post-metal vocal style, which steals strength to the final result, this would have been something totally different with the proper black metal screams, but the band is exploring new horizons. (Alejandro "Morgoth" Valenzuela)