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martedì 14 novembre 2023

Grift - Dolt Land

#FOR FANS OF: Neofolk
The Swedish solo-project Grift was founded by Erik Gärdefors more than a decade ago. Erik has been a quite active member of the extreme metal scene in Sweden. His previous and also current projects are closely tied to the black and death metal subgenres, where he has shown his talent. With Grift, we can appreciate a further vision of Erik’s musical interest as he brings a strong folk influence on the ‘creation table’, where Grift was crafted. Since its inception, Grift’s music has been a quite palatable mixture of black metal and neo folk influences. As it usually happens the first opus entitled 'Syner' already had a very solid mixture of both genres, although the black metal elements sounded a bit harsher than in the subsequent releases. With albums like 'Arvet' or 'Budet', the intrinsically melancholic influence of the neo folk music impregnated the full compositions of Grift and even the blackest metal elements had a strong influence of the aforementioned subgenre. That led to the creation of something unique and, therefore, forged Grift’s own musical vision.

With the new opus entitled 'Dolt Land', Grift leaves behind all the black metal elements, at least for this release, as it seems that the artist contemplates the beauty of its land’s nature and consequently, tries to create an appropriate musical experience for the listeners.  So, 'Dolt Land' is logically a folk/neo-folk album with a strong melancholic touch, which is so present in the purely folk albums that metal projects release in Scandinavia. The album is an immersive experience and a very pleasant listen if you like this kind of slightly gloomy form of folk music. The nature-related ambience of the album opener "Silverne Sitg" is a fine example of what you can listen to here. The nature sounds are elegantly missed with folk instruments, which slowly gain the main role, creating a nice bridge from the wild sounds to the man created ones. Erik’s voice sounds great as he has a deep and emotional tone which is very appropriate for this type of music. Even though an album like this may not have greater variations in the tone and pace, this composition shows that some variations are possible in order to enrich the composition and make the song more interesting. Another aspect where Erik tries to add some different touches in his own voice, as he adds a raspier tone in several compositions, for example in "Nattens Pilgrim". This addition, alongside the use of different folk instruments and variation in the intensity of the structures, help to create folk songs which are not so monotonous. Another song which I enjoy quite a lot is "En Hemskog", that is an acoustic guitar-driver composition, maybe with less variation than other compositions, but with  a very nice work with this instrument that makes me appreciate it a lot.

In conclusion, 'Dolt Land' is a temporary departure from Grift’s fusion of neo-folk and black elements, and although this may disappoint some of its fans, I personally urge all of them to give a chance to this album, as it is a very tasteful and enjoyable listen. (Alain González Artola)

(Nordvis Produktion - 2023)
Score: 75
 

giovedì 31 agosto 2023

Gråande - S/t

#FOR FANS OF: Atmospheric Black
Coming from Sweden, Gråande is a new project recently created by two musicians, Nichil and Nachtzeit. The later one needs no presentation as he is the creator and only member of the well-stablished and respected project Lustre, among many other projects, all of them the quite enjoyable. Backed by the label Nordvis Produktion, the project has released a self-titled debut EP, consisting of only two tracks, but making it clear that Gråande has a quite interesting potential.

The EP 'Gråande' unsurprisingly confirms that the new project is firmly rooted in the black metal genre and, more precisely, in the niche of atmospheric black metal, as it happens with Lustre. However, contrary to his most famous project, Nachtzeit and his colleague Nichil, have forged two tracks with a slightly less trance inducing touch than what we can see in Lustre. The guitars, the rhythmic base and the vocals sound more powerful and powerfully rhythmic, and the music is definitively more intense here. But don’t get me wrong, the similarities are there and both projects don’t differ that much. The hypnotic keys are definitively present, and the general ambience also has its trance inducing touch, but with Gråande, the music definitively sounds a bit heavier. The second and shorter track, "Evighetens Kvarn", is the clearest example with its faster drums, quite unusual in Lustre, its cold-biting riffs and Nichil’s excellent shrieks, that sound quite powerful and desperate. The track is definitively a fine example of a crossover between atmospheric black metal and DSBM. The EP opener "Sjöar Ovan" sounds closer to what we have heard in Lustre or the always present influence of Burzum. This influence is stronger in two thirds of the song, where the evocative keys along with the mid-tempo guitars and the drums represent the trademark of the aforementioned projects. Nevertheless, as it happens in the second song, and as a characteristic aspect of this project, we can enjoy more energetic sections, where the drums have a more vivid pace and the guitars sound quite raspy, creating an excellent song of pure atmospheric black metal. In both tracks, shine the powerful vocals of Nichil, which is definitively a successful inclusion in Gråande.

This self-titled debut EP is without any doubt, a very solid beginning for Gråande, it brings the classic influences of Nachtzeit, but with a refreshing touch and, more important, a quality work in the creation of both tracks. Personally, I can’t wait to listen to a full-length of this project, as I am quite sure that many fans of the genre will rejoice. (Alain González Artola)


(Nordvis Produktion - 2023)
Score: 80

https://lustre.bandcamp.com/album/gr-ande

domenica 14 maggio 2023

Lustre - Reverence

#FOR FANS OF: Ambient Black
The Swedish one-man project Lustre has become, since its inception, a primordial reference when we speak about atmospheric black metal. Henrik Sunding, better known as Nachtzeit, is undoubtedly a fanatic of black metal, particularly of the most atmospheric oriented one. He has been involved in several projects, each one having its own character, although the devotion to this genre is out of any discussion. I strongly recommend you to check out Ered Wethrin and Nachtzeit, which are my favourite ones. 
 
Going back to Lustre, the particular vision of Henrik for this project was quite clear since the debut album 'Night Spirit' that was released in 2009. Lustre’s music is trance inducing ambient black metal, strongly influenced by classic projects like Burzum, which obviously is a pivotal influence in the genre when we speak about introducing ambience into the black metal scene. What Lustre does is to create quite simple and repetitive structures. Don’t loose your time trying to find complex riffs or tempo changes, this is all about hypnotic sonic creations which transport you out of this reality. And this is what makes Lustre so special. Repetitiveness and simplicity can always be problem, and many would consider that this music lacks of interest after listening to a couple of songs. But somehow, Nachtzeit achieves the unquestionable merit of keeping releasing songs that captivate you, and this is something admirable.

So, after these years and a good amount of albums and EPs, Lustre continues to be quite active and its last offering is the EP entitled 'Reverence', which consists of one song with the same name. Those who don´t like this project won’t find any reason to like it now, but many others, and I include myself in this latest group, can enjoy this new release a lot. Although Lustre’s music hasn’t changed a lot since its creation, it is also unquestionable that Nachtzeit has perfected the formula during the project’s existence. 'Reverence', being a long song, gives a greater room to introduce little tweaks and more arrangements which make the track a great musical experience. Vocally, this song shows a more varied approach. The voices are classic black metal shrieks, but their tone and strength vary through the song, with moments where they sound louder and more intense, as it happens in the mid-second half of the song, in contrast to the initial part. About the arrangements, the simple yet beautiful keys play their usual major role leading the song, but we can also find some tiny touches here and there, especially in the background which enrich the composition. The electronic interlude in the middle of the composition is a nice one, and I find it quite interesting. As you can imagine, they are tiny adds or changes as the music needs to be trance inducing and nothing can distract you from this purpose. But this effort is very welcome for me, as a composition always needs to sound a bit fresh, regardless off its innovative nature of lack of it.

All in all, the new 'Reverence' is a quite inspired one. Lustre has managed to compose a long track which has everything we know and like from this project. The hypnotic atmosphere and marvellous melodies are there, recognizable but still being capable of absorbing our attention and getting our love, and because of this, Lustre is a so unique project. (Alain González Artola)

(Nordvis Produktion - 2023)
Score: 82

martedì 21 marzo 2023

Morcaint - Elessar

#FOR FANS OF: Atmospheric Black
Sweden’s obscure project Morcaint was created in 2008 and it seems that Ulvtyr and Heruhim, the two founding members, composed a debut full-length, which sadly never saw the light of the day. The project was put on hold during a long of time, but fortunately it came to live some time ago and managed to catch the attention of the respected Swedish label Nordvis Produktion, which always gives you a hint of the project’s quality.

The aforementioned unreleased debut album doesn’t seem to be recorded in this new era, but Morcaint has released its debut EP which consists of only two new songs, although the quality of both compositions makes me feel a reasonable hype for an, hopefully, upcoming debut album. 'Elessar' is the title of the EP, and as you probably guessed, it is a direct mention to the world of Tolkien. Personally, I am never fed up with bands taking inspiration from Middle Earth, so I was more than happy to check out what this project can offer. Morcaint’s music is firmly rooted in the atmospheric black metal sub-genre, which I consider quite appropriate for Tolkien’s fantastic universe. Musically, Morcaint achieves an excellent balance between the expected atmosphere, and the heaviness you could expect from an extreme metal band. The first track "Elessar" immediately shows that with a captivating atmospheric intro followed by a great tremolo riffing, which is a perfect example of how atmospheric black metal should sound. The combination of mid-tempo and headbanging inducing riffs, and the always welcomed blast-beats make the song very entertaining. Both the vocals, with the classic distant sound in its production, and the drums, sound clear and powerful. The production has a raw touch, but it is enough clear and well-balanced which gives an organic touch to the songs, a characteristic that I consider a correct approach for this music. The keys have a reasonable presence, as you can hear them through the song, which includes certain moments of a bigger prominence, where they truly shine. The second "O Lórien" is a bit longer, which gives a greater room to introduce more variations and, in this case, longer mid-tempo sections where the atmosphere is absolutely captivating. The simple yet atmospheric hypnotic keys enhance the ambience and gives a truly solemn touch to the song. The classic riffing is solid, and it is a great example that there is no need for experimentation where things are done with great taste. The intensity of the song is increased towards its final section, with a marvellous combination of relentless fury and beautiful atmospheric arrangements, that remain in loneliness to close this great track.

In conclusion, Morcaint’s debut EP 'Elessar' is an excellent debut and a fine example of how atmospheric black must sound. As it only has two songs it leaves the listener wanting more, much more, so I do hope that this time the project will remain active and will release in a near future its debut full-length. (Alain González Artola)
 
(Nordvis Produktion - 2023)
Score: 82
 

domenica 6 dicembre 2020

Over the Voids… - Hadal

#FOR FANS OF: Black Metal
Poland for many years has been a truly respected scene with many talented musicians involved in the black metal genre, creating and developing projects both classical or innovative, but always with a distinctive sound. Some of those musicians are more focused on their main projects as others, like the musician known as the Fall, have been participating in several bands, though he decided to create a solo-project where he could forge a sound sorely based on his ideas. Over the Voids… was the name of this project created a few years ago, which caught the attention of the respected Swedish label Nordvis Produktion. The interesting homonymous debut album was the first stone of this project´s career, whose sound was firmly rooted in a devotion to the 90s black metal.

Three years later Over the Voids… has released its sophomore album 'Hadal', confirming the main characteristics found in the debut album but expanding a little bit its sound, though it keeps the core sound which always helps to maintain the personality of the project recognizable. The aforementioned devotion to the '90s black metal classic style is still there, though the production fits the current times. The first proper song of the album "One Commandment", is a fine example of it, stylistically the style is highly recognizable with those rasped vocals, yet with a slightly lower tone, which is quite classic in other bands of the Polish scene. Some melancholicesque vocals are also introduced as a tiny variation which is always welcome. The riffs have a distinguishable black metal sound with a little distortion, very typical in modern times. The guitars are obviously a strong point on this album with remarkably well-done work in the composition of the riffs. This is by no means an album with the typical songs with a lineal structure as variation in the guitar lines, sometimes more aggressive and other times slightly more melodic, are also accompanied by a rhythmic base where drums and bass create flowing structures in terms of intensity and pace. The fourth song "Witchfuck" is one of my favorites and one which shows clearly the explained variance of these songs. The more aggressive tone "Stone Vault Astronomers" doesn’t leave behind the already exposed features, combining straightforward sections with aggressive vocals and ferocious riffs, but at the same time introducing again those melancholic clean vocals which mark a clear contrast. This combination of elements is undoubtedly an interesting resource to create varied and exciting songs and marks which are maybe the key elements introduced in this second opus of Over the Voids... I wouldn't like to forget mentioning another impressive track, the one entitled "Prodigal King". This song has some of the best riffs of this album, quite melodic yet still aggressive, and introduces some echoing vocals which give a certain atmospheric touch to this song, making it one of the most varied of this sophomore album.

In conclusion, it is undoubtedly that Over the Voids… has made a step forward with 'Hadal', reaching a pretty inspired balance between straightforward aggression, a remarkable melodic facet, and some interesting new adds which enrich its compositions. This is a very good black metal album that may appeal to, both the lovers of the classic sound and the ones who want bands that renew the classic sound without reneging on it. (Alain González Artola)

(Nordvis Produktion - 2020)
Score: 82

https://overthevoids.bandcamp.com/album/hadal

lunedì 9 novembre 2020

Varde - Fedraminne

#FOR FANS OF: Black Folk
The Norwegian trio Varde was founded three years ago by musicians with, at least for two of them, a previous background in the metal scene, being especially linked to the black metal scene in Norway. I especially think to Nord, currently involved in the return of the excellent Russian band Tvangeste. In its short existence the band has been quite active releasing two singles, one promising EP and the recently debut album 'Fedraminne', which has been released by the always reliable label Nordvis Produktion.

Varde’s core sound is firmly rooted in the black metal genre, though the Norwegian folklore has a primordial influence both in its lyrics and the music itself. Moreover, the band has not fear to introduce some unusual influences which enrich its music. The debut album 'Fedraminne' is a mature evolution of those ideas, which have been represented in eight songs, with a quite interesting degree of variety. This remarkable diversity may surprise the unprepared listener in certain moments. Varde’s style has a raw nature in its heaviest moments, with some powerful riffs and a remarkable vocal performance with some vicious screams. Anyway, we will taste through the album a combination of influences and approaches, both in the vocal department with the introduction of different types of clean vocals and rhythmically with the introduction of different arrangements. The evocative opening track, "Kystbillede del I" is a nice first example of it, with an excellent mixture of delicate keys, great riffs and a different range of vocals. We can also find more straightforward tracks like "Halvdan Svarte" or the more extreme one "Forbundet", which show Varde’s rawest face, with a high dose of aggression in the later one. The more surprising homonymous song shows in contrast the most experimental side of Varde, where we can find acoustic guitars, saxophone leads and folk influenced clean vocals, which create a totally different composition. Surprises don´t end here as a song like "Skuld" could confuse us with its industrial and martial sound, bringing us back those industrial black metal influences. The track itself is a good piece, though I must admit it may sound a little bit out of place in comparison with the general tone and conceptual background of the album. The closer song, "Kystbillede del II", is a nice summary of the album, combining atmospheric touches, experimental details and a more blackish and aggressive second half. In this final section both influences converge lead by ferocious vocals and a faster pace, until the rhythm decreases and the initial experimental and quiet introduction returns, making this song a remarkable way of ending this debut album.

All in all, 'Fedraminne' is a good work with some truly interesting and even genuinely surprising moments, which make the listener be reasonably excited with every song that comes next. This is always good when the quality is high and in general terms, Varde has created a fine release, which should help them to receive some attention from the scene. (Alain González Artola)


(Nordvis Produktion - 2020)
Score: 76

https://vardeband.bandcamp.com/

venerdì 12 luglio 2019

Waldgeflüster - Mondscheinsonaten

#FOR FANS OF: Atmospheric Black Metal, Drudkh
Taking its Bavarian black metal style into a more anthemic and delicately adorned place, emotionally gripping high-resolution heartfelt heathendom travails twixt the timbers in search of the message within the 'forest whisperings' where Waldgeflüster finds its namesake. Far less dreary in production than the previous presentation but no less melancholic than 'Ruinen', these tickling strings through gruff folksy laments offer insights into how the fabled fury of black metal blasts and clip clopping cymbals can cry out through the deluges of choking atmospheric layering that make this band's music stand firmly within the boundary of black metal and curiously peek out to the lands beyond.

Epic anguished compositions consist of melancholic treble cries over humming rhythmic strums, the battle hardened black metal blast beat belabored by its forced march through this swirling nihil, and a majesty reached in “Der Steppenwolf” that is as proud as it is concerned with its struggle to endure has been brought to humbling fruition. Played in acoustic at the back end of vinyl versions of this album, these Jekyl and Hyde explorations of this strong song further express the turbulent dichotomous melancholy of being caught between the natures of man and wolf, an aperture through which Waldgeflüster both cherishes and laments the beauty in which it finds itself confined and simultaneously freed.

An echoing mix of awkward twanging and seas of reverb hammered into shape by blast beating makes “Gipfelstürmer” sound as much a storm as an echo of timelessness worn into stone as the longest piece on 'Mondscheinsonaten' dances a skyline of tempestuous gales and rides out a storm of withering emotions. Dense treble rainfall sloshes over thumping percussion as rhythmic vocals call out to the storm and attempt to subvert the deluge until drowning in the cries of cascading strings. Throughout this album is an expansive breadth of emotion with a focus on dragging out melancholic riffs, drowning them in the choral tones of a throaty choir, and accentuating the reverberating strings that twirl in the tremolo swirls of this clear and woeful sighing production.

Expressive sustain behind a trickle of guitar notes flourishes into a haze of grain, growing into a drastic gale of decaying strings struggling to hang on to their escaping breaths. The curvature of a chugging rhythm three minutes into “Rotgoldene Novemberwälder”, uplifted by more droning choral calls behind a rolling percussion, grips the heart with the psychedelic impact of Drudkh and the august heroism of Horn. Like reading the parallels between dramatic mythological rides into a deadly underworld, one is easily enwrapped in the throes of these decaying 'red-gold Novemeber forests' as life fades into another unquiet winter, hurriedly attempting to absorb the last nutrients of a time of plenty before enduring the coming cold. Thus “Und Der Wind...” and “Von Winterwäldern Und Mondscheinsonaten” take up a fierce anthemic mantle, cloaking the fading forest in swirling snow storms and making less distinct and more distant the cries of desperation emanating from the mouths of its victims as the onslaught of winter breeches the woodland refuge.

A breath caught in a whirlwind of emotions, imprisoned by the escapism of imagination within these arboreal walls, and falling to despair in a desperate struggle to stay upright, 'Mondscheinsonaten' strives to survive the privations of its station while still acknowledging the lustrous allure that such natural beauty can inspire in its meandering melodies. Yet still the tear of its fury must succumb to silence, the disquiet of its fitful attempts to survive fall to the desolation of existence's entropy. Such a knowledge is incredibly apparent throughout these foreboding forays yet still so mysteriously lingering between each heave of horrific glory, suggesting a beyond for which to strive despite such distinct decay and despair woven throughout these painstaking passages.

Where a song like “Und Der Wind...” flirts with the basics of a folk rock structure and energizes it with the fury of a black metal brutalization, the general cry of this cavalcade of corrosive textures becomes an understanding of the necessity of decay, the need to die in order to make life worth its struggle, and the endlessness that is entropy for fighting nonexistence through shout and shudder still realizes the same simple reality. Entropy cannot be reversed. (Five_Nails)

Score: 85
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Waldgeflüster is a German band coming from Munich. The German black metal scene is widely known and respected by the fans. There are tons of bands which play a quite orthodox form of black metal, while many others are more interested in playing a sort of black metal heavily influenced by the ancient history of their land, which is commonly known as the pagan black metal subgenre. The German scene of this subgenre is, in my humble opinion, one of the best and the range of bands playing this style is quite rich and interesting. While some bands have a heavy folk influence, using folk instruments more generously, other ones use them sparsely, being a secondary resource used to enrich the music in certain moments. I would place Waldgeflüster in this second group. Musically speaking, Waldgeflüster plays black metal with a certain somber touch, creating a melancholic atmosphere, without lacking the expected aggression in a band whose roots are the black metal genre.

'Mondscheinsonaten' is the fifth album of a band whose line-up has remained quite stable since it became a full band in 2014. Prior to this moment, it was a one-man band created by Winterherz. His talent was already clear in the first and impressive three records entitled 'Herbstklagen', 'Femundsmarka - Eine Reise in Drei Kapiteln' and 'Meine Fesseln'. Going back to the latest record, I can safely say that Winterherz´s touch and talent are still in a very good shape. 'Mondscheinsonaten' is a very nice piece of pagan influenced black metal with the aforementioned dark and somber touch, but with a good range of elements which make the album an excellent work. The album contains seven songs, being some of the quite long as the impressive "Gripfelstürme", probably one of the best if not the best track of this album. It´s a very varied and dynamic track with tastefully composed sections and melodies. This lengthy track includes excellent melodies, some powerful and pagan-esque clean vocals which accompany the usual high-pitched shrieks, as well as intelligently placed atmospheric keys . "Rotgoldene Novemberwälder" is the single of the album and summarizes perfectly the main characteristics of this album. It is an excellently structured song with impressive guitars and background vocals, which make the sound epic yet mournful. Once again the clean vocals, both in the front and in the background, play a major role in making these songs emotional. Even though the top-notch guitars and the already mentioned touching clean vocals are the ones which have the most import roles in 'Mondscheinsonaten', Waldgeflüster successfully use other resources to enrich this work, as some very nicely composed atmospheric keys which are one of the highlights in the very intense and hypnotic track entitled "Und der Wind". Acoustic guitars are also used in different tracks, mainly as a song opener, which is sometimes abruptly interrupted by a purely black metal-ish section or as an introduction to a acoustic esque sung section as it happens in the album closer "Staub in der Lunge". This song perfectly closes this excellent work leaving us a permanent feeling of melancholy.

'Mondscheinsonaten' is undoubtedly an impressive work which confirms Waldgeflüster as one of the best bands in the German pagan black metal scene. With songs having a strong black metal base, the German guys build an album rich in the use of different elements, which makes the listener keep interested from the very beginning to the end. It’s a emotionally very intense album, which I think is something great and makes the music even more special. (Alain González Artola)


sabato 27 gennaio 2018

Eneferens - In the Hours Beneath

#FOR FANS OF: Cascadian Black, Agalloch
Eneferens is a one man atmospheric black metal project, created at the beginning of 2016 by Jori Apedaile. Initially, he lived in Montana, where he took part in another atmospheric black metal band called Arkheon Thodol. Later, he moved to Minnesota leaving the initial project and deciding to create a new band, Eneferens. Since its inception, this new project has been pretty active, releasing two albums and one EP in only two years. Now it’s time to review his second effort entitled 'In the Hours Beneath', which was initially an independent release. Anyway, his work gained some interest and thanks to the excellent label Nordvis Produktion, decided to re-release it in 2017. From the very beginning you take a look to the album´s front cover, you realize what kind of music you are going to listen to. Eneferens moves undoubtedly in the realms of atmospheric black metal, but always trying to build a distinctive sound which makes the music very interesting. First of all, Jori uses profound death metal-esque vocals, instead of the typical black metal shrieks. I must say that his vocals are pretty consistent and they fit the music, although they are not the most usual ones in this genre. Moreover, he has no fear to add some clean and quite melancholic vocals, like in the opening track, “Ascension”. For some reasons, those parts remind me Agalloch (but also Italians Novembre/ndr), though I wouldn´t say that they are very similar bands. Those vocals plus the acoustic sections, give this release a quite melancholic feeling, which confirms what the aforementioned album cover promises. Another good example of it, is represented by the third track, “Morning”, which is one of the calmest tracks of the whole cd, with a slow pace, some acoustic sections and delicate clean vocals. 'In the Hours Beneath' is in general a not very fast work, as Eneferens prefers to create mid-tempo tracks with some very slow and heavy moments ("Chrysantheum", which suddenly includes unexpected fast sections). Another good example is provided by “Refuge”, which flows quite naturally between mid-tempo, slow and fast parts in a very well-done way. The guitars are indeed a true highlight of this work, playing a major role and being quite varied and very well executed. I couldn’t define them citing only one genre, I can feel influences from (obviously) black metal, but some parts can even remind death or post black metal influences. The slow nature of this work has also a slight touch of doom metal, mainly due to paused and deep sections always accompanied by Jori’s growls. His vocals are, as already mentioned, very well-done in both styles, being the clean ones the most original ones. Those vocals can disappoint the listener who wants a rawer and more classic stuff, but if you listen to them with an open mind, I sincerely think that they are fine and fit perfectly well the music. All in all, Eneferens second effort is a very solid release. Jori has tried to create a very personal album, which initially can be described as an atmospheric metal album, although it has some influences and twists which make it a distinctive work with an intense melancholic touch. Excellent stuff. (Alain González Artola)

(Nordvis Produktions - 2017)
Score: 85

sabato 25 novembre 2017

JoDöden – Sittandes I Sjön Med Vatten Över Huvudet

#FOR FANS OF: Black/Folk, early Ulver, Burzum
It’s pretty usual that metal musicians, who take part in several bands, tend to release solo albums just to make some music based on their different influences or musical roots. This is the case with JoDöden’s debut 'Sittandes I Sjön Med Vatten Över Huvudet', which I must mention, it’s a quite funny album title (a rough translation would be “seated in the lake with water over the head”). JoDöden, the mastermind behind this homonymous project, is already known in the black metal scene due to his main projects. Whirling is a band which combines black metal with avant-garde influences, while Sorgeldom was founded by the Swedish mastermind as an acoustic project. Later the project evolved to black metal, becoming a full band with the addition of several members. 

Taking into account the aforementioned musical background and after having listened to the album, I come to the logic conclusion that he has somehow returned to his roots with this solo album. 'Sittandes…' is a nature themed album and specifically a Nordic nature based work. Those beautiful coastal northern towns and extensive forests have served as a spiritual inspiration för JoDöden, whose music tries to evoke the vast and cold essence of northern Sweden. The album has an organic sound, far from those ultra-polished modern works, which in my opinion suits perfectly well the music. As far as I know, these songs have been recorded in different places, moments and even different moods. This explains the heterogeneous sound of these tracks, which initially can be confusing. A good example is the difference in the production between the opener track, “Aprilvädret”, and the more blackish track “Bottenlös”, which comes immediately after the first song. This song has a quite filthy production in comparison. Both tracks are also a good example of what we can find in this work. Stylistically, the album is mainly instrumental, with a great role for the acoustic guitars (like in the first track), while the second one is an example of how JoDöden tries to introduce some of his black metal and avant-garde influences. Anyway, as I have already mentioned, the acoustic sections are quite common and they are usually mainly instrumental. In that aspect, this album reminds me at times Wongraven or even the most acoustic tracks by Ulver. The very few “blackish” sections sound a little bit out of place, although I find them interesting. This is mainly because they add an extra point of variety, which is something this album really needs. The long and sometimes tedious acoustic tracks are, from time to time, broken by slightly avant-garde influenced compositions, which make this album a weird beast. 

In conclusion, JoDöden’s debut solo album is a strange folk album. It combines a nature themed folk with some avant-garde influences and minor black metal sections. It’s mainly instrumental and repetitious style makes it a difficult listen if you don´t usually listen to this sort of stuff. Unsurprisingly, he covers a Burzum track, a band which is well-known for not having very varied tracks. As it happens with Varg’s stuff, JoDöden is a project you really need “feel” in order to really appreciate his music. (Alain González Artola)

(Nordvis Produktions - 2017)
Score: 50

giovedì 26 ottobre 2017

Saiva - Markerna Bortom

#FOR FANS OF: Folk Metal
Another one-man band from Sweden, Saiva is the product of Andreas Petterson, a once corpse painted black metal warrior who has appeared with numerous underground acts before settling into the more folk influenced periphery since hanging up his screaming face. With Saiva there is as much to be expected as there is in Grift. Saiva's sound is music to thresh wheat to, to stare at trees to, and to hang outlanders from those trees to as much as Grift's music is to sulk, question, contemplate, and commit suicide to.

Throughout Saiva's 'Markerna Bortom' is a general air of ancient and timeless chanting to quiet and toned-back minimalist guitars picking their way around softly rippling cycles. Distant cries can be heard from Grift's Erik Gärdefors in “Där Vindar Vänder” among other collaborations that round out an album enhanced by the contributions of Panopticon's Austin Lunn and Juha Marklund of Tervahäät. These additions surely do embrace that idea of 'solidarity in solitude' through an isolating experience between the shakes of the strings while the imposing ensemble can conjure the anxiety of being stalked by phantom fears behind every tree.

“Varsel I Vildmark” has harmonizing calls that leap with a bark as the guitars wrap around themselves through the dreamlike end of the song, predicating the yelping accents throughout the vocal harmony in “Nordan”. Most distinctive however, is how “Nordmarkens Älvar” and “Där Vindar Vänder” create an endless flowing sound with their calming guitars. While the river calmly bubbles along in “Nordmarkens Älvar”, the flood of a full compliment inundates the second progression in “Där Vindar Vänder” as chanting, a second guitar, and pounding drums submerge stone and shoreline with icy intensity.

The quivering lilting in the guitars makes for a quintessentially black metal offering of twisted harmonies as a second set of strings stands hairs on end and sends shivers down your spine. Even when taken down to its most basic tones and without the raging resonance expected in voluminous reverberations, the tone of this album retains its foreboding atmosphere. This is especially found in the second movement of “Nordan” where the gritty riffing growls behind an ever suffocating wall of imposing treble sounds to create a claustrophobic atmosphere before the wave breaks. Though the aggression of 'Markerna Bortom' is understated and far less apparent than the average screaming black metal band, the mesmerizing atmosphere and steadily growing sound with all its guitar additions, chants, martial drumming, and chest-clenching uproar finds its own delirious place in the mysticism of black metal's disorienting wilderness. (Five_Nails)

(Nordvis Produktion - 2017)
Score: 75

https://saiva.bandcamp.com/album/markerna-bortom

domenica 22 ottobre 2017

Lustre - Still Innocence

#FOR FANS OF: Black Ambient
Sometimes it's a nice change of pace to listen to something airy, inoffensive, and so unusually out of place that it inhabits a world of its own. Nachzeit's one-man offering of a pretty atmosphere through 'Still Innocence' is just that sort of float of a feather down a chasm of sunlight that embraces the serenity of its delicate descent into the shadows.

Through lovely and ethereal waves of ambient noise with drums hidden behind quiet keyboard synth in “Dreaded Still”, a calming meditative track paints happy clouds of humming atmospheric fuzz across a full and entrancing soundscape, open to a calm and sweet whistling tune as it softly steps its way through the winds. Sometimes a sound can easily become the theme to a season and I can already sense this song becoming a major contender for what my mental jukebox will spin in this autumn's retrospect.

There is truly somber and melancholic beauty in each song. Guitars are held so far back in the mix that they sound like distant pulsing waves of rainfall, ushered by heaves of wind to hammer a puddle before allowing the noise to give way to steady and sometimes interminable drips. Even more distant, whispers and drowning screams can barely be heard as they gently breathe between squalls of grain-falls. This album is sappy and weepy, nostalgic and mesmerizing, lonely and longing, and all encapsulated in simply beautiful sound that, sadly, overstays its welcome.

While “Dreaded Still” can catch the ear, the compositional style shows its standardization quickly enough by the second track, “Nestled Within”. Lustre shows its quality production and maintains a momentum that can go easily ignored as background music in “Let Go Like Leaves of Fall”. Still, this music is entrancing while simultaneously unimposing and a calming accouterment to a solitary walk or to rainy day spent immersed in a book. While the opening of the album with “Dreaded Still” is energetic enough to be reimagined as a techno song, by the time you get to “Reverence Road”, the soundscape has turned into elevator music playing in a 1980s shopping mall at the height of Madonna's fame. I like the moments that remind me of immersive role-playing video games, like the Final Fantasy style opening to “Without End”, but at the end of the day this album of sappy sounds runs its course long before the music ends. Lustre holds its atmospheres hostage when they could have been allowed to run free through the listener's memory before becoming an annoyance. Instead these lingering songs refuse to leave, losing their luster to the apathy of a listener that is left begging for the album to end rather than begging for more.

As the music seems to offer more than it needed in respect to song length, the droning melodies and repetitious drum beats become a halfhearted white noise. I was hoping that maybe there would be some explanation of the songs, some literature to expound upon what may be in Nachzeit's head while composing this music, but there are only snippets of scant stanzas to bring reason to this repetition. The stanzas for “Dreaded Still” and “Nestled Within” aren't very alluring. The wordplay to the stanza for “Reverence Road” is nice enough, but again this is such maddeningly unintrusive substance that it has me asking why the rest of this album even exists after the opening track.

I'm left scratching my head as to just what any of this album was supposed to accomplish and how this lines up with any characteristics of black metal other than a nearly inaudible hiss of what may be guitars in the background. I don't hate this music but I've quickly become bored of it. I'm left a little confused as to where to place this album, but the worst that I could ever react to this is with ambivalence. Lustre's 'Still Innocence' is a meditation tape or white noise sleep album, it's the speck of dust illuminated by a ray of sunshine that passes unnoticed until that certain hour of the afternoon, and that's just fine enough when you're not hoping for much more. (Five_Nails)

(Nordvis Produktion - 2017)
Score: 65

domenica 1 ottobre 2017

Grift - Arvet

#FOR FANS OF: Depressive Black Metal
Eric Gärdefors' anguished and depressive black metal project, Grift, continues in its smooth, intimate, and captivating approach with another desperate cry into the untamed wilderness. The lonely house that Grift built, residing twixt the trees of a desolate forest and lying unlit under an ashen sky, is the prison of an isolated mind that dwells on the inherent insignificance of existence while awaiting inevitable demise.

Folksy acoustic guitars with pattering traditional drums, wailing cries both high and low, and a dive into the fury of fleeting black metal riffs characterize “Flyktfast”, Den Stora Tystnaden”, and “Utdöingsbygd” as genuine and significant standard metal affairs among a catalogue of introspective and disillusioned lyrics. After two minutes of a desolate and creeping intro, where the serenity of a quiet resonating cymbal tolling between creaks of wood is interrupted by distant cries, a barking dog, and a drop into Grift's most energetic song on this album, “Glömskans Jrtecken” harnesses its lonesome atmosphere in a tumble of emotions. The relentlessly kicking rhythm buffets long, drawn out guitars that longingly ring like organs, yearning to recapture a long lost mental state, stuck in a fleeting moment that is impossible to hold onto after conjuring a shadow if itself in retrospect. Lyrically, the song describes the somber revelation that memories merely malform over time. Through an easily-convinced naivete, minds that sought signs of the 'urkraft' or primordial force that has awakened mankind's cognition were simply imagining, never witnessing the spirits manifesting themselves in the greatness that so deluded such a once-impressionable youth.

The avant-garde moments of this release make up the majority of “Morgon På Stromshölm”, with its four minutes of birdsong, cymbal tinks, and a grating violin taking over the final minute of the track. “Nattyxne” embraces its desolation to drag the guitars through begrudgingly beautiful tones while assuring the listener that, despite all the pleasing sounds and picturesque landscapes it conjures, the tone of this album remains firmly entrenched in its dispirited disposition. Emotionally impactful, Grift's 'Arvet' is an unheard cry for help as the production fills the air with the moisture of falling tears and mesmerizing melancholic measures. The understated intensity of this album, lurking in the shadows before pouncing in “Utdöingsbygd”, creates a reversed rhythm crushing its own heart and wallowing in its self-absorbed misery while maintaining a firm grip on the desolate black metal structure that culminates in the swing of tremolos and blasts. (Five_Nails)

(Nordvis Prod - 2017)
Score: 75

https://nordvis.bandcamp.com/album/arvet

lunedì 15 maggio 2017

Vaiya - Remnant Light

#FOR FANS OF: Post Black
Listening to Vaiya's music has been about as rewarding as reading Milton's 'Paradise Lost'. There is an immense heap of dry atonal content that meaninglessly meanders in Vaiya's long-winded catalogue, a simple show of how many words can cover a page without catching the attention of its audience. Luckily, the man behind the band has finally created something of value and come into his own as a musician and, dare I say it, an artist. Rob Allen has shown so much potential and perplexingly thrown it away throughout this project. Years of wallowing in such unremarkable stagnation must have finally pissed him off and snapped something in this musician's mind that motivated him to strive for something better because 'Remnant Light' is finally something that works and captures the potential he had only been hinting at for years.

A one-man act from Australia, Vaiya creates some densely cloistered black metal in 'Remnant Light' that grows outwardly from its intense desperation to invigorate as it expands. Each song steps into the light after indulging the darkness it is bred in and takes a deeply personal journey that is translated into a warmer approach to black metal, but not without its own expressions of anguish through painful evolution. Finally finding focus, Vaiya finds riffs, the drums have become audible, wailing tremolos shine as cymbals crash and embrace the elaborate cacophony of real and palpable black metal rather than shoehorning words into a genre designation for a name without manifestation to back it up. The longer this album steps into the light, the higher the riffs rise, the more captivating is the atmosphere, the higher the score for this album rises, and the more this reviewer appreciates the effort and evolution this musician has gone through to achieve a worthy benchmark. Finally, a band has been born from the fetid womb of a gaseous bedchamber.

The album is split into three equal parts, each exactly thirteen minutes long. This makes for a long-winded and immersive exploration. Despite their length, each song's gradual pace is captivating and entertaining as it emerges from the maw of darkness to bask in the glow of hypnotic singing and beautiful guitar notes. The growth of “Confrontation” is best displayed in its flowering finish while “Banishment” takes wailing tremolos, upping the ante with harmonious intensity and a churning drumming backdrop that is actually audible and uses the space rather than simply fills it in. Later in the song is a fantastic moment where the ambiance of the guitars and synth march the treble notes into a grinder of drumming that gets me thinking of how Emerna layered his “Esoteric Digression”, forging a flourish from the fodder into a fleeting fortress quickly forsaken to its own fragile foundation. The general mix is more bass oriented than your average under-produced black metal release and the guitars fill this role with deeper notes thickened with reverb but in a warmer climate than what is usually expected from the European standard. The highest notes are noticed in a distant rhythm guitar quashed in so much reverb in “Transformation” that its bassy grain becomes a hypnotic meditation for the flowery highs of the lead harmony. The songs sound similar to each other, making for a cohesive thirty-nine minute ride that approaches the same sort of energy with different notes, but the structuring keeps things fresh enough as they evolve and the riffs have their stand-out moments that ensure they shy enough away from each other to forge their own paths.

Like his album's theme, Rob Allen has finally stepped into the light. Languishing in the darkness of a one man band pretentiously prostrating inanity at his audience with one hand outstretched shaking a tip can of oxidized pennies and the other hand tightly cupped around his trembling anus eagerly anticipating the next foul dose that he imbibes from his crack is a snapshot of a time that seems an age ago. 'Remnant Light' has redeemed this musician from the doldrums of barely passable mediocrity to find a man in an age of discovery, introspection, and self-realization. If this album completes Viaya's journey, it was well worth the agony of enduring so many terrible ideas to get to this high water mark. Here tears of joy can be shed as though we have made this journey together and we can rest, contented with where the path has taken us. (Five_Nails)

(Nordvis Produktion - 2017)
Score: 70

https://nordvis.bandcamp.com/album/remnant-light

lunedì 19 dicembre 2016

Waldgeflüster - Ruinen

#FOR FANS OF: Post Black, Ulver, Agalloch
A Bavarian black metal band that features some Ulver and Agalloch style guitar harmonies with high doses of furious blast beats, Waldgeflüster alternates between raw, aggressive old-school black metal style and melancholic, heartfelt post-black modernism in 'Ruinen'. Post-black is an interesting arrangement on its own. Bands who play this style honor the under-produced, low-fi atmosphere of the progenitors of the second wave of black metal while they seek to display a maturation of the style and, in my opinion, sometimes try too hard to say they've outgrown the aggression of their youth. Giving the post title to any style seems to say that whatever a sub-genre or movement set out to do was already accomplished and now the new breed is playing with what was worthy of surviving their scrutiny. With black metal being a very anti-establishment style that breaks down many metal walls and constructs, the post-black style seeks to sift through the debris and pick up the few solid pieces that survived the apocalyptic assault of the legions that came before them. Major originators in this matured post-black realm like Ulver, Agalloch, and Enslaved, broadened the horizons of the initial second wave and experimented with just how far they could take the initial approach. However, this new territory comes with the caveat of too many post-black hipster bands jumping on the bandwagon of a style that was initially created to make you get into it rather than be too easily accessible to exactly that sort of fair weather audience. Luckily with Waldgeflüster the hipster bits are toned down enough while a focus on the common forest reverence and atmosphere are the main compliments of their style posing the question of where to take things after the smoke has cleared. Unfortunately, it's been done so many times that to truly stand out becomes far more difficult in such a small but saturated sphere.

Despite how cleanly produced the vocals, bass, and drums are, the guitars have a very raw sound to them. This treble is a staple of the style but it's too high in Waldgeflüster's mix to compliment the bass end and it becomes grating too easily despite how beautifully employed the instruments are. Something less airy and thicker in the lower registers would improve this quite a bit. It's not a major flaw, but enough to make the music a bit less pleasing on the ear than it could be and it makes the drums less pronounced that I'd prefer. The main single from this album, “Weltenwanderer”, is a thesis of this band's focuses. From an airy opening with vocals raging against the guitars' melancholy, plateauing with destructive blasts, and the entire band falling into an introspective but determined wandering segment, this song integrates the complex combination of thoughts and emotions that black metal has pondered for decades. “Trummerfestung” already passes as great piece of music after the first three and a half minutes and then goes on to become an expository piece elaborating on the majesty witnessed in the lyrics. Some electrifying blast beats, fantastic tempo changes, and humbling harmonies make this an epic and memorable song. The blast near the main transition, around 1:20 is unsettling in how fast it comes into the mix, however it is unseated by a relentless tremolo harmony with a backdrop of a more melodic and expected speed in the next blast. These first two songs are the biggest standouts of 'Ruinen' while “Und Immer Wieder Schnee” begins a turn towards a deepening depression and the title track comes in as a simpler cleanly sung depressive piece, combating the structures created by the former songs. With more ripping drumming falling upon a strong guitar change-up, the energy of “Grastufen Novembertage” has a reverential, epic, and foresty sound combined with a return to the rage from the opening of the album while “Aschephonix” claws its way out of the doldrums its guitar keeps pulling it into. “Susitaival” is an acoustic closer to the album. Very much a more folksy approach to Agalloch style, this flowing piece seems to get its name from a hiking trail in Finland that translates to the “Wolf's Path” and earns this album some serious points for how gorgeous it sounds.

Waldgeflüster has a great grasp on where they want to go throughout this album and guide you through a dense forest of sounds and emotions where every copse of trees has a memory attached to it. The blizzards of blasts and icy treble make this band's domain a harsh environment at times but the shelter of this thick and grizzly territory hides the spirit of a style that is being examined with the reverence of retrospect. In all, Waldgeflüster's 'Ruinen' is a complex sort of beast that approaches black metal with a more matured outlook but cannot help but ponder what pieces should be picked up after the great structures have been razed. (Five_Nails)

sabato 18 ottobre 2014

Grift - Fyra Elegier

#PER CHI AMA: Black, Kampfar
La Nordvis, deliziosa etichetta madre di questa release, ultimamente sta dando alla luce molte interessanti proposte, sempre molto discrete e coinvolgenti, e i Grift sono una di queste. Provenienti dalla fredda Svezia, terra di una sempre più proliferante scena Black Metal vissuto con estrema dedizione, sono attivi dal 2011 ma questo loro EP di debutto è uscito solo nel 2013. 'Fyra Elegier' pare sia stato ben accolto dall’opinione generale di chi come me, cerca e studia l’evolversi del sottobosco scandinavo, ma è e rimane un prodotto di nicchia, con una bassa tiratura di uscite in formato vinile, cd e audiocassetta. i Grift sono uno dei molti gruppi svedesi che stanno delineando il profilo di una seconda e credibilissima genesi di blacksters purosangue. Questo genere che io oserei definire “nuovo”, è in realtà ciò che era sempre stato il Black Metal prima della sua rovina, ossia austerità, introspezione, misantropia e profonda chiusura nei confronti di un mondo che guarda ad un futuro sempre più dannatamente falso e miserabile. Questo 'Fyra Elegier' che tradotto significa “quattro elegie” è composto da quattro canzoni che non stravolgeranno il mondo, ne si auto-proclameranno come virtuosi capolavori dell’anno perché questo “nuovo” modo di sentire e vivere il Black Metal finalmente è disinteressato e se ne sbatte le palle dei media, è pulito e vivo, ha un anima e non necessita di strafare per attirare l’attenzione dei metallari da cheeseburger che se ne stanno su youtube più annoiati dei loro stessi brufoli, né lecca il sedere alle etichette più progressiste e orientate a nuove tendenze shoegaze, nella speranza di farsi preconfezionare un bell’artwork a triangoli e farsi sbattere sul mercato come nuova rivelazione del momento. In questi 24 minuti regnano la quiete e l’armonia, a dispetto della violenza cieca e della brutalità estrema che troppo spesso è fumo negli occhi a nascondere fragilità e povertà di idee all’ascoltatore. Qui si ascolta musica dedicata alla pace eterna, fredda, profonda, una pace che solo la morte sa e può dare, scaturita dall’apertura di un intro di tristi violini che dondolanti, paiono uscire da un grammofono. Successivamente la notte discende su tutto con un cielo costellato di riff generosamente melodici, appoggiati su una batteria che come un cavallo stanco, trotta rovinosamente verso i meandri dell’oscurità assieme al suo condottiero che proclama le ultime memorie. I Grift possiedono un lato malinconico che definisce i tratti della loro musica, ma sono molto lontani dal depressive black, sono più simili ai vecchi Kampfar e ne condividono lo stesso scarno minimalismo, la stessa essenzialità che però in questo caso non è volta a raccontare storie di mitologia nordica, né ha la medesima attitudine nazionalista; qui la cosa che si sente di più, non è l’amore per la propria terra, per la propria storia passata, ma l’amore per la morte, e la rabbia verso la superficialità con cui l’uomo volge ad essa. Mi raccomando, prima di cadere nel più antico e immemorabile silenzio, nella pace ultima, prima che sopraggiunga la fine di ogni cosa… ricordatevi di ascoltate 'Fyra Elegier'. (Alessio Skogen Algiz)

(Nordvis Produktion - 2013)
Voto: 80

https://www.facebook.com/Griftofficial

venerdì 6 dicembre 2013

Lustre - Wonder

#FOR FANS OF: Black/Ambient
Lustre’s particular brand of atmospheric black metal has always struck me on a deep and personal level. Whether that’s through the fuzzed out reverberating guitars or the emotional and shimmering keyboards, Lustre is able to craft some of the most vivid atmospheres that have graced my ears. 'Wonder' carries on with their signature style, yet despite no alterations to their overall sound Lustre still prove to be masters of their craft when it comes to this particular form of keyboard laden black metal. The most notable aspect of Lustre is the heavy keyboard presence. They dominate the entire mix, pushing the guitars and vocals to the background. It’s a strange mixture, what with black metal being a predominantly guitar based genre of music, yet Lustre work wonders with this mixing. The guitars are suitably fuzzed out, and despite being quiet can be quite easily heard and provide a good background for the shimmering keyboards. The guitars function on a minimalistic, perhaps one could say droning wavelength, indeed there’s no solos, no real riffs, just one note chords stretched out for extended periods of time. The keyboards have always been the main instrument in Lustre’s arsenal, everything else comes second. "A Summer Night" makes great use of the keyboards; a Burzum meets Port-Royal kind of thing with hissed vocals, ambient keyboards and quiet guitars. The overall song structures of the songs are very simple, usually following the same formula of open with a keyboard melody, add some guitars, end with an atmospheric outro. With each songs being of an average of nine minutes with very little to differentiate between themselves, one could be led to believe that this is a boring album. With this kind of music though, one needs to approach it with the right mindset, if you go in thinking this is going to be too repetitive and way too boring then incidentally you’ll be bored out of your mind. This kind of music works best when the listener approaches it in a different way as to the way they’d approach an artist such as Iron Maiden. This isn't music for those looking for lots of riffs and solos; this is repetitive and trance inducing that above all aims to create an ethereal, even mystical atmosphere. Black metal has always been a genre than focuses on atmosphere much more than other metal genres yet Lustre takes this to the next possible extreme. The songs are incredibly minimalistic, containing only a small handful of melodies. The vocals show very little variation between pitch, dynamics and even rhythm, they’re a constant whispering shriek that could easily be missed if enough attention isn't placed upon them. Whilst the music of 'Wonder' is quite easy to listen to and admittedly quite accessible, this is not an album for everyone. The moods this album creates are unique, perhaps even abstract, there’s a strong sense of sorrow within this but the music also seems to deal with themes of hope and perhaps even wonder. Nachtzeit is the kind of abstract, surrealist artist who leaves his work open to interpretation, there’s no right or wrong way to feel about the music of Lustre and this is why this kind of music is so special. It has this undeniably ability to connect with people on a mass scale; due to the ambiguous nature of these songs they have a universal factor to them, as though Nachtzeit was able to channel the collective consciousness of the entire human race when forging this album. Pretentiousness aside, this truly is a great album, the keyboard melodies are stunning to say the least and the repetitive, droning guitars create a nice backdrop to the prominent keyboards. If you weren't swayed by Lustre’s brand of black metal in the past then this will not change your mind, Lustre keeps his style of music constant with the only differentiation present in the mood of the songs. Go into this album with the proper mindset and be sucked into Nachtzeit’s surrealist view of the world. (Sean Render)

(Nordvis Produktion - 2013)
Score: 95

https://www.facebook.com/lustre