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Lethean - The Waters of Death (2018)
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Eternal, The - Skinwalker (2024)
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Cowardice - Atavist (2024)
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Cowardice - Without Condolence (2016)
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Cowardice - Fealty (2022)
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Mötley Crüe - Cancelled (2024)
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Loathe - From Nothing (2023)
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Seether - The Surface Seems So Far (2024)
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Seether - Wasteland - The Purgatory - EP (2021)
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Kane Roberts - The New Normal (2019)
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Wind Rose - Trollslayer (2024)
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Elvellon - Ascending in Synergy (2024)
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Elvellon - Until Dawn (2018)
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Elvellon - Spellbound (2015)
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Espionage - Digital Dystopia (2018)
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Unravel - Eras of Forfeit (2018)
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Unravel - Final Dawn (2016)
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Adorior - Bleed on My Teeth (2024)
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Reduced - Majesty From Within (2018)
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Reduced - Gradually Executed (2015)
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Bliss-Illusion - 森罗万象 Shinrabansho (2018)
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Bliss-Illusion - Live at B:East Oriental Metal Festival (2016)
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Bliss-Illusion - Northland I • II (2021)
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Maestrick - Espresso Della Vita: Solare (2018)
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Maestrick - Unpuzzle! (2011)
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1349 - The Wolf & the King (2024)
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Voodus - Into the Wild (2018)
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Voodus - Open the Otherness (2020)
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Voodus - Serpent Seducer Saviour (2017)
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Voodus - NightQueen (2015)
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Sylosis - The Path (2024)
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Mindforce / Dead Heat - Mindforce / Dead Heat (2017)
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Bastardizer - Dawn of Domination (2018)
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Bastardizer - Enforcers of Evil (2014)
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Invocation Spells - Unholy Blasphemies (2014)
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Filth - Southern Hostility (2024)
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Filth - The Ignorance (2021)
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Filth - The Burden of Isolation (2018)
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Filth - Murder Inc. Tales From the Gutter Vol 2 (2022)
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Filth - Filth (2020)
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Die Krupps - Vision 2020 Vision (2019)
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Die Krupps - Live im Schatten der Ringe (2016)
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Die Krupps - The Final Remixes (1994)
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0N0 - End / Upon the Throne of Hell (2008)
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0N0 - Cyberjunk's Not Dead (2007)
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Voivod is one of those bands that makes a "distinct nature" out of fucking with your preconcieved notions of metal, and they rule at that in various ways. They're like Melvins and Boris in the sense that they can effectively do whatever they want in their field, and then expand into other territories because you can't stop them. During their heyday, they released a streing of albums that people keep bickering over their picks for the quintessential Voivod album, a la Beatles. That's how you know you've got an essential metal band. There are even defenders of Angel Rat, and when your string stretches five albums, you are essentially a Beatles band for your genre.
The one Voivod album I go back to most often is Dimension Hatross. As Madonna is the 80's Lady Gaga, these guys are the 80's Vektor. They pioneered the idea of sci-fi sounds and themes in metal with this highly technical yet highly punkish album, carefully molding the complexities of machinery with the industrial repetition of punk and crossover thrash. Hell, Snake's got one of THE most punk voices in the world of thrash, and these guys aren't even a crossover band (I kinda wish they were, though, what with another layer being perfect for them). Now this album doesn't really have the emotional stretches of my favorite metal album, a fellow thrasher album known as Ride the Lightning, but god does this album fuck with your head. It remains extremely catchy throughout and more intriguing than even the best prog allows for because of it.
There is ONE GRIPE I have with this album. Like I said, this doesn't have the emotional outstretch of Ride the Lightning. We've had thrashers, metal bangers and ballads on that album, and when you boil down to it, this album is largely a technical exercise in the same way that Symphony X's Divine Wings of Tragedy and Liu Zhenyang's Paramainomeni is. Having said that, this is probably the best of the three albums I listed. The thing is, the thrash, prog, avant-garde and punk are all ingredients for each song, which means the album stays the same. I think a band that inventive could've taken an extra step forward without screwing with the consistency.
Nevertheless, with how impressive and innovative the technicality is, especially when you have some of the most incredible combinations of timing, melodies and riffs the genre has to offer, I have to consider that this is a more minor gripe than it would typically be on my scale. If I'm fully honest, the album still doesn't feel as bloated as Master of Puppets does, so I'd say it's in the same league.
Having to complete a book-reading challenge before the end of the year, I've been speedreading roughly a book a day, and listening to albums helps me focus. So once again I'm going through asstons of music and occasionally checking out some metal. This time I'm going on a Nevermore marathon. I've put them off for too long, but I have heard the first two albums before. So now I begin their heyday with Dreaming Neon Black. Don't worry. I can focus on both at the same time, and even absorb both types of vibes when I properly hone my autism.
Looking back on my review for the previous album, The Politics of Ecstasy, I made several comments on their range. I think there's a bit less of that here, though. This time, Nevermore's focused on creating a consistent sound for themselves. Everything is just dark enough to work, except where the singer is concerned. He's got some serious range and power about him in the melody and metallic energy departments. The second half of the album has some gothic undertones which match up with his voice even more than before. There's little variety save a goth rock song at the end and a doom metal song called The Lotus Eaters. I would prefer more variety, even at the level of The Dreadful Hours or in an extreme case, When the Kite String Pops, so the album risks feeling too long. There's a deeper groove metal tone in the guitars which manages to put itself in the world of thrash perfectly well, obviously because of the band's previous experience in that world. But does this make it a unique album? No, not really. Thrash and groove have gone hand in hand for a long time, and lots of prog albums of the time were taking a deeper and darker approach. Add this to the two different songs, it tells me they could've done so much more.
In the end, one factor kind of fails for the genre, despite being new to Nevermore. So what's left? Technicality, production, yadda yadda. And I can't deny that I had fun throughout the whole album. There wasn't a single melody or riff that I wasn't at least fairly impressed with. And much of the album's darker tone comes from a more prominent bass, which is extremely easy to hear thanks to the album's production. Both are going hand in hand perfectly, about as perfectly as I want when you put the two together in any band. Because you can hear everyone so clearly, this amplifies all the emotional vibes present, in spite of the samey tone of the album.
Basically, every song was great on its own merits, and it's about as proggy as a Rush album, allowing thrash fans an easy yet properly-shifting entry-point to prog. if you're gonna do an easy-to-digest prog album, this is how to do it. But its accessibility also gets in the way of maximizing the variety factor, so it's a bit overlong. They could've done more with this, but it's obvious that they were focusing on their identity, which still succeeds here. I'm glad I decided to continue on with Nevermore, but contrary to popular opinion, I'd have to say The Politics of Ecstasy is slightly better.
The Norwegian Second Wave of Black Metal hit my teenage life like a tonne of bricks back in 1992. I'd already been a fan of First Wave black metal bands like Bathory, Hellhammer & Sarcofago for some time by that stage but the likes of Darkthrone & Burzum took my fascination with the dark majesty of this sound to an all-new level that compared favourably with my metal genre of choice at time i.e. death metal. I'd soon find myself seeking out the more underground material the black metal scene had to offer & in large quantities too, locking myself away in a completely blackened bedroom with my headphones on while fantasizing about life in an icy forest of trolls. This would be the time that I'd discover the now legendary Enslaved after I picked up their split CD with fellow Norwegian superstars Emperor in late 1993, a release that only increased my appetite for this style of music. Before long I would find myself seeking out Enslaved's early demo recordings in order to further quench my thirst but it would be the "Hordanes Land" E.P. that represented the band's coming of age as artists & would signal the start of their rise to the top of the black metal ranks. I've revisited it many times over the years but this will be the first time I've attempted to rate or review this release which I know so well after all this time.
The "Hordanes Land" E.P. is a three-song affair that spans just over half an hour with each track being of significant length. It was recorded during September & October of 1992 at Lydloftet, Ølen with the assistance of a trio of producers in Reinhardt Toresen, K. B. Bjørkhaug & K. Ulland, none of which had made a name for themselves prior to this release. The result of those sessions is instantly recognizable as the classic Norwegian black metal sound though & it puts Enslaved in the discussion as far as the earlier protagonists of the Norwegian movement. Enslaved's lineup was only a trio at the time but the three pieces they'd produce were all very ambitious & expansive for a group of young musicians, none of them having reached their nineteenth birthday at the time with guitarist Ivar Bjørnson (Ivar Bjørnson & Einar Selvik/Borknagar/Mysticum/Trinacria) amazingly being just fourteen when "Hordanes Land" was recorded. The title of the E.P., which is taken from the old Norwegian language, can be translated as "Land of the Hordes" & is a very good depiction of the adventure & majesty that can be found within.
The early Enslaved sound in much less progressive than the one they'd go on to create in later years but was still highly sophisticated for the early black metal movement with the song structures all taking a number of turns in a variety of different directions. There are a few drastic changes that can feel a little jerky at times but it's not a major issue. The epic thirteen-minute opening track "Slaget i skogen bortenfor" is by far the most significant of the three inclusions & was comfortably my favourite song on the split CD with Emperor that received such regular play time with me as a late teenager. In fact, it's the reason that I've always held the Enslaved side of that split CD in slightly higher regard than the Emperor one, despite it being of a similar quality in many respects. I adore the blasting drums of Trym (Emperor/Zyklon) & their combination with bassist Grutle Kjellson's tortured shrieks & Bjørnson's wonderful use of keyboards was highly influential at the time. It's also a feature of the split release with Emperor employing a similar approach on their self-titled. The use of acoustic guitars gives this track an organic feel that simply oozes of the cold Norwegian landscape of snow-covered forests & leaves an accurate depiction of just how influential Enslaved were on how the Second Wave sound developed over the coming years. It's not a huge stretch to be able to predict the more progressive leanings that Enslaved would take with their sound in the future given just how ambitious this early material was for such an immature trio of kids. The other two pieces are a touch less expansive but are still as overt in their creativity. The second track "Allfǫðr Oðinn" appeared on Enslaved's 1992 "Yggdrasill" demo tape where I quite liked it but here we see it being taken to another level. The early part of the song sounds noticeably less sophisticated & epic than "Slaget i skogen bortenfor" but at the two-minute mark the band hit on a classic Norwegian tremolo-picked melodic guitar theme that takes things into the stratosphere &, in doing so, predicts so many of the great black metal that was to come over the remainder of the decade. The song-writing is a little patchy but this theme alone plays such a significant role in the way the song plays out that it single-handedly manages to drag "Allfǫðr Oðinn" into very solid territory. The ten-minute closer "Balfǫr" is comfortably the weaker of the three inclusions in my opinion although I do still enjoy it. The use of keyboards is a little cheesier on this one & it's a little more melodic & a touch less dark than the other two pieces too although the use of acoustic guitar is very effective & things ramp up significantly when Trym gets his blast beats on.
Perhaps "Hordanes Land" doesn't represent the peak of Enslaved's creative journey but it was still very much their coming of age as artists & is especially impressive when you consider the relative immaturity of the three musicians involved. I'm particularly amazed at the scope of musicality that's been drawn out of Bjørnson here as his contribution often sounds incredibly mature for a child of just fourteen years old. It's really no wonder that we'd see him pushing Enslaved into my progressive territories in the future as he still had a whole world of musical exploration ahead of him. It's interesting to ponder on how he came to have such a strong understanding of the black metal ethos at such a young age too. I'd imagine that he must have had some older & fairly well-informed influences around him during the previous few years. Enslaved would return with their debut album "Vikingligr veldi" the following year, a release that I still regard as their finest black metal work to this day, but "Hordanes Land" really wasn't all that far behind when you look at it in the modern day. I'm not sure that I've ever regarded Enslaved as a tier one black metal producer but this is a damn fine first-up effort nonetheless & should be an essential inclusion in any black metal fans collection.
For fans of Helheim, Emperor & early Borknagar.
I've already been familiar with Neurotech via a few later songs and several of those long Symphonies. And now it's time for me to explore further back into the discography of one of the most underrated acts of one of the most underrated subgenres of all, cyber metal. Blue Screen Planet is a two-track EP with the first track being a 10-minute epic and the other being a laid-back instrumental of almost the same length.
Similarly to Mechina's Conqueror, Blue Screen Planet marks Neurotech's transition from a standard industrial/cyber metal band to one that's more symphonic and setting up a conceptual universe. Also similarly to that Mechina album, it doesn't entirely pay off as it should...
"Part I - Axiom" is a bombastic journey of symphonic cyber metal... Well, too bombastic. Some parts are overdone, which very much exemplifies the paraphrased adage, "Too many ingredients spoil the broth." While this epic is still solid, his 10-minute explorations are better explored in the later symphonies. Interesting how I like the instrumental "Part II - Revelation" more. Most metalheads and more upbeat music listeners can't go past the first half of this serene Hans Zimmer-like composition, but I can! It's amazing how magical this piece sounds as it transports you out of the harsh reality of Earth into the astral plane. It works well with the video game No Man's Sky. So instead of unleashing metal in maximum power, let the cool ambience move you into this different dimension. By the 5th minute, you'll already be one with the multiverse.
The origin of Wulf expanding the soundscapes within his Neurotech project is all in this EP. Lots of great ideas from calm to blasting, from soothing piano to crushing guitar! Though the instrumental is more balanced than the epic. As beautiful and intriguing as this EP is, it's more of a side-order than a main dish....
Favorites: Both tracks, though I like "Part II - Revelation" more.
From 2011 to 2015, Disturbed was on hiatus. During then, vocalist David Draiman decided to form his own temporary project, Device. If you'd like me to give you a hint at what Device, it's like Disturbed with a more industrial edge...
People already knew Draiman's plan to make more industrial material from some teasers. The industrial side comes from the other member of the project, Geno Lenardo, ex-guitarist of Filter. The heaviness Disturbed fans have expected is blended with electronics for some decent results. It should be noted though that Lenardo was replaced by Will Hunt (Evanescence) and Virus (Dope) for the couple live concerts performed by the band.
Straight into heaviness is "You Think You Know" which rocks out as if Disturbed never had that hiatus, while having a bit of Nine Inch Nails. Draiman's singing is quite strong here, "You think you know but you're horribly blind, you think you know that the story's defined, you think you know, but your heart has gone cold inside." Sounding closer to Disturbed is "Penance". The drumming rhythms and vocal grunts are still around while having some electronic synths. Following this is "Vilify", the best choice for the band's first single. It's a perfect highlight of Draiman's strong vocals.
For their cover of the 80s glam ballad "Close My Eyes Forever", taking the respective places of Lita Ford and Ozzy Osbourne is Lzzy Hale of Halestorm and Draiman, and the song is given a modern electronic twist. "Out of Line" stands out well as another one of Black Sabbath's members, Geezer Butler performs his audible bass, while Draiman and System of a Down's Serj Tankian both sing their perfect lyrical views of the world. The haunting "Hunted" continues taking on the electronic metal fusion as they've done throughout the album so far, showing that they can do it well without relying on guests. "Opinion" rips through with searing soloing by Tom Morello of Rage Against the Machine, having more of the spotlight than in Linkin Park's "Drawbar".
"War of Lies" has some of the nu metal riffing of early 36 Crazyfists. "Haze", which has Avenged Sevenfold vocalist M. Shadows, is another solid collab. These guest appearances really help boost the quality of the album in most cases. The last guest vocalist is Glenn Hughes, known for his solo material and his time with Black Sabbath and Deep Purple, in "Through It All", a nice sentimental rock ballad. I don't really like the bonus tracks enough to mention, except for their cool cover of Nine Inch Nails' "Wish".
You just have to admit how much outer thinking Draiman has with his work. He can really expand his boundaries beyond the band he's usually known for. It works well with some solid standouts, though not so much for a lot else. And the project would stop once Disturbed was revived....
Favorites: "You Think You Know", "Vilify", "Out of Line", "Opinion", "Haze", "Wish"