Sonny's Forum Replies
I'll say no this month Sonny. Will be back next month for sure.
OK. Thanks, Ben.
Austin Lunn (aka Panopticon) has released a single from his upcoming album, The Rime Of Memory, due out at the end of November. Sixteen minutes of atmospheric black metal wonder called Cedar Skeletons, Lunn shows that he is still producing great quality, nature-themed black metal that puts most of the competition in the shade.
Ben, will you be contributing any suggestions for November's playlist?
Naked City - Leng Tch'e (1992)
Naked City's Leng Tch'e has a reputation for being one of the most disturbing and affecting metal releases of all time. Comprising a single 30+ minute drone metal track and taking it's title from the torturous chinese method of execution whereby the condemned slowly has parts of their body sliced off and with a cover consisting of a photo of a victim undergoing said execution method, I was certainly expecting a tough listen as I approached this for the first time.
The first half of the track is indeed a great slab of drone metal with massive chords drenched in feedback, sparse, yet ominous percussion and a generally disturbing atmosphere prevailing, setting us up for the reputedly horrifying second half which features the tortured screams of japanese vocalist Yamatsuka Eye and the wailing freeform saxophone of John Zorn. So when this supposedly blood-curdling, spine-tingling tsunami actually hit, I was completely blindesided by just how much of a disappointment it was. The actual howling and screaming of Yamatsuka Eye is less disturbing and more irritating, sounding like a hysterical B-movie scream queen, which completely destroyed all the good work done on the build-up until then. In fact, when Zorn's manic sax playing joins the fray, I couldn't help but think that it would have been much more effective to let the sax alone express the horror of the situation.
I honestly cannot see where Leng Tch'e has gained such a notorious reputation. I have heard much more disturbing vocalisations in extreme doom and drone from the likes of Khanate and Thorr's Hammer, even Burning Witch's Edgy 59 is more disturbing than what we have here. And you know what, that is a crying shame because without those annoying screams this would actually be fucking brilliant, but for me they make it almost unlistenable and not in a good way, whereas without them this would have edged very close to a 5/5 for me.
3/5 (despite how much I hate the screaming)
Another update to my Top 20 Drone Metal releases:
1. Hell - Hell III (2012)
2. Earth - Earth 2: Special Low Frequency Version (1993)
3. Bismuth - The Slow Dying of the Great Barrier Reef (2018)
4. Khanate - To Be Cruel (2023)
5. Trees - Light's Bane (2008)
6. Boris - Boris at Last -Feedbacker- (2003)
7. Bong - Mana-Yood-Sushai (2012)
8. Monarch! - Omens (2012)
9. Neptunian Maximalism - Éons (2020)
10. Wolvserpent - Aporia:Kāla:Ananta (2016)
11. Khanate - Khanate (2001)
12. FVNERALS - Let the Earth Be Silent (2023)
13. Sunn O))) - Life Metal (2019)
14. Crawl - Damned (2023)
15. Big Brave - Vital (2021)
16. Sunn O))) - Black One (2005)
17. Nadja - Radiance of Shadows (2007)
18. Father Sky Mother Earth - Across the River of Time (2017)
19. Endless Floods - Circle the Gold (2019)
20. A Storm of Light / Nadja - Primitive North (2009)
Sunn O)))'s "Monoliths & Dimensions" and The Body's "No One Deserves Happiness" fall out to make way for Bong and FVNERALS.
Bong - Mana-Yood-Sushai (2012)
I have only really been interested in drone metal for about a decade now and only started exploring it in earnest two or three years ago, but it has become one of my favourite genres and a lot of my highest scores of recent times have gone to drone metal releases. I guess that because I am quite an anxious person by nature, I find the monolithic droning of this style of metal to be inherently calming. Bong are a new name to me, despite them having been around for close to twenty years now and hailing from these British Isles I call home. They are prolific releasers of material with nine studio albums, a plethora of splits and EPs and thirty-plus live albums.
Mana-Yood-Sushai is the four-piece's third album, released in 2012, and is a sublime mix of drone metal and psychedelia that gives it a heavy eastern, mystical flavour, a sound I really love to hear brought into the sphere of metal. The album consists of only two tracks with the 27 minutes of the first track, Dreams of Mana-Yood-Sushai, being the one that really hooked me in. One of the members of Bong is sitar player, Benjamin Freeth, and his jangling strings combine perfectly with the droning chords of guitarist Mike Vest on Dreams... that seems to conjures up vistas of setting suns over mystical eastern temples that I found to be an inordinately meditative and restful piece. The track also features bassist/vocalist Dave Terry with some really nice throat singing that further enhances the eastern flavour with it's ritualistic chanting style favoured by eastern mystics.
Second track, Trees, Grass and Stone, is just shy of twenty minutes in length and is an instrumental, making it a bit more jam-like than the opener with the percussion of drummer Mike Smith driving the track and taking a more prominent role. It is also a heavier-sounding track than Dreams... the droning chords carrying increased weight and settling over the listener like a heavy blanket. As is true of an awful lot of drone metal, it is most effective when listened to at higher volumes, at the point when the experience can become almost physical and it's simple structure can fully infiltrate the listener's senses and become a transcendental sensation.
So once more a new drone metal discovery has me reaching for my higher scores and takes it's place in my list of metal favourites.
4.5/5
Jag Panzer - The Fourth Judgement (1997)
I enjoyed Jag Panzer's debut, Ample Destruction, but it's follow-up, Dissident Alliance, seems to have been universally panned, so I went into The Fourth Judgement unsure what to expect. What I got was a fairly mundane USPM album. There are some decent riffs on here, hell a couple are even genuinely killer and the solos aren't too shoddy either, but everything else screams mediocrity. I don't like the vocals much. Sure, there are plenty of power metal singers I dislike more, but Harry Conklin's style, whilst not grating as much as some, does very little for me either. The production robs the rhythm section of any authority and contributes heavily to the mundanity of the release as a whole.
The Fourth Judgement is a release that feels like it lacks any passion, aggression or exhilharation that is the cornerstone of heavy and power metal. There isn't even very much pomp and circumstance, that I'm not personally a big fan of, but which would at least lend it some fist-pumping energy. A damp squib for me overall, to be honest, but the guitar work, particularly a few of the riffs, is good enough to allow me to bump it up to a more respectable score.
3/5
Nice list again Ben. Of the stuff I was unfamiliar with, Tsjuder and Profane Order chimed with me the most. I haven't ever listened to Rebel Extravaganza before and enjoyed the track from it a fair bit. I also enjoyed the Gespenst and Ifernach tracks.
I'm not sure about the last track by Bríi, I think I will have to check out a bit more from them, but it did pique my interest. Of the stuff I know, Ancient, Deathspell and Altar of Plagues were big yesses. Marduk sounded just how I expected them to and Trhä and Mgla didn't really set my world on fire.
All in all though, an enjoyable couple of hours whilst decorating the living room. How about a new tagline, "The Metal Academy Playlist - makes household chores almost bearable!"
That's great news Daniel. Glad to hear that things are moving forward for you.
Thanks, Ben. I am really enjoying putting them together. Hopefully they will serve nicely as a reference source for cover artists. Next I am working on one for Felipe Machado Franco who does a lot of power metal covers for the likes of Rhapsody of Fire, Blind Guardian and Iced Earth.
I have added a new list. This one is for Adam Burke, aka Nightjar Illustration. You may have seen his covers on Vektor's "Terminal Redux" or Temple of Void's "The World That Was". He has a very distinctive and recognizable style.
Torture Rack - Primeval Onslaught (2023)
Primeval Onslaught is an unpretentious old-school death metal assault. Whilst not implying that Torture Rack operate on the same level as previous death metal titans, the album summons up the foetid rankness of Autopsy, combining it with the vitality and intensity of prime Morbid Angel and the brutality of Suffocation to produce a release I found to be both exhilharating and supremely satisfying. I would be the first to admit that, when it comes to extreme metal, be it death, black or even thrash, my tastes are quite conservative and I would much prefer an album of uncomplicated, old-school, brutal beastliness to the more modern focus on experimentation and diversification that has flooded the extreme scene over the last twenty-odd years. Luckily (for me anyway) that is exactly what Torture Rack deliver - and they deliver it in spades. Primeval Onslaught is a glorious celebration of old-school death metal that is well and truly up my particular death metal alley.
The riffs are thick and muscular, hitting like a jackhammer to the temple, with the rank production seeming to hang everything with strips of torn flesh, making the album sound like a veritable bloodstorm. The soloing, such as it is, consists of short, sharp shocks that are thrust at the listener like a stiletto between the ribs. Bass and drums thunder and batter away, driving the quicker material along whilst imbuing the slower sections with a dark ominousness that looms over the listener like gathering thunderheads. The vocals are suitably deep and gutteral growls guaranteed to set the hairs on your neck on end as they vomit out their gross-out lyrics of death, torture and cannibalism, the very creed upon which death metal lyricism was built. There is sufficient variation in the tracks with some mightily memorable riffs, "Impalement Storm" and "Forced From the Pit" being cases in point, to guard against accusations of saminess.
So, what I'm trying to say is that Primeval Onslaught is built on the solid foundations of old-school death metal brutality, to a tried and tested blueprint, that won't surprise anyone with more than a passing interest in death metal, yet is of very high quality. If the purpose is to reproduce the peak nineties death metal sound, then Torture Rack are to be commended for a job well done and to bemoan it's lack of experimentation and criticise it for what it isn't would be more than a little disingenuous and unfair to a band that, to my ears at least, deserve better.
4/5
Ebony Pendant - "Ebony Pendant" (2023)
Ebony Pendant is a solo project of S.C. (Simon Coseboom) and this self-titled release is his sophomore full-length, following 2020's "Incantation of Eschatological Mysticism" debut, a couple of splits and an EP (2021's "The Garden of Strangling Roots". He plays version of melodic black metal, but with quite a raw production which gives it a bit more of an edge (and air of underground authenticity) than your usual melo-black outfit. It doesn't exactly possess the thin sound you would usually associate with the rawest black metal, with enough bass presence to boost the muscularity of the riffs, but the production somehow gives the impression that it is a lot rawer and thinner-sounding than it actually is. Vocally, S.C. has a nice line in evil, demonic croaking, similar to Immortal's Abbath, which suits the material really well. Surprisingly, for a guy who is a drummer himself with both Seattle death metallers Degraved and black metal act Griefspell, S.C. has recruited his pal K.M. as skinsman for this album from the death doom band Cavurn of which they are both members (S.C. on guitar in that mob). K.M.'s drumming is decent, being pretty frantic, yet well-controlled and helps drive the riffs and maintain the breakneck pacing.
A couple of nice, gentle acoustic passages aside, S.C. makes no attempt to court the black metal intelligentsia who want black metal to constantly be pushing boundaries with experimentation, dissonance and genre-splicing. No, despite the melodicism of some of the riffs, this is pure black metal - adrenaline-fuelled, old-school, ripping with icy claws at the listener's sensibilities. The raw production gives Ebony Pendant's melodicism a cold and frigid edge that is the cornerstone of all truly awesome black metal and this frostiness gives tracks such as the more melancholic-sounding "Whispers of a Nameless Fear" or "Sentiment for a Time Long Forgotten" a cutting edge that it may have lacked with a fuller production. Ebony Pendant are new to me, but despite the fact that they will probably never raise their heads over the parapets of the USBM underground, they deserve much praise for flying a flag for unashamed old-school black metal blasting and have the potential to become firm favourites of mine.
4.5/5
Hi Daniel, my suggestions for November are:
Cryptopsy - "Pathological Frolic" (from "Blasphemy Made Flesh", 1994)
Deicide - "They Are the Children of the Underworld" (from "Once Upon the Cross", 1995)
Exhumed - "Clawing" (from "Horror", 2019)
Immolation - "Burn With Jesus" (from "Here in After", 1996)
Necrophobic - "Nailing the Holy One" (from "Darkside", 1997)
Oni - "Creature of Chaos" (from "Incantation Superstition", 2023)
Torture Rack - "Forced From the Pit" (from "Primeval Onslaught", 2023)
Vader - "Blood of Kingu" (from "De Profundis", 1995)
My suggestions for November Vinny:
Testament - "Last Stand for Independence" (from "Dark Roots of Earth", 2012)Hi Sonny,
Daniel has already nominated a Testament track for the upcoming month, would you like to submit an alternative?
Ah, sorry Vinny. No, I'm fine with just the others.
My suggestions for November Vinny:
Aura Noir - "Black Thrash Attack" (from "Black Thrash Attack", 1996)
Bewitched - "Born of Flames" (from "Diabolical Desecration", 1996)
Enforced - "The Quickening" (from "War Remains", 2023)
Exumer - "Rising From the Sea" (from "Rising From the Sea", 1987)
Mutilator - "Tormented Soul" (from "Immortal Force", 1987)
Pentagram Chile - "La Fiura" (from "The Malefice", 2013)
Testament - "Last Stand for Independence" (from "Dark Roots of Earth", 2012)
Hi again, Ben. Could you add Eremit's latest album "Wearer of Numerous Forms" please.
Hi Ben, could you please add Finnish black metal act Vinnfrost - their sole album "Initiation" has brilliant cover art by Gorgoroth vocalist Atterigner.
October 2023
1. Averon - "An Echo From Beyond" (from "An Echo From Beyond", 1999)
2. Acid Bath - "Bleed Me an Ocean" (from "Paegan Terrorism Tactics", 1996) [submitted by Sonny]
3. Conan - "Amidst the Infinite" (from "Existential Void Guardian", 2018) [submitted by Vinny]
4. Tribulation - "Hemoclysm" (from "Hamartia EP", 2023)
5. Full of Hell - "Armory of Obsidian Glass" (from "Weeping Choir", 2019) [submitted by Daniel]
6. Hellish Form - "Texas Is Sinking" (from "Deathless", 2023) [submitted by Sonny]
7. Warning - "Bridges" (from "Watching from A Distance", 2006) [submitted by Ben]
8. Paradise Lost - "No Forgiveness" (from "Shades of God", 1992) [submitted by Daniel]
9. Noctum - "Resurrected in Evil" (from "Final Sacrifice", 2013)
10. Sourvein - "Urchins" (from "Aquatic Occult", 2016) [submitted by Vinny]
11. Jesu - "We All Faulter" (from "Jesu", 2004)
12. Baroness - "Beneath the Rose" (from "STONE", 2023)
13. Black Tusk - "Fatal Kiss" (from "Passage Through Purgatory", 2008) [submitted by Vinny]
14. Candlemass - "Incarnation of Evil" (from "Ancient Dreams", 1988) [submitted by Daniel]
15. Runemagick - "Archaic Magick (After the Red Sun)" (from "Beyond the Cenotaph of Mankind", 2023)
16. Esoteric - "Quickening" (from "The Maniacal Veil", 2008) [submitted by Ben]
Hey Ben, could you please add a couple of releases for US blackened doom band, Gaul:
Lustrous in Death EP (2020)
Taken by the Twilight Tide album (2022)
Just one suggestion from me this month Ben, but it is 16 minutes, so there is that!
Alda - "A Distant Fire" (from "A Distant Fire", 2021)
I am a massive Michael Moorcock fan and have a ton of his paperbacks that I bought in the late 70s and early 80s, quite a few of which have Whelan's paintings on the covers. I have always loved his Elric paintings used by Cirith Ungol and his Smoulder covers are excellent too.
Verwimp does have a very distinctive style, Ben. He seems to use a technique that gives his paintings a "soft focus". I always liked the Absu covers and never realised that he was so prolific a cover artist.
By the way, Ben, does the site mechanics have a limit to the number of entries we can have on a list?
Feel free to request bands for whatever reason you like Sonny. If they have good artwork, it's more enjoyable for me anyway.
OK, thanks, Ben. Will do.
Hi Ben, could you please add Destroyer of Light (US).
Hey Ben, could you please add:
Beorn's Hall (US)
Blood of Serpents (Sweden)
Dewfall (Italy) [they are listed on RYM as Dew Fall, but I believe it should all be one word as per Metal Archives]
Temple of Evil (Cyprus)
Also could you add the 2019 album "Hex" from Finnish black metal band Wyrd.
Admittedly these are all for a cover art list I am working on, but I am familiar with albums from all these bands and have rated at least one release from each.
I'm not convinced of the metal pedigree of these few suggestions, but they are probably worth discussing:
Sir Lord Baltimore - Kingdom Come
Flower Travellin' Band - Satori
Budgie - S/T
Ursa Major - S/T
Icecross - S/T
Although Sabbath were knocking true metal albums out left right and centre while all these were being released, so most of the first ten true metal albums will be from the Brummie foursome I reckon.
However, this leads to another question: if it was all released later, how much does it contribute to the genre back then, assuming it was ever heard at all?
That's entirely my point actually. The intention behind this exercise is to give people a road map of the releases that built the scene. I don't think you can say that archival releases have had much of an impact in the majority of cases. This also leads into the question of when a release is popular enough to be relevant too but I don't think that'll be an issue for some time yet so it's a conversation for another day.
I raised this particular release as a case in point because, although it wasn't released until much later, the material was the basis for the evolution of Death Row and Pentagram and was also available as a bootleg long before it's official 2005 release and is often name-checked by many other doom metal practitioners as an early influence.
I guess that's not really relevant to a project to discover the earliest actual releases, but I think it is interesting as a discussion point regarding the development of metal, and especially doom metal, nonetheless.
Thanks Ben. The main reason for starting this exercise was that I was picking up on certain stylistic consistencies on covers as I was rating them, whilst not really being that familiar with specific artists, other than Lewandowski and Repka. So, I thought that compiling lists of the artists whose work I admired most would allow a deeper exploration of each artist's style and development as well as providing a reference guide for other interested members.
Oloffson actually has many more covers to his credit, but many are for lesser-known acts who haven't been added to the site yet and I don't want to flood you with requests for bands whose actual music I may not even get round to rating!
There's only one place to start for me and that is Black Sabbath. The S/T was released almost four months earlier than In Rock, on 13th Feb 1970, so that is my nomination for the first true metal album. Side one especially is where it's really at. I'm guessing Tony Iommi's forced downtuning helped, but that's where I first hear heavy psych morphing into true metal.
Blue Cheer's Vincebus Eruptum is often quoted by some, but I don't buy it. That one is still heavy psych for me. High Tide's Sea Shanties is another, but again, I don't hear enough true metal there.
I just mean to nominate it as a bare minimum standard for what heavy metal was back then and may be now. The Sabbath debut is definitely the beginning of metal, but it's so heavy even by today's standards that it's not much of a bare minimum, but more like the fine line between heavy metal and traditional doom.
Other albums we should EXCLUDE include the whole Zeppelin catalog. They are easily my favorite band, but they only had a handful of songs that to me would qualify as early metal, and those handfuls are rarely even on the same album. In other words, we have to be careful about which early albums qualify as "heavy metal" and "proto-metal."
I agree Rex. Much as I love Zeppelin (not as much as I did back in the day, admittedly), they certainly aren't a metal act, the odd track such as Communication Breakdown and Immigrant Song aside. That bassline to Dazed & Confused sounds awfully doomy to me, though.
Just a thought, although it wasn't released until 2005 I think, would members count Bedemon's Child of Darkness as an early (if not the earliest) trad doom album? The oldest material was recorded in '73. They later went on to become Death Row and then Pentagram, for anyone not familiar with the album.
There's only one place to start for me and that is Black Sabbath. The S/T was released almost four months earlier than In Rock, on 13th Feb 1970, so that is my nomination for the first true metal album. Side one especially is where it's really at. I'm guessing Tony Iommi's forced downtuning helped, but that's where I first hear heavy psych morphing into true metal.
Blue Cheer's Vincebus Eruptum is often quoted by some, but I don't buy it. That one is still heavy psych for me. High Tide's Sea Shanties is another, but again, I don't hear enough true metal there.
I've just added a list for death metal cover artist Pär Olofsson:
https://metal.academy/lists/single/248
Next up I am going to cover Adam Burke (aka Nightjar Illustration). I'm a big fan and he has quite a few well-placed entries in the Academy Gallery.
An interesting idea Daniel, although I suspect a number of "heated debates" may ensue. I have quite a big interest in late-60's, early-70's heavy psych and hard rock, so may have something to contribute. I have a list on RYM of albums that I think contributed to the evolution of heavy metal, from The Sonics 1965 album, "Here Are The Sonics!!!" right up to Maiden's 1980 debut.
I spend an inordinate amount of time rating covers on here. My mother is an artist and (as with everything else in my life) if time permitted I would spend more time exploring art. I have a print of John Martin's "Sadak In Search of the Waters of Oblivion" on my wall above my music stack and plan to add more to my office/lair walls.
Have an internet acquaintance who I planned to meet whilst in the States a few years back but couldn't co-ordinate diaries, who does art for album covers. Super-talented guy (also involved in a number of music projects) - his artwork is here:
I have never seen "Sadak In Search of the Waters of Oblivion" before Vinny, but it is fantastic and has a similar feel to some of Lewandowski's paintings.
Do you know any covers that Kishor has produced off hand? He does look very talented. I think hands are one of the hardest parts of human anatomy to capture well and he does them brilliantly (and quite a lot by the looks of it!)
Hi Sonny, he lists the albums under any of the Illustrations (no paintings used) that have been used under the image on the website mate. Black Harvest is his own band/project btw.
Ah yes, I can see them now. Thanks Vinny.
I spend an inordinate amount of time rating covers on here. My mother is an artist and (as with everything else in my life) if time permitted I would spend more time exploring art. I have a print of John Martin's "Sadak In Search of the Waters of Oblivion" on my wall above my music stack and plan to add more to my office/lair walls.
Have an internet acquaintance who I planned to meet whilst in the States a few years back but couldn't co-ordinate diaries, who does art for album covers. Super-talented guy (also involved in a number of music projects) - his artwork is here:
I have never seen "Sadak In Search of the Waters of Oblivion" before Vinny, but it is fantastic and has a similar feel to some of Lewandowski's paintings.
Do you know any covers that Kishor has produced off hand? He does look very talented. I think hands are one of the hardest parts of human anatomy to capture well and he does them brilliantly (and quite a lot by the looks of it!)
I'm happy to see this thread. Anyone that knows me will understand how much importance I place on cover art. I'm a lover of art in general, but particularly dark art.
I actually managed a list of Dan Seagrave covers on RYM for quite some time. I really should replicate that over here at some point.
I've been thinking about creating a list of all Kris Verwimp covers. There are a LOT of them, and it's pretty easy to tell who was behind them, so I'll try to get onto that soon. If you want to know what his work is like, just check out Cermonial Casting's covers from 2004's Immortal Black Art album.
I thought a project like this might interest you, Ben. I seem to remember us having a conversation about cover art once or twice back in the RYM days. I too love art, in fact, as much as I would love to be able to play a guitar, if I had one wish that could gain me a talent, it would be to be able to paint like some of these guys.
Didn't Kris Verwimp do Uada's "Djinn" cover? I like that one very much, so I will have to check more of his work out.
Cool lists, Sonny! Do you have any favorite cover arts by the talented Travis Smith? Check out a lot of his work in his official website: https://www.seempieces.com/
You are right, Andi, he is extremely talented. I am currently working on a list for Swedish artist Pär Olofsson, but I will start one for Travis straight after. I haven't really considered his body of work as a whole before, so can't give a favourite, but I really like that Living Sacriifice "Ghost Thief" cover.
The second of these lists is dedicated to Swedish artist Ola Larsson. Although he isn't a prolific cover illustrator, I think the list provides a great view of how a developing artist evolves over time, with his earlier covers being quite crude compared to his gorgeous later, sci-fi and Lovecraft inspired material.
https://metal.academy/lists/single/247
I would recommend checking out some more of Ola's work on blogspot:
Mournful Congregation - The Exuviae of Gods Part 2 (2023)
A year on from the release of the wonderful Part I, Mournful Congregation unveil the second part of The Exuviae of Gods EPs. Of course both EPs are album length for most bands, each weighing in at almost forty minutes, but that is short for this particular band. In common with Part I, Part II contains a re-recording of a track from their 1995 An Epic Dream of Desire cassette demo, this time around opener Heads Bowed being the track getting a makeover.
Whilst Mournful Congregation are absolutely practitioners of that most sorrowful of all doom metal sub-genres, funeral doom, what they do better than virtually every other band is imbue their funereal dirges with a sliver of light and hope. They definitely conjure up a sorrowful, mournful atmosphere with their music, but they always seem to be able to add a wistfulness that says, yes, death has come, but fear not, death is not the end. I am not at all a religious or even a particularly spiritual person, but there is something about Mournful Congregation's music that always makes me feel less oppressed by the thought of life's inevitable ending. Fortunately the band are also able to deliver this ray of hopefulness without ever compromising on sheer crushing weight, the reworking of Heads Bowed being a prime example, it's heaving weight being countered by the lightness of the acoustic guitar intro and outro that bookend the track.
The second and shortest track, the sub-nine minutes, The Forbidden Abysm, has more of a death doom vibe about it, being the "fastest" and heaviest track on display here and is pretty decent, although the least interesting of the three. Closer, The Paling Crest, weighing in at eighteen minutes, is the real heart of the album and the EP's standout piece. Beginning with an acoustic guitar and harmonised clean, choral-type vocal intro complete with a soaring electric lead solo, it segues into the track proper with Ben Petch's abyssal growls being accompanied by leaden chords and more of those soaring guitars, backed by a subtle application of keyboards. Around mid-point this subsides and is replaced by a light and airy, picked acoustic melody that is itself swept away as the heaviness returns, albeit with a more hopeful atmosphere permeating the hulking chords. Lyrically the band seem to back this up, with Petch intoning that "Fear of death is fear of wisdom" and "Fear of natural order is fear of nature itself, For death is merely the consequence of birth", the implication being, "So what are you worrying for?"
I am a massive fan of the sorrowful and heart-wrenching heaviness of funeral doom, but there is something very appealing about Mournful Congregation's wistful acceptance of the inevitability of death and the absolute conviction that it is nothing to be feared, which comes across not only lyrically, but also in the atmospheres they create with gorgeous, airy melodies being woven into their heavier backdrops of mournful sorrow to lend their music a positivity lacking in so much doom metal. I slightly prefer last year's Part 1 of the Exuviae of Gods EPs over this, but it is still a fine release and one I would have no reservations about recommending.
4/5
Love this track. Right up my street. I've already put Sphere of Apparition on follow on Bandcamp in readiness for release day!! The production sounds really great, those guys have done a brilliant job - love that cover too.
The Abbey - Word of Sin (2023)
The Abbey are a Finnish five-piece who play doomy gothic metal with some progressive tendencies. Probably the most well-known member is female vocalist Natalie Koskinen who is, of course, vocalist with funeral doom merchants Shape of Despair. The Abbey employ dual male/female vocals, but shy away from the "beauty and the beast" style of male growls and ethereal female wails, focussing on a harmonised and layered clean delivery. Formed in 2021, Word of Sin is the band's debut full-length release.
At their doomiest a comparison with Draconian Times-era Paradise Lost is justified, but that isn't the only card they play. They throw in a couple of quicker tracks, A Thousand Dead Witches and Temple of Pain, that have galloping, heavy metal-style riffs that energise the album and contrast quite nicely with the slower, more laconic material. In truth, though, for me there isn't enough weight to the majority of the album and it sits quite firmly on the lighter side of the gothic doom fence, concentrating on producing beautiful melodies rather than playing to the melancholy, sorrowful nature that the best of the genre has to offer. Admittedly, what they do, they do very well and Word of Sin has some very nice melodies indeed which may stay with you well after the album has finished playing.
The album ends with the Lovecraftian-themed two-parter of Old Ones Prequel and the almost thirteen minutes of Old Ones itself and sees The Abbey indulge a more progressive side of their sound. Old Ones Prequel is an acoustic guitar and male-voiced piece with singer Jesse Heikkinen sounding very much like Wayne Hussey of UK gothic rockers The Mission and serves as an intro to the album's main event. Old Ones proper begins with an ominous doomy atmosphere that possesses one of the albums most memorable melodies combined with some very nice, soaring lead work. Around mid-point the melody fades and we are treated to an organ-led instrumental passage that evokes a high-ceilinged and expansive volume of space set aside for the worship of the unseen Old Ones, eventually giving way to a ponderous riff, more soaring lead work and a harmonised choral vocal that combine as one to a rather satisfying crescendo. This closing two-parter is by far my highlight of the album and the band's unleashing of this more progressive side is a path I hope they continue down with further releases.
The production on Word of Sin is decent, but again emphasises the lighter over the darker and heavier. The vocals and guitar leads are given particular prominence with the riffs lacking the density that I prefer in any doom-related enterprise and with the rhythm section taking a back seat for the most part. The production, however, does perfectly suit the Old Ones and it's more progressive tendencies and serves to emphasise just how superior this closing section of the album is.
3.5/5
Not exactly destined for the graveyard this one, but my sister found an old Motorhead Reading Festival 1979 scarf of mine amongst some of my dad's stuff she was sorting out. I didn't go to the Reading Festival in '79 (that summer's festival for me was Zeppelin at Knebworth Park), but I picked this up at a gig on the Bomber tour in November the same year. Can't believe it's 44 years old - older than a lot of you reading this no doubt!!
Threads of Unknowing's smothering of it's tech-death aspirations with the filth-ridden atmospherics of old-school death metal results in a classic case of an album falling between two stools and failing to satisfy the occupiers of either of them. I can't imagine for one minute that any adherent of the more expansive side of technical death metal, which VoidCeremony seemingly wish to align themselves with, are at all appreciative of the muddiness that the production has bestowed upon the album's sound. It seems to detract from the efficacy of the technical elements, elements which are surely better served by the clarity of a cleaner production. On the other hand, acolytes of the Morbid Angel / Autopsy cavernous approach are unlikely to be overly impressed by the album's technicalities.
I am becoming increasingly self-conscious about my aversion to the more technical forms of metal and I really wish I could "get it" so that I didn't appear to be such a glaring ignoramus, but I just don't I'm afraid. I guess my relationship with music and metal in particular is more based on either the buzz metal creates with it's energy as personified in memorable killer riffs and searing solos or in all-encompassing atmospheres, be it the expansiveness of atmospheric black metal's nature-based themes or the oppressive darkness of funeral and death doom, sludge or drone metal. To me, technical-based metal of the type that VoidCeremony deal in, is just too counter to what I look for and is probably better suited to people who are more interested in the intricacies of music production itself. I understand the compulsion to be challenged by art and to venture outside one's comfort zone, but I've played that game and have no further wish to expend a huge amount of time and mental energy on something I derive little enjoyment from. This somewhat rambling explanantion is by way of an apology as to why I am unable to get on board with what a band like VoidCeremony are trying to achieve, a problem have encountered previously with the likes of Gorguts' Obscura album.
Now, it isn't all bad news for me with Threads of Unknowing, because suddenly, in the album's latter stages, things take a turn for the better as the band turn a corner onto a more progressive road. At the Periphery of Human Realms (The Immaterial Grave) is a rather lengthy title for what feels like an instrumental intro into the progressive epic that closes out the album, Forlorn Portrait: Ruins of an Ageless Slumber. I wouldn't say they abandon their technical approach completely here, but they do dial it back a bit and lean much more towards a progressive style, a move that I am much more in support of. The last track in particular sounds much more like something King Crimson may have laid down around their Red era, had they been even remotely interested in death metal. This track just flows so much better than the earlier techy tracks and the changes in tempo and timbre are much less jarring and feel much more organic.
I agree with other reviewers that the deeply growled vocals are distracting and sound completely out of place for the majority of the album, a harsher vocal with a bit of a higher register feels like it would be much more appropriate, but I guess the band knew what they were aiming for. So, in summary I would have to say that Threads of Unknowing feels like a worthy misfire to me. Whilst I applaud the band's unconventional approach to technical DM, the production is just too anomalous and does the band no favours at all. I enjoyed their efforts significantly more on the two closing tracks which took a more progressive approach than the earlier tracks' technicalities which, frankly, left me cold.
3/5
A terrific album, Daniel, as is his S/T from the same year. A massively underappreciated talent.
Necrosis - Kingdom of Hate (1987)
Necrosis were formed in 1985 and featured brothers José Miguel and Andrés Nacrur on guitar and drums respectively. They were both previously members of Massacre (Massakre) and featured on the Pissing into the Mass Grave demo I reviewed previously. The band are another Chilean band with an on/off career, splitting in 1990 after the suicide of then bassist, Alfredo Peña, reforming in 1999 only to split in 2003 due to the perennial "musical differences". They reformed again in 2006 and released three albums before splitting once more in 2017.
Necrosis have much more of a Bay Area sound than both Massacre and Pentagram and sound less extreme as a consequence, coming on more like Exodus or Death Angel. Kingdom of Hate was their first demo, 1500 copies being released in 1987, available on cassette only. The sound quality is very good for a 1980s demo release and sounds very professionally produced, the production on the guitar solos being the only aspect of the production that is really less than stellar, sounding a bit distant at times. The riffing is captured very well, though, and has a nice crunch and depth, whilst the drums and bass are served very well indeed, both being perfectly audible throughout.
Kingdom of Hate contains four tracks with a total runtime of 24 minutes and kicks off with the almost nine minutes of opener, Prayer, which begins with a nice lengthy and classy intro riff, before it gets down to the real business in hand, i.e. thrashing you goddamn ass off! This is a brilliant track that switches from a quicker riff to a slower, chuggier one and back to great effect before encompassing some manic soloing over a supercharged, thrashy blastbeat. Prayer is the kind of longer thrasher that has more progression than a lot of straight-up thrashfests, reminiscent of Metallica's classic-era tracks and is my favourite of the four on display here. Fall in the Last Summer is a track that gets itself into a wicked groove and sounds like a cross between Exodus and Spreading the Disease-era Anthrax and I imagine had Chilean mosh pits heaving. My Fears has a bit of a crossover feel to it, alternating between a throbbing main riff and quicker, punkier breakdowns. The EP closes with the title track which is pretty much a straight-up, no nonsense, Exodus-style thrasher.
Overall, this is a lot more recognisable fare for mid-80s thrash fans, particularly fans of the Bay Area sound and doesn't flirt with extremity and the emerging death metal style as both Massakre and Pentagram did previously, but rather plays it a bit safer. This is still a very good demo and shows that the classic Bay Area sound need not be confined to the US. All four of the tracks available here ended up on Necrosis' debut album, The Search, which was released in the summer of '88 and was their only official release prior to their original split in 1990.
4/5
Nice work once more Vinny. Unknown takeaways this month for me were Phantom G.D.L. and Strike Master, both of which were great. Plenty of recognizable stuff this month too, which is nice and great to kick off with one of my favourite later Kreator tracks! I still struggle most with the "groovy" stuff, but that's my problem and not a problem of the playlist.
Do you have anything for October's playlist, Ben?
Pentagram - Demo #1 (1987)
So, as the title suggests, this is the first proper demo from Santiago's Pentagram who are not to be confused with the legendary US doomsters and, in fact, changed their name to Pentagram Chile in 2012 in deference to the US legends. Despite having only one studio album to their name in 2013's The Malefice, they have been an on and off presence in the Chilean scene for almost forty years now. They were formed in 1985 by guitarist and vocalist Anton "Behemoth" Reisenegger and fellow six-string slinger, Juan Pablo "Azazel" Uribe, both of whom remain in the band to this day. For the demo they were joined on drums by Chronos drummer, Eduardo "Eurynomos" Topelberg with Reisenegger also filling in on bass guitar. Recorded at Nacofon Studios, Santiago in January of 1987, the demo features three tracks, Fatal Prediction, Demoniac Possession and Spell of the Pentagram with a total runtime of just over fifteen minutes. For a 1980's demo this has pretty good production and is much better than the Massacre demo sound-wise, giving a decent indication of the band's aggressive vitality.
In common with a lot of eighties' South American thrashers, Pentagram took their cues from the Slayer / Possessed school of aggressive thrash that would form the basis of the new genre of death metal. The pace is not quite as relentlessly frantic as Massacre and the songwriting is better with the band exhibiting a greater degree of control over their aggressive tendencies. The riffs are strong and memorable with some nice variation in pacing, although when they let rip, they really unleash hell and I think their aggression is more effective for being so well-controlled. The throbbing, cyclonic riff of closer Spell of the Pentagram is particularly effective and is my favourite on the demo, but they are all terrific. Vocally Anton Reisenegger reminds me a fair bit of early Chuch Schuldiner with his rough and ragged, almost shouted style. The drumming is tight even though it does suffer a bit in the mix and the bass is perfectly audible throughout, as is common with most Chilean thrash. The soloing is OK, but is probably the aspect that most reveals the youthfulness of the band and is one of the few aspects where they could improve significantly.
Simply put, if you are interested in mid-to-late Eighties' thrash and it's metamorphosis into more extreme styles like death metal, then this demo is an absolute must and is one of the best thrash demos you would likely hear. Fans of Slayer, Possessed and Kreator need to check this out.
4.5/5
Massacre - Pissing Into the Mass Grave [Demo] (1986)
Massacre were one of the very first Chilean thrash metal bands, forming in 1982 as Sepulcro, changing their name to Embrión in '83 and finally to Massacre (or Massakre) in 1985. Pissing Into the Mass Graves was the bands first demo, and is probably the oldest available Chilean thrash recording. It was released in September of 1986 on cassette only. The three tracks featured on the demo are the title track, Pissing into the Mass Grave, Our Everyday Blood and Death Poem. It starts off with an intro of the sound of some poor soul presumably suffering hellish torture before exploding into the title track which is an absolute belter and sounds pretty good here, despite the rough, ie zero, production values. It has an addictive as fuck main riff which is as good as anything the Big Four wrote and rattles along at a breakneck pace. The vocals have a quite annoying echo effect on them, unfortunately, but otherwise are aggressive and harsh-sounding, in common with a lot of South American thrash. The soloing is buried in the production sadly, but from what can be heard it sounds great. I have unfortunately been unable to find a better version of this track which is very sad because it sounds like a rough-hewn deathly thrash diamond.
Our Everyday Blood is more of the same, although the riff is nothing like as memorable as that of the title track and it suffers a bit more because it has even more of the barely audible soloing, which is one of the biggest disappointments of the whole demo because it sounds like vocalist/guitarist Yanko Tolic and fellow guitarist José Miguel Nacrur really let rip on this one. Side two of the cassette is taken up by the almost eight minutes of Death Poem which start off with a chuggy slower riff before exploding into a much pacier affair. The echoing effect on the vocals here, though, is just too much and becomes quite annoying and distracting. Death Poem may suffer from a bit of a case of overbombing with the band chucking pretty much everything at it, but I do like that chuggy riff that keeps making a return at various points throughout the track.
All in all, this is an interesting listen and very early on sets the precedent for Chilean thrash, borrowing from all manner of styles like d-beat, death metal and the black metal of the likes of Hellhammer. It is worth checking out if only for the title track which I think is a thrash classic. The production sucks, but I have heard far worse and if you are used to listening to underground metal demos it shouldn't present too much of a challenge.
3.5/5
Godthrymm - Distortions (2023)
Godthrymm's newest album just came out last week and it's more of what you'd expect from the band, but at the same time I'd expect nothing less. So far this one is just as quality as their first, so if Sonny hasn't seen that this one dropped yet I'd highly recommend to check it out.
Only just seen this post today, Xephyr. I will definitely check it out as I enjoyed the first album quite a bit.