...And Oceans - A.M. G.O.D. (2001)Release ID: 4292

...And Oceans - A.M. G.O.D. (2001) Cover
Ben Ben / January 12, 2023 / Comments 0 / 1

I've always considered myself a fan of this album, having picked it up on release. At that point in my metal journey, I'd become increasingly interested in bands that took the black metal blueprint and mixed in other influences. Bands like Ved Buens Ende....., Fleurety, Arcturus, Aborym and Dødheimsgard excited me greatly, so I had no issue at all with ...And Oceans giving their black metal a healthy dose of cyber symphonics. I've since listened to it many times while doing other things, enjoying its strange atmosphere and numerous special moments, thinking that one day I'll finally sit down and write a review to inform others of this hidden gem. Well, it hasn't quite worked out that way! Now that I sit down and totally focus on A.M.G.O.D. as an album, it's actually a hit and miss affair that I just can't rate as highly as I expected to. It starts strongly, with the first three tracks showcasing the band's interesting approach of injecting invasive symphonic aspects into otherwise decent melodic black metal (this sounds nothing like Emperor in case you're wondering), but sadly goes a bit downhill from there. By the time I get to the admittedly atmospheric but highly repetitive instrumental TBA in a Silver Box and the divisive techno beast that is New World Model, I have to admit that I was previously overrating A.M.G.O.D. as an album, if not as an enjoyable sideshow that has numerous great moments.

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KosieKat KosieKat / June 02, 2024 / Comments 0 / 0

The opening  of this album for me was like stepping into a cold swimming pool. I was kind of hesitant, and it took me a few minutes to warm up through the opening track. I thought that it would be a perfectly servicable, mid level album trying to use idustrial elements, nothing too offensive but noththing to really write home about.  However the third track, Tears Have No Name, is an absolute banger, and worthy of any playlist save, this ignited my excitement to listen through the rest of the album as I begun headbanging to the track and it continued through , as Espirit de Corps continues to pick up the pace  I couldn't help but grin, at hopfully  finding a great album to add to the rotation. As I finished my listen this was only confirmed as I enjoyed myself throughout although I know that may be a bit controversal considering the major shift with the last 3 songs. If you have not given ....And Oceans  A.M.G.O.D a listen yet, do yourself a favor, and do it. Now. Its an up tempo headbanging good time for most of the album that takes the industrial influence and melds it  so well with forceful driving Heavy Metal Riffs, while I will admit that the ending of the album, does do that thing that sometimes industrial bands do where they get a little happy with the umm tss bumm instrumentals when it came to the end of the album, you still should give a majority of the tracks a listen and even so, it doesn't hurt to just let it play out

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Chris Van Etten Chris Van Etten / June 08, 2020 / Comments 0 / 0

This is my first experience with ...And Oceans and I like most of what I hear. Actually, my immediate reaction wasn't good: I found the main part of the opening track to be pretty awful, and I wondered if I'd be able to sit through the whole thing. Once I got past that track, the second one was more listenable, the third track won me over, and the next four tracks kept me hooked.  So from what I gather ...And Oceans added synth/industrial stylings on  this record that they never utilized before.  Were they successful? Short answer yes, long answer yes but they should have trimmed some of the fat. Going back to that first track that I couldn't into ("Intelligence is Sexy"), I just think they tried too hard to do an expository number that shoved in your face that they were mixing synth with brutal metal. I find it listenable now, but I still think it's kind of hack. But nevermind that and the second track (which is okay), because the record kicks ass from there on. "Tears Have No Name," begins with a synth part and then has the metal play along with it, rather than having synth layered on top of a metal riff. They take both approaches on the album, but I think I prefer the former. Make no mistake, this is metal, as opposed to more aggro industrial, but having the synth backbone gives the parts a lot of character and flavor. There are parts where the synth is more subtle, and those parts are pretty good too, but they can can handle metal just fine without it. "Esprit De Corps" only has about four seconds of synth before going raging thrash, but the track kills so who cares. My guess is it was written before they changed styles I also want to point out that recording and mix are crystal clear, which adds to the experience a lot. I prefer my Black Metal a bit more on the dirty side, but I'm glad they went all out with the mix, having the synth loud, clear and all over the place in the stereo spectrum. And despite what I just said, the main Black Metal riff on "Odious And Devious" works on a different level here than it would on a trad BM record, because of what it's contrasted with. I'm anxious to delve their next release, because while I like "A.M. God," it is clear they were new to blending they styles together (although usually pretty damn well),  and I'm curious to see how they advance in that department. One last thing, I don't think the last track - the EDM (I think) "New Model World" - is pointless, especially since the preceding track works so well as a closer. 

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Release info

Release Site Rating

Ratings: 6 | Reviews: 3

3.8

Release Clan Rating

Ratings: 4 | Reviews: 3

3.6

Cover Site Rating

Ratings: 4

2.5

Cover Clan Rating

Ratings: 3

2.0
Release
A.M. G.O.D.
Year
2001
Format
Album
Clans
The North
The Sphere
Sub-Genres

Symphonic Black Metal

Voted For: 0 | Against: 0

Cyber Metal

Voted For: 0 | Against: 0