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giovedì 26 gennaio 2017

Rudra - Enemy of Duality


#FOR FANS OF: Black/Death
Count me in as pretty impressed. Rudra made a big impression on me on 'Kurukshetra'? Think it was that one. Back then I was an 18 year old belatedly getting into extreme metal who was blown away by just how different it sounded. These days I'm much harder to please, but to my surprise, I found myself digging this album just as much.

I reckon the obvious comparison here would be Nile. I mean they don't exactly sound all that alike, but Rudra's thrashing, often death-ing metal has a lot of similar hallmarks- namely a dedication to going for exactly one and one vibe only, fascination with a bunch of old, dusty things and a tendency to use the same scale over and over again. The ancient, mystical culture they're trying to invoke is just a bit further east, that's all.

And they're really good at it. It's arguably a team effort - the guitarist throws out a lot of pretty decent riffs - but it's really a percussion and vocal based thing. The vocals - this big midranged snarling thing, growling away in a bunch of languages and really adding a powerful, rich, very fierce vibe to proceedings. There's this tendency in tracks like "Hermit in Nididhysana" for him to get into a fairly repetitive, ritualistic mood and it's freakin' great. All up it's those moments - much of "Hermit", the epic closer and "Roots of Misapprehension" to pick a few examples - where Rudra are at their finest. They can do fairly decent, crunchy death metal but it's when the drums start getting increasingly off beat and things get a bit trancey that the band takes off and things get really fun.

There's a few nit-picky criticisms, perhaps - the production could certainly be a bit beefier, and the bass is reduced to a rumbling somewhere in the distance, and a few of the riffs, particularly earlier in the album, are a bit weak. I really like this album, but you certainly get the feeling that if Rudra just went a bit more off the deep end - a few more far-out parts, and perhaps a more intense riffset at times - then you'd really have an all-time band on our hands.

As it stands though, I'm still playing this regularly a month or so after the initial promo download, which says a lot. Well worth your time, 'Enemy of Duality' is definitely a quality album. (Caspian Yurisich)

(Transcending Obscurity - 2016)
Score: 80

https://rudrametal.bandcamp.com/

mercoledì 28 dicembre 2016

Mare Cognitum - Luminiferous Aether



#FOR FANS OF: Progressive Black Metal, Darkspace
Interesting old album this one. I want to like it, and I kinda do but it's just a bit headache inducing. Perhaps one of those releases where you find the concept/general idea really good, but the execution leaves you wanting.

The most obvious description with 'Luminiferous Aether' is a hi-fi, somewhat maximalist Darkspace. Whereas those swiss guys do a fantastic job conjuring up a cold, lifeless universe populated sparsely by primal, unyielding alien evil, Mare Cognitum basically get something closer to a darker Mass Effect universe. Somewhat grim still, but here the nebulae are in that blazing false colour we're used to, the explosions are bright yellow, and the sound effects are physics defyingly-loud and vibrant.

I have no problem with this- I'm a cheerful guy myself and am perfectly happy to lose myself in a musical version of a jam packed space opera. The main problem is basically that there's not enough dynamics, and there's not enough riffs.

They're pretty intertwined problems, I think. There's enough bands that stay in a forteissmo dynamic for 70 minutes straight and pull it off because good riffs flow from one to the next- things build, despite staying fully loud the whole time. That doesn't really happen here; most of the songs have very promising sections but then there's a tendency to wander off into aimless blasting where nothing much happens, where nothing much progresses. Call it New-Metallica syndrome if you want; you get the feeling that you could cut 25% of each song quite comfortably.

Things just float on in these overtly layered tunes until the songs end. I found myself drifting in and out of focused listening fairly often with this- there's just not enough to grab your attention for the whole album. I reckon a few parts like the album intro would've been a good addition. Mellow parts, when done properly don't have to be soppy or an Opethian exercise in song lengthening; they can make the songs flow better and establish new moods, they can draw a listener's attention back to the song. I'd refer to Spectral Lore's mind boggling 'III', an album of similar ambition and scope, but one that use dynamics one hell of a lot better.

I know I've whinged about this album for much of the review - but honestly I don't hate it or anything. You flick to any particular part of it and for a few minutes you'll be all "jeez, this is pretty cool" as your mind imagines some super futuristic space battles with all sort of mind blowing, space-time shattering weaponry. Problem is a few minutes later you'll likely be absentmindedly checking your email. Worth a look if you're into big, spacey BM - you may well like it more than me. Personally I think I'll stick with Darkspace. (Caspian Yurisich)

giovedì 1 dicembre 2016

Ivory - Southern Cross


#FOR FANS OF: Symphonic Metal, Stratovarius
Without wanting to sound too much like an sociologist, Ivory's 'Southern Cross' just wouldn't happen in Australia, I reckon. I just feel like we have a lower tolerance of cheese down here in the antipodes- or perhaps we tolerate a different kind of cheese? Anyway, it's easy to come away from this album thinking "thank god heavy metal is not a mainstream pursuit here"; it's just a shiny, overwrought nothing of a thing.

Instrumentally it's not terrible. It plods like a sauropod on valium, but you can tell there's a few parts where at least they tried. It's not a new sound or anything- Stratovarius with some occasional Dream Theatre-lite moments and maybe some Metallica meets My Little Pony when the band wants to get heavy. The keys and guitars are saccharine sweet but they play a lot of busy parts- the occasional neat bit of interplay here, a lot of cool little runs and solos all over the place. The overall impression is that while it's dripping with mature cheddar, the musicians weren't content with just being a backing track for a vocalist to wail over.

It's the vocals are the main problem. With a charismatic, powerful vocalist this would probably still be the most artificial thing since diet coke, but it would at least have a chance at being entertaining. As it stands though it's pretty gross. Devoid of power, writing not a single memorable vocal, atrocious lyrics (all of which are easily audible, just to increase the cringe), forever sounding like he's at the absolute end of his range, and possessing a very strong, very cringy accent, there is absolutely nothing going here for the poor guy. He clearly tries, but that doesn't matter- he sounds awful, he's loudly mixed and he's everywhere.

It's not a horrible album or anything, but I certainly don't like it that much and I can't see it getting any play after this review. If you can get past the vocals you've got a fairly okay, symphonic, vaguely proggy power metal album. I couldn't get past the vocals. There's far better albums in this vein- don't bother looking here. (Caspian Yurisich)

lunedì 28 novembre 2016

Recitations - The First of the Listeners

#FOR FANS OF: Avantgarde Black Metal
Man, this is pretty great stuff. It's been a fair while since a black metal album has captured my interest, but this is really good shit. Recitations manage that often rarely achieved trinity that all quality metal has, a good atmosphere, massive riffs, all while being a genuinely entertaining listen.

An entertaining listen? Well sure, sort of. Recitations are by no means accessible, but amidst the buzzing mayhem of "Tongueskull Sacrament" the brief, krautrock-from-hell interlude works ridiculously well, especially as it's switched between a huge, almost Angelic Process-ish pound. I wouldn't necessarily call this "psychedelic black metal" or anything but it's not too far from the truth, and it's done really well. It's just this hallucinotory journey where everything is deep and dark but still kinda beautiful to look at. Track 3's intro is another example- and it's a fine bit of music in general- dark, endlessly bubbling, all these distant chants and synths hovering at the end of your imagination. It's like being trapped in an ancient crypt that's covered in glow in the dark stars, or something.

The word that keeps on coming to mind is "deep". Perhaps it's the synths that sound like they're recorded a long way underwater; maybe it's the cavernous production. I work around a mine, and recently I went underground for the first time- it was occasionally strangely beautiful, but just as often an ugly, hostile place- sometimes the water would cascade down the rocks and glow strangely, other times it would be 45 celsius, pitch black, super claustrophobic and the air would be old and stale. I liken that to this album, it has plenty of haunting moments but just as often it's big riffs and distinctive, howled vocals pounding away at your skull. 


It's the sort of album that provokes a lot of different images in your head- a ritual of immense power, a malevolent space entity, a contact with the secret chiefs; and it's a real pleasure to put this on and let your imagination run wild. All up quite a unique album, and I wish the album was a lot longer. Consider that a huge compliment and a big recommendation. (Caspian Yurisich)

(Avantgarde Music/Signal Rex - 2016)
Score: 85