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Visualizzazione post con etichetta Morrowless Music. Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione post con etichetta Morrowless Music. Mostra tutti i post

venerdì 27 settembre 2019

Huszar - Providencia (remaster)

#FOR FANS OF: Atmospheric Black Metal
Huszar is a one-man band created in Argentina in 2015 by Marcos Agüero, who has been pretty active in the scene since that year. In fact, he has created another three projects, which are related to the atmospheric black metal genre with the exception of Desprecio. Going gack to Huszar, we can say that this has been the most active project, as it has already released tree albums, alongside with some singles and splits. The album I am reviewing today is its last offering but not strictly a new one. The original recording was released two years ago and now it has been remastered and re-released by Morrowless Music, a new label founded by the well-known leader of the Swedish atmospheric black metal project Lustre, Nachtzeit. Thanks to this, Huszar’s 'Providencia' has a renewed production and a truly beautiful new artwork, which surely will catch the attention of more fans, especially those in the European scene, as this release was originally more restricted to the South American scene only.

This remastered version of 'Providencia' is a quite fine example of what Huszar does. The project is a quite interesting mixture of atmospheric black metal, some progressive influences and a good dose of post-metal. This means that the album´s tracks flow in a very natural way from the quite straightforward aggression, heir from its black metal influences, to a more quiet and instrumental esque sections, which are strongly influenced by post black and blackgaze. The instrumental post metal influenced sections cannot only be found as a part of the sung tracks, but also as full instrumental compositions, like for example the third track "Providencia III: La Flora que Crece Alrededor de Nuestras Catedrales". The most aggressive and blackish song like "Providencia IV - De los Cometas en Llamas Hicimos Vuestro Culto" balances the album with a welcoming forthright strength. Marcos delivers a quite competent vocal performance, with the expected shrieks which sound powerful, alongside with a quite well composed guitars with a unmistakable black metal style. Drums sound well executed, with a healthy combination of blast-beats and a more diverse patterns. The most pure mixture between the already mentioned influences have a greater room in the second and fifth songs, thanks to their generous length, clocking both over 15 minutes of time. Though the post, progressive and ambient influx can be found in almost every track, these longer compositions make possible to mix sections of every style in a quite natural way, flowing the track between seas of calm and moments of stormy fury. Those tracks are very tastefully composed and one of the best aspects is that you can´t complain about their length, which is always a good aspect. The remastered production makes the album sound more clear and balanced, especially on the guitars, which help the compositions to shine as a more solid set. 
 
'Providencia' is definitively a very good piece of atmospheric black metal, enriched with interesting and varied influences, where the compositions have been matured to sound elaborated yet reasonable easy to listen. An album which lasts more than one hour can always be a demanding listen, but Huszar makes possible to enjoy it without complaining too much about its length. I recommend keeping an eye on this project on its future releases. (Alain González Artola)

(Self/Morrowless Music - 2017/2019)
Score: 82

https://huszarblvck.bandcamp.com/album/providencia-remaster

lunedì 5 agosto 2019

Erancnoir - S/t

#FOR FANS OF: Atmospheric Black
Middle East is not known for being an easy place to play any kind of modern music, not to mention metal and, for obvious reasons, any subgenre closely related to extreme metal. The combination of particularly conservative societies and the extremely restrictive applications of religious beliefs, in this case the Muslim religion, make truly difficult to have an active scene. But even in the hardest scenarios passion, talent and inspiration can arise from the shadows and show to us that good music can appear in any place. Iran, or Persia if you prefer, is a country with a vast heritage, both historically and culturally, and it is known that its inhabitants are usually quite cultured people. But it is surprising how a single person can almost create a little scene around him. This is the case of Harpag Karnik, the young Persian behind the excellent projects like Forelunar, Ethereldine or the band I am reviewing right now, Erancnoir. All these projects play atmospheric black metal with distinctive touches and characteristics, but all of them are focused on a very well executed and emotionally intense atmosphere. His creativity seems to be unstoppable as he has released a healthy amount of releases in only two years, which is undoubtedly pretty impressive.

This time is the moment to review one of his most impressive personal projects, Erancnoir, which released its third and homonymous album just one year after the debut, which is truly amazing. I have known one-man bands which have a similar or even higher rate of releases, but Erancnoir is, without any doubt, on the top in terms of quality. 'Erancnoir' doesn´t differ too much from its previous works and like happened with the sophomore work 'Frostfallen', it contains two and remarkably long tracks with a combined length of around forty minutes. Both tracks have similar structures, which try to explore the darkest realms of atmospheric black metal. Keys play an important role, but they are not overused. For example, in the first track entitled 'Erancnoir' they initiate the track with a mystic intro, which immerses you in a vast and desolated landscape. This initial calm section is abruptly broken by a furious walls of guitars and blasting drums with a remarkably fast pace. This speediness is kept for a few minutes making the song quite grim, still atmospheric thanks to the accompanying keys. As mentioned, the song has a rather homogeneous structure but it is still able of capturing the attention due to its hypnotic nature and a little changes in its rhytmh. Vocals are, as expected, quite high pitched and indecipherable, but reasonably well performed. As the song slightly slows down, we can enjoy some nice touches like an accompanying guitar or keys which enrich the song and reinforce its captivating nature. The next track, 'Mehr', follows a similar path including the expected intro, this time way shorter. The initial furious part evolves to a very nice mid-tempo section, where the keys play a bigger role until the song becomes a pure ambient track. This supposes a beautiful ending for the album like the calm after the storm.

In conclusion, Erancnoirs´s third instalment is another excellent piece of atmospheric black metal where structures don´t vary too much, though this is not especially problematic as its great melodies and spellbinding nature are the reason behind its quality. We can only hope that Harpag with continue its impressive rate of great releases in the upcoming years. (Alain González Artola)


(Morrowless Music - 2019)
Score: 82

https://erancnoir.bandcamp.com/

lunedì 8 luglio 2019

Lustre - Another Time, Another Place (Chapter Two)

#FOR FANS OF: Ambient Black, Burzum, Mesarthim
Allowing electric sustain to decay into itself, like an ouroboros circling a distant star, “The Light of Eternity” gleams, suspended in space and only slightly changing during its vast lifetime as twinkling sunspots appear and dissipate along the surface of this bubbling sphere of sound. Below is chaos, the grumble of high-efficiency fusion churning vibrations down to string level and hoisting the weight of this newly formed sound by the fabric of space-time. Lustre attempts to burn eternal.

Unlike the previous compilation, the desperation in the howls from the torture of experiencing “The Light of Eternity” takes Lustre into a more dichotomous and significant territory where the drama and majesty of its celestial twinkling transfixes the mind while the achingly static inanity of lesser beings intrigue an artist obsessed with the broad brushstrokes of his universe.

Unfortunately, there is an insufferable inanity to “Waves of the Worm” where no nobility is experienced in its endless undulation. Through seven and a half minutes of a static Pink Floyd synth intro that would not be out of place throughout the opening moments of 'Wish You Were Here' and no songwriting to speak of backing its incessant idleness, this track has less appeal to it than the average Lustre experience and becomes a frustratingly placid piece of pretense even for this artist. For a band as low key and pedestrian as Lustre's music can get, this is a painfully slow disappointment with no redeeming qualities whatsoever.

Where Lustre's previous theme of gradually moving between the seasons and enduring the privations of the most desperate times of year made its early work enchant and lure a listener into its voluminous verses, this second segment of Nachtzeit's compilation series shows the inconsistency that even such a glacial ambient sound can have when a musician has yet to truly nurture his theme and hone his craft. This second chapter in Lustre's 'Another Time, Another Place' series consists of the Swedish bedroom band's earliest demo, 'Serenity' from November 2008, and rounds itself out with the September 2013 EP 'A Spark of Times of Old'. Clocking in only twenty-seven seconds longer than the previous seasonal styled release, this wider scope and breadth of scale from the concerns of the celestial to the minutiae of the minute have some difficulty in capturing the imagination despite displaying the musician's apparent desperation.

Despite “Waves of the Worm” coalescing into a lackluster track, synthetic xylophone returns, clinking along its counterpointing scale in a dull sighing lull, like slowly accepting the gravity of a singularity and observing the abyss overcome all vision in “A Spark of Times of Old” to redeem the release. Surrounded by truly sinister hissing, the dreary atmospheric organ synthetically shapes itself through the tinkle of an incontinent artist curling his spine and shrinking back into the cave from which he has so briefly emerged. After observing the majesty that awaits him, the daunting energies of the ever-burning celestial colossus, and the wretched struggle of the worm wriggling in the filth from which all life emerges, Nachzeit finally crawls back to do what he does best. Crying in his cave, feebly attempting to scare off the creepy crawlies that intrude into his small circle of light, this experiment with the outside world has confirmed his suspicions, there is nothing but dread outside his comfort zone. Instead, Lustre continues to linger, longing for its uninterrupted innocence and seeking simply a safe stagnation. (Five_Nails)

giovedì 4 luglio 2019

Lustre - Another Time, Another Place (Chapter One)

#FOR FANS OF: Ambient Black, Burzum, Mesarthim
Delving into Lustre's back catalog, 'Another Time, Another Place (Chapter One)' unearths an unreleased EP in the form of 'The Ardour of Autumn' (2013) and blends it into a reissue of the 2009 EP, 'Welcome Winter', to round out a forty minute foray into Lustre's ever-inviting comfort zone.

In a world of shrieking solos and furious drum fills, Lustre's delicate and intimate ambiances can leave a listener feeling as though he is the brutish beast accidentally intruding into a fragile shop brimming with decorative curios. The relaxing sigh of this music fogs the mind with easing endorphins as sprays of guitar foam hush the tinny keyboard resonance at the top, surrounding the space behind this crisp tinkering foreground with fuzzy gravitational waves. Like crossing that small shop's threshold and stepping into world stagnating in its antiquity, Lustre leaves the chaos of a city or the battles across a countryside swarmed by foes behind in order to bounce around Balamb or cast a line from Fisherman's Horizon in a mini-game of metal where its majesty is in its sickly sweet musical menagerie melting across an icy landscape and an even more frigid furrowed brow.

Dim flickering melodies happily bounce shadows away, like tongues of flame inviting company into the comfort of newly-created nostalgia. Holding back the chill of autumn breezes, the newly debuted 'Ardour of Autumn' is choreographed like the coordinated drips of condensation accumulating from stalactites as fingers of time run round the rims of glassy puddles of eternity to hum life into such stoic silence. With a background of weighty guitar grain chased down by hushed snarls, even the most sinister muffled shriek becomes a whisper of distant malevolence as fleeting furies etch their echoes into memory.

The bestial backdrop of “The Ardour of Autumn (Part 1)” swells and shrinks the chest like a cigarette sigh by the fire pit while the rest of the plastered party shakes the property's foundation at the basement battle station. A melancholic turn, as though the happy plodding of those sweatshirt-clad evenings has finally ushered in the first snows of November, heralds the drag of evenings into the wee hours of the morning as alcohol affects emotions and the second wind of the night brings a brain bursting with forlorn thoughts, the blur of guitar rising to more prominence in the mix and the peaceful synth shedding small tears tasting of bygone torments so far away yet lingering as woeful reminiscences of one's past innocence.

There is little jauntiness to these highly-structured tunes, merely a relaxing and mystical, brooding and funerary feel that implores a listener to contemplate not only its own relentless embrace but also the wandering thoughts that such strict structures incubate in a brain craving the chaos of creativity. Still, after the ears are deadened by another session of the metalhead's traditional form of therapy, the intrigue and ambiance of Lustre becomes an almost magical nightcap to an evening of howls and growls. (Five_Nails)