Reviews list for Nightfall - Children of Eve (2025)

Children of Eve

Nightfall's eleventh studio album comes as a bit of a surprise. While serving as longtime Athenian giants in the Hellenic Black Metal scene, their contributions to the overall genre have been severely lacking in comparison to contemporaries like Rotting Christ and The Elysian Fields. They are a group that leans much closer to the Gothic textures and a rougher version of melodic death metal. You can hear blast beats, tremolo guitars on songs like "I Hate" and "The Traders of Anathema" sure, but the textures that engulf "With Outlandish Desire to Disobey" tell a different tale. These drastic changes in style can be overwhelming at times, but for the most part, I feel like Nightfall have done an adequate job of making the transitions between these sections feel less obtuse and jarring than perhaps their contemporaries.

The production of Children of Eve is pretty good. The album has a lot of low end and is carried heavily by its thunderous guitars. As the sound shifts from tremolo guitar counterpoint, to death metal chugging as well as big open chordal progressions during the gothic segments, the timbre of the guitar is always kept at the front of mind for the band and the mixing. The record even sneaks in a couple of death metal style guitar solos as well. The percussion, while janky at times, is very solid as well. The biggest issue I have with records like this is when they shift from blazing blast beats at a million miles a minute, to slow, brooding segments, it can feel like something is missing in the very foundation of the songs themselves. As for the vocals, I can see the appeal; again death metal style vocals with low gutturals most of the time, but the words being used are fragmented at best, and cringy at worst.

This was an okay album. It's major strengths are its intensity while still maintaining a strong melodic base. It's major downsides are that these transitions between melodic and technical passages are usually quite janky, and the album does not waver too much outside of a well established comfort zone early on. Even then, Children of Eve is yanked down for having a eerily similar theme to Rotting Christ's The Heretics

Best Songs: The Cannibal, Seeking Revenge, For The Expelled Ones, With Outlandish Desire To Disobey

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Saxy S Saxy S / September 18, 2025 03:03 PM