Sonny's Forum Replies
No, I absolutely agree with you Daniel. I have been listening to it over the last few days whilst working up a review and hear very little metal. It seems more related to early seventies' heavy psych than it does metal, even though it is still quite heavy at times. That said, if you like stoner metal then I don't hear any reason why you wouldn't get at least something from this. I didn't realise that RYM had got it so egregiously wrong but, hey, it's not the first time is it? Shit, there are even a couple of people who voted progressive metal up as a secondary. I've gone with a stoner rock primary and a heavy psych secondary.
I think it is the kind of release that does raise interesting questions about what constitutes a clan's releases though, because I also agree that this will appeal to a significant number of Fallen devotees, particularly those who dig stoner metal. I mean, I would be much more open to something like this than almost any kind of gothic metal release, even though gothic metal is a bona fide Fallen genre and this is not.
So... The Fallen feature release isn't a Fallen release?!
As I have surprisingly never listened to a full CoC album before I will take Animosity.
You're up next Vinny.
Behexen - Rituale Satanum (2000)
I first heard of Behexen via their 2012 Nightside Emanations album, but I didn't hear anything there that compelled me to check them out much beyond that. So I approached their debut hoping it would appeal to me a little more, but fearing that it probably wouldn't. Well those fears were quite unfounded because, fortunately, Rituale Satanum is right up my street. Despite not hitting the shelves until 2000, it channels the early releases of black metal's second wave to such an extent that I swear you can smell the odour of burning church pews whilst listening to it!
A quick glance at the cover and listening to the intro's exhortations to all manner of unholy demons, including old Lucifer himself, it is obvious that Behexen are a black metal outfit very much into the fundamental satanism of the genres roots. This fundamentalism manifests as a raw blastfest of withering black metal savagery and it positively seethes with hatred for all that is holy. It certainly isn't as lo-fi as you may expect, but it still encapsulates the feel of early nineties Scandinavian black metal authentically. Whilst the majority of tracks are high-tempo blasters, Behexen are not averse to occasionally slowing the pace on tracks like Baphomet's Call, to provide some contrast and break up the incessant battering with a riff or two that leans towards more traditional heavy metal riffing.
One of the album's big draws for me is the vocals of Hoath Torog whose unholy, throat-shredding screech is exceedingly effective and reminiscent of Ihsahn on the early Emperor material. In fact, the album as a whole suggests that Behexen had a lot of respect for the Norwegian Imperials, The Flames of the Blasphemer, which is the only track with a noticeable keyboard presence, is out and out Wrath of the Tyrant-era Emperor worship and I swear that Blessed Be the Darkness borrows a lot from I Am the Black Wizards. Despite the ferocity of the majority of the material on display here (and it it's best it is exceedingly raw and viscious-sounding), Behexen do have an ear for a good melody too. Tracks such as Christ Forever Die or Sota Valon Jumalaa vastaan in particular contain some really quite melodic riffs at one point or another. I am no authority on technical competency, but Behexen do seem to me to have a command of their instruments that not all raw-sounding black metal bands can boast. Drummer Horns sounds like an absolute beast as he commits all-out assault and battery on his kit with blastbeats from hell and guitarist Toni Kettunen (aka Gargantum) generates huge momentum with his vast arsenal of riffs.
I have had this on hard rotation for about three days now and every listen through excites me more than the last. Rituale Satanum is an album I am genuinely glad to have stumbled across and is exactly the sort of album that got me into black metal in the first place. Sure, if you want a challenging, genre-busting album of super-modern black metal experimentation then you are most definitely going to have to look elsewhere, but if you want a genuinely kick-ass reminder of black metal's roots then Behe"X"en marks the spot!
⸸⸸⸸⸸
(4 inverted crosses out of 5)
Hi Ben, my suggestions for November's playlist:
Khors - "Throne of Antiquity" from "The Flame of Eternity's Decline" (2005)
Raventale - "Without Movement" from "Transcendence" (2012)
Behexen - "Night of the Blasphemy" from "Rituale Satanum" (2000)
I think I will take the Behexen debut album. I am familiar with a couple of their later releases but haven't listened to their earlier stuff. Thought about the Hulder comp, but I am already pretty familiar with the material so ultimately passed on it.
October 2022
1. Sky Pig - "The Scag" from "Hell Is Inside You EP" (2020)
2. Lord Vigo - "Memento Mori" from "Danse de Noir" (2020)
3. Theatre of Tragedy - "Fair and 'Guiling Copesmate Death" from "Velvet Darkness They Fear " (1996)
4. Sore Throat - "Phase I" from "Inde$troy" (1989)
5. Paul Chain Violet Theatre - "In the Darkness" from "In the Darkness" (1986)
6. 16 - "Monday Bloody Monday" from "Bridges to Burn" (2009)
7. Slow - "Déluge" from "V - Oceans" (2017)
8. Solitude Aeternus - "Scent of Death" from "Alone" (2006)
9. Draconian - "The Sacrificial Flame" from "Under A Godless Veil" (2020)
10. Acid Mammoth - "Caravan" from "Caravan" (2021)
11. Dystopia - "Control All Delete" from "Dystopia" (2008)
12. Possessor - "Twisted Nerve Endings" from "The Speed of Death EP" (2022)
13. Solstice - "Death's Crown Is Victory" from "Death's Crown Is Victory" (2013)
14. Hell - "Mourn" from "Hell III" (2012)
15. Acid Witch - "October 31st" from "Witchtanic Hellucinations" (2008)
Much like yourself Daniel, I had never sat down and listened to an Eyehategod album all the way through until earlier this year when I was looking for some well-regarded sludge to feature on the monthly playlist. I took the plunge with their previous album Take As Needed for Pain but also took in Dopesick pretty soon after and loved them both. It's easy to hear why the band are considered such giants of sludge metal. I must admit that the genre doesn't always do it for me, but those two albums are an object lesson in the unremitting bleakness, bitterness and self-loathing that best defines sludge and are fully deserving of their legendary status.
I will take the Floor album Ben as they are the only one of the four bands I have never heard before.
I have a lot of love for Chaos AD as it was the album that got me back into metal after my early nineties hiatus. I'd take it over anything from Pantera any day.
The revenue is now coming from streaming - a digital world that was nonexistent back in the day.
From everything I've read & heard, bands actually make bugger-all off streaming their music unless they're at the extreme top level. I have several friends that produce music that's sold on streaming platforms & they're always complaining that they make next to nothing from it. All but the absolute elite metal bands make most of their money from touring & merchandise sales these days. The importance of producing their own music is so that they can get people to book them for live shows.
Yes, that is my understanding of the situation too. Artists want their music streamed by as many people as possible in the hope that those people will then buy tickets to shows, t-shirts and hoodies etc. This is the only real explanantion for streaming services being so cheap (or even free if you're not bothered by advertising) and the price of merchandise and physical copies of music are so high. I pay a tenner a month for Spotify and can (and often do) listen to dozens of albums in a month, yet to buy a single CD from a local record shop or off Bandcamp costs more than a month of Spotify and for my preferred format of vinyl records, two or three months. You can buy a t-shirt from Primark for three ot four quid, but stick a Maiden or Judas Priest transfer on it and it'll set you back £20+.
Thanks for the comments Xephyr. Your observations about current metal show-going was exactly what I was looking for. The very aggressive moshing was only really just beginning as a thing when I finished concert-going. I took my mate's girlfriend to see Anthrax (she loved thrash, he didn't) on the Among the Living Tour and it was both of our first experience of a moshpit which resulted in us spending all night in A&E while she got her broken arm fixed. To be fair she was no wimp, we stayed for the whole show before seeking treatment and she still came with me to watch Slayer a couple of months later. Needless to say, my mate wasn't too chuffed when we turned up shame-faced next morning, she with her arm in plaster, though! That said, I was never a huge fan of moshpits, I am 6'2" and back then I would have been about 235, so I wasn't a small person, but the downside is that that makes you a target for some dickheads and in the end that wasn't what I went to metal shows for as I'm not at all a violent person by nature. But, for some, it is part of the cameraderie and is a major part of the experience of live shows I guess. Each to their own. However, from what you describe Xephyr it does sound like the underground is alive and well and metal fans are still getting the same kick out of the live experience as I did back in the day and that is really kind of reassuring.
As to your point 3, I guess the more I think about it, I realise that everything was about class in 1970s Britain so metal fandom was only an extension of the ongoing society-wide class divide and so when the so-called "classless society" of the late 80s and onwards was being touted, it was only natural that metal would succumb to it as much as anything else. You only have to look at football (or soccer to our american friends). In the 70s and early to mid-eighties football was strictly a working class sport, with huge amounts of gang violence associated with it, but by the time of the formation of the English Premier League in 1993 a significant number of match attendees were from relatively wealthier backgrounds and nowadays I'm surprised anybody not on good money can afford to attend a game at all.
I think I may need to clarify something also. I never at the time consciously viewed metal as a class-restricted thing or as anything other than something I loved more than almost anything else and the points I originally made were only derived from looking back at those days with hindsight. In the same way that we didn't realise at the time that we were poor because everyone we knew lived the same way, I never back then thought of metal as a societal identifier, it was just a me identifier and I never even thought of it in terms of a "scene", I was just fortunate enough to have friends I hung out with who were into it too and we went to shows and metal clubs where we joined up with even more mates where we could all enjoy a good laugh, a drink, a smoke and some killer music. I may have given the impression that these observations had always been on my mind, but I can assure you that I was nothing like perceptive enough back then to make such observations and I make them now only as I look back on those days with many years of water having passed under the bridge and a whole lot more experience under my belt.
I say that I feel metal is more popular now because it seems to be more in the public consciousness than it was before. Most people have heard of Metallica and Iron Maiden, sure, but also bands like Linkin Park and Slipknot who are forever on Kerrang!!'s TV channel or on Scuzz are also well known.
See I guess that's kinda my point really. Linkin Park & Slipknot's popularity peaked at around the turn of the century which is 20+ years ago now but where are the new mega-bands to replace them? I could be completely off the mark here but if people are still predominately associating metal with bands from multiple decades ago rather than the current crop of metal acts then I would have thought that would have been an indicator that the scene had retreated into the underground again. Who are we looking at from the 2010's & 2020's that can compete at that level?
What I am getting at Daniel, although admittedly not very well, is that I feel metal has a wider base and has become more pervasive in the culture than it was in it's earlier days. You will hear metal songs in huge movies, on TV adverts and even during football games - watch the NFL and you wil hear Crazy Train or Enter Sandman at nearly every break in play! Maybe my assertion of metal's current popularity was overstated, but it has become more accepted within the culture I don't think there can be any doubt. Either way, to focus on that one statement kind of misses the point I'm trying to make that there are aspects of some of the metal that is made today that have become very pretentious and is lauded above bands that are truer to metal's roots. It was probably wrong of me to associate this with class and I have confessed to trying to provoke a little with the statement, but to be honest rhe current political climate here in the UK has made me very class-conscious again and is somewhat dominating my thinking at this time.
I would still like to hear any commentary on how the metal underground today looks and feels as it is something I am interested in hearing about as it was such a massive part of my life for a considerable period of time and I would.like to hear how it differs (or not) from the days of my involvement many decades ago.
I'm interested to know why you think metal has grown in popularity since the early 2000's Sonny as that's certainly not the case over here in Oz. It's never been more uncool to be an Aussie metalhead as far as I can tell. The only bands anyone outside of the scene is aware of are the classic bands from the 1980's & early 1990's which was when metal was at its peak here.
I must admit that there was a short time during the early eighties when the NWOBHM was at it's height that metal was relatively more popular here in the UK than it is at the moment. However that was fairly short-lived and the way it was abandoned wholesale, I feel, adds testament to my point that to many people music is just another fad to be dropped when trend dictates and something "better" comes along. But after it had faded into the underground again, the same guys were still going to metal shows who were there before things took off. To these guys metal always meant more than a mere passing fad.
I say that I feel metal is more popular now because it seems to be more in the public consciousness than it was before. Most people have heard of Metallica and Iron Maiden, sure, but also bands like Linkin Park and Slipknot who are forever on Kerrang!!'s TV channel or on Scuzz are also well known. The fact that there even is a TV channel showing metal videos is still hard for me to get my head round when in the UK back in the day you couldn't even hear metal on the radio let alone on TV.
Then there's the music nerds of RYM and the like who wouldn't have touched Venom or Motorhead with a barge pole, but who are quite happy to have Cult of Luna albums sat next to their Radiohead or John Coltrane LPs (or more likely on their hard drives) so they can brag about their eclectic taste to anyone who'll listen to their shit.
I must admit that nowadays I am divorced from any involvement in any metal scene and raging tinnitus has pretty much ended my going to metal shows, so I only really base these hypotheses on gut feeling rather than hard and fast data.
You are dead right Daniel that peoples's perceptions are based on their own experiences, but the early metal bands themselves always say that they played almost exclusively to working class crowds in their formative years. Metal was born in Birmingham in the late sixties / early seventies for fuck's sake and believe me there were few places less working class than Brum at that time - my dad's family are from Birmingham so I have some first-hand experience of the time and place!
OK I'll admit that this thread might be deliberately provocative, but to be honest I thought it might be a topic that would provoke some interesting debate about the metal scene, which has undoubtedly seen some changes since I went to my first Motorhead gig in 1978. I would particularly be interested to hear the experiences of people who are still closely involved in the metal scene in real life (as opposed to on the internet) to get a feel for what it is like nowadays in the underground and to put my mind at rest that there still is an underground and that the outsider reputation of real metal is still intact.
I'm sorry Sonny. It has been one of those months. I assume you've completed the playlist by now, but if not...
- Solstice - Death's Crown Is Victory off Death's Crown Is Victory (2013)
- Slow - Déluge off V - Oceans (2017)
If you've already completed this months, these can be for next month.
Thanks!
As it happens Ben, the stars have aligned in such a way that I haven't yet finished the playlist for October yet, so I will add these to it.
It's been quite a while since I last listened to Journey into Mystery, a lot of water has flowed under the bridge and a lot of music has flowed through my ears. As a consequence, I no longer feel as bowled over by it as I once did, it's doomy take on thrash metal not sounding as awesome as previously. I still love the sound of the album - the obvious Celtic Frost worship of a song like the cthulhian The Elder Race still chimes with me, the doomier sections will always find my favour and I am always up for a bit of punky Slayer-worship such as they dish up on Hear My Screams. The issue I have with Journey into Mystery (which was also an issue with the Dream Death's later iteration, Penance) is that the songwriting is very uneven with some great tracks sitting alongside some that, frankly, fall flat on their face. The two tracks around the halfway point, Black Edifice and Divine in Agony, just don't sound very well put together to my ears and come across as a bit messy, especially the latter of the two. When they do get it right, such as on The Elder Race, Sealed in Blood or the title track, then I am right there, all-in and along for the ride, but when they drop the ball it is a bit painful.
Although there is an undoubted doom metal influence upon Journey into Mystery, in common with the earlier Celtic Frost albums, I don't think there is enough out and out doom metal to cite it as a primary genre on the album, the thrash component outweighing it songwriting-wise, as oppossed to aesthetically. I'm guessing this sounds like a bit of a caning of a former favourite, but I still enjoy this album very much it's just that I am now more aware of it's limitations and so a rating correction is called for I think.
4/5
Hi Ben. Have you any suggestions for October's Fallen playlist?
Nice one Vinny. I'm looking forward to hearing your thoughts on the best my beloved Fallen has to offer.
It is tough to follow up on Candlemass' debut because, as you rightly say, they pretty much perfected epic doom metal on the first attempt. I guess it is very similar to Morbid Angel releasing Altars of Madness and setting such a ridiculously high early standard for death metal. Still, that didn't prevent others from knocking out fantastic albums, so I hope you find plenty of other releases you dig too.
Hi Vinny. My suggestions for October:
Slayer - "Live Undead" from "South of Heaven" (1988)
Legion of the Damned - "The Widows Breed" from "Slaves of the Shadow Realm" (2019)
Toxik - "World Circus" from "World Circus" (1987)
Bulldozer - "Never Relax" from "The Final Separation" (1986)
Lååz Rockit - "Last Breath" from "Know Your Enemy" (1987)
Flames of Hell - Fire and Steel (1987)
Is there a special genre for "metal with vocals that sound like a turkey being strangled"? I really wanted to be in a band when I was a teenager but put that dream to rest when I realised I had neither skill nor natural talent. Evidently these guys weren't as self-aware as I was! I only listened to this in order to vote on a Hall submission and I will never forgive you guys for it. This was one of the absolute worst metal albums I have ever heard. Of course because it's from an Icelandic band all the tr00 cvltists hail it as a first wave black metal classic, but guess what? The emperor has no fucking clothes!!
1/5 (I originally had it as a 1.5 but every time I think about it it sounds worse in my head).
I think there is too much going on in this submission with the removal of two genres and the installation of two different ones, a total of four changes in one submission. I have voted yes despite being unsure as to whether this deserves a place in The Fallen. I certainly don't think it is black or thrash metal (or any good) and a speed metal tag is definitely justified. I can hear where the trad doom submission comes from but find it hard to agree with.
Once more I come up against an act I have never listened to before, the covers have always put me off in the past. Well, once more I also discover another album I really enjoyed. Voted yes - I could hear more than enough speed metal here to allow me to support the original proposal. I can also hear where you were coming from with the black metal assertion Daniel, which really was a surprise to me considering my preconceived prejudices about the band!
This definitely doesn't sound like death metal to me. In fact it sounds more like a hardcore punk release. I guess it's a bit like SOD with the same immature humour. Personally I hated it!
I've never listened to Lååz Rockit before and, although I did enjoy this quite a bit, this seems like an easy one to me. Outside the first two tracks there seems to be very little thrash-wise, most of it sounding like the early USPM albums I listened to when I started one of the Guardians clan challenges. Still a good record though.
Whilst Alone is also an awesome record for sure, I don't think it has anything as iconic as Well of Souls or At the Gallows End on it , so is downslope from Nightfall for me. But this is nitpicking as they are both records I would unhesitatingly recommend to any trad/epic doom fan.
Contrary to popular opinion, I've never found "At the Gallows End" to be anything terribly special to tell you the truth. I do quite like it but definitely think of it as one of the least appealing couple of tracks on "Nightfall". "Well of Souls" is certainly an amazing track but my personal favourites are "Bewtiched" & "Black Candles" which I regard as being the equal of anything I've heard from the epic doom metal subgenre. In fairness though, I'd place Solitude Aeturnus' "Scent of Death" right alongside them in that respect.
It's weird (or maybe it's me who is) but despite it possibly being Candlemass' most well-known track, Bewitched is my least favoured "proper" track on Nightfall. Go figure!
It's been a while since I did a Top Ten, so here's my current top ten epic doom albums (using RYM genre tagging for want of a better solution).
1. Candlemass - "Nightfall" (1987)
2. Solstice - "New Dark Age" (1988)
3. Candlemass - "Epicus Doomicus Metallicus" (1986)
4. Scald - "Will of the Gods Is Great Power" (1996)
5. Solitude Aeturnus - "Alone" (2006)
6. Candlemass - "Candlemass" (2005)
7. Candlemass - "Tales of Creation" (1989)
8. Isole - "Silent Ruins" (2009)
9. Age of Taurus - "Desperate Souls of Tortured Times" (2013)
10. Procession - "Destroyers of the Faith" (2010)
Whilst Alone is also an awesome record for sure, I don't think it has anything as iconic as Well of Souls or At the Gallows End on it , so is downslope from Nightfall for me. But this is nitpicking as they are both records I would unhesitatingly recommend to any trad/epic doom fan.
Candlemass - Nightfall (1987)
Candlemass shook the metal world's foundations with their debut, Epicus Doomicus Metallicus, an album so fundamental to epic doom metal that the genre was named after it. It's massive riffs and larger-than-life theatricalities laid down the fundamentals of the genre for the succeeding generations to follow. So, having perfectly defined an entire genre at the first attempt, where do you go from there? Well for Lief Edling he decided to do it again, only more so! To this end Candlemass recruited the immense talent and larger-than-life personality of Messiah Marcolin from little-known act Mercy (where he was drummer in addition to singing) to take over vocal duties from Johan Längquist who was only credited on the debut as a guest performer due to his unwillingness to commit to Candlemass. There is no doubt that Messiah grabs hold of Nightfall and takes full advantage of the opportunity presented to him by turning in an amazing and, yes, epic vocal performance where he draws a line in the sand for the gold standard of epic doom singers. Yet despite Messiah's excellent vocals, this is no one-man show as the rest of the band are in career-defining mode. The guitarists sound great with the riffs having as much depth as any you will hear on a doom metal album and Lars Johansson's solos are exhilharatingly performed.
The real stars of the Nightfall show though are surely the songs which are incredible and, as a collection for me, top the debut and are surely the crown jewels of Leif Edling's songwriting career. If you kick off an album with as devastating a one-two combination as Well of Souls and At the Gallows End (my absolute favourite Candlemass track) then you know you are in for one hell of a ride. Candlemass take massive Sabbathian riffs and draw them to their logical conclusion, the quickening riff of At the Gallows End and the main riff of Dark Are the Veils of Death would leave even Tony Iommi gasping for breath and the way the egyptian-sounding melody is interwoven into the main riff and given extra prominence following the chorus of Well of Souls is masterful. Drums are seldom discussed much in relation to doom metal, but the echoing thuds and percussive interjections, such as the tubular bell during Mourner's Lament, all add to the pomp and circumstance of the album's imperious atmosphere and Jan Lindh should be commended for his controlled and vital contribution.
I have really been caning Nightfall over the last few weeks and during that time it has worked it's way up and up in my affections, now lodged firmly as one of my all-time favourites, deposing the debut as my favourite Candlemass album and even knocking A New Dark Age off it's perch as my favourite epic doom album. This is the very definition of epic doom to my mind and should be required listening for any doom metal fanatic.
5/5
Without rambling, my experience with Dirt is in direct opposition to Sonny's. As I matured, it was albums like Nevermind and Ten that lost favour as I learned more about the artist, their songwriting process, as well as their future. Sure, Alice in Chains had their problems on later albums (S/T and Black Gives Way To Blue) and left me questioning the bands future, but I never found those albums outright repulsive in the same way I find so many newer Pearl Jam records in the 2000s and beyond. Dirt is an album with soul; something severely lacking in the genres that Alice in Chains are attempting to replicate here. And it's the soul of Layne Stayley, Jerry Cantrell, and the rest of Alice in Chains that lives on 30 years later.
Just for the record, Saxy, I don't have any experience or history with Dirt as I only listened to it just now for the first time for the feature, so I don't really know what you mean. Maybe that is the difference you are referring to as I have zero emotional attachment to it as it played no part in forming or shaping my taste in music, whereas Nevermind, Ten and Superunknown did? I had been a metal fan for many years before Dirt was released and had even left metal behind by then, at least for a while, before returning to it later in the nineties. I do agree about Pearl Jam though, as pretty much everything after Vitalogy is painful.
I've seen quite a few positive comments about "The God Machine" recently, not just here at the Academy but on several other sites too, so I figured that, despite me and European Power Metal not really being comfortable bedfellows, it's about time I checked out my very first Blind Guardian album.
OK, so this was never going to be one of my favourite ever albums, but it was actually quite a pleasant surprise. Inevitably from a band who have been releasing high-profile albums for a third of a century, their talent was never really in doubt, but their level of ability is quite unimpeachable. As has been pointed out by others, singer Hansi Kürsch, despite being nearly as old as I am, has still got an impressive set of pipes and shows no signs of vocal decline, even with the most demanding of lines. However, the backing vocals is where I struggle the most with the album, the constant harmonisation just becoming too much for me personally and making everything sound like it was produced by Brian May. The guitar work is pretty great, especially on the quicker material and the solos are shred-happy, but despite this they manage to stay on the right side of enjoyable for me, not ever descending into neoclassical metal levels of wankery and futility. I note that Xephyr initially was unimpressed with "Secrets of the American Gods" and for me this is an obvious low-point of the album, particularly after the two strong opening tracks.
So, as I say, this is never going to reside in my comfort zone and towards the end I was flagging a bit, but it provided enough enjoyment that I could see myself returning to it at some point. It has also made me want to check out some of their classic albums the guys mentioned above. If only you could get a version without all the harmonised backing vocals, I think I could really get into this.
3.5/5
Well now you've piqued my interest Xephyr, so I will definitely have to give this one a blast tomorrow.
Well Brutal Truth have turned in the second feature release this month that has left me gobsmacked with my jaw on the ground in amazement, following in the footsteps of Solitude Aeternus' Alone. I am no grindcore expert but I must confess I do love a good slab of musical annihilation that some of the better exponents of the genre can produce and I do rate a few grindcore releases from the like of Napalm Death, Carcass and Terrorizer very highly indeed. So I was pleasantly surprised to hear another slab of grindcore that could comfortably sit next to those titans without shame. In fact, it is even possible that ECDER may have surpassed some, if not all, of those previous genre favourites by sheer virtue of the fact that it offers something a bit different. It is almost like Brutal Truth were visionaries who entered a two-dimensional world of flatness that was early grindcore and then looked beyond into a third dimension and were able to give the genre more depth and perspective as a result.
There is a variety within the confines of the albums boundaries that is seldom heard within the grindcore world and BT don't just rely on beating you into submission with your own severed arms. There is quite a bit of OSDM incorporated into the tracks, unsurprisingly as this was 1992 after all, and even some doomy Autopsy-style DM. But when it really comes down to it these guys could blast the balls off a buffalo - listen to Stench of Prophet for fucks sake and tell me that track doesn't leave casualties in it's wake! But the nature of the album is such that this high velocity assault isn't the only card in it's deck and so, when the band do drop the hammer, it is even more effective for it. Now I'm not 100% if this is truly grindcore, deathgrind or whatever and, frankly, I couldn't give a rat's ass because it a phenomenal slab of early Eighties extreme metal heaven and is an album I have now got to track down a copy of!
Edit: Wow, I can't believe that Brutal Truth were formed by Anthrax's Dan Lilker. Makes SOD look like the limp turd that they were.
4.5/5 (I actually wanted to give it a 5, but I have a new rule where nothing gets a 5 until it proves it has got staying power).
Although I am fairly familiar with Solitude Aeternus' earlier albums, specifically the first three, for some reason I have never listened to Alone before it's appearance as this month's featured release for The Fallen. Well, kudos to Ben for sharing this one because it has inserted itself, in short order, as my favourite Solitude Aeternus album and indeed one of the best doom releases of the 2000s.
There will be an instant familiarity for anyone raised on Candlemass, Solstice and Isole with the songs sounding huge and immensely powerful, but here they take the epic doom of their contemporaries and imbue it with a degree of melancholy that feels like it seeped over from Warning's Watching From A Distance (although Alone was released a month before Patrick Walker's magnum opus, so this is mere fancy on my part, but the analogy still holds).
The band are on absolute top form and turn in a performance of unrivalled confidence, with special mention to vocalist Rob Lowe whose vocals are stunning and a measure of Lowe's impressiveness is that he was selected to become the new vocalist for Candlemass at around the time of Alone's release. Check out opener and album highlight Scent of Death and the ending of the track, where his vocals perfectly evoke a middle-eastern atmosphere, for an illustration of his ability to transport the listener to other realms solely with the power of his voice. I must admit, I do love to hear arabic or middle eastern vibes on metal albums and wish it was a direction more bands would explore. Here it also continues into the second track, Waiting for the Light, where the guitars trace a middle eastern motif during the earlier section of the track. The two guitarists, John Perez and Steve Moseley, both also turn in terrific performances, their thundering, ultra-heavy riffs being counterpointed by virtuoso soling that would make many a heavy metal guitar hero raise their eyebrows in surprise.
Overall, Alone is the whole doom metal package, with great, epic-sounding and atmospheric tracks imbued with a haunting melancholy that inspires both awe and sorrow simultaneously and is a superb illustration of why I personally love doom metal.
4.5/5
Both Messiah and Rob Lowe are exceptional vocalists with little to choose between them, but I think it is actually Messiah who defined the Candlemass sound vocally, with the help of their best material admittedly, so would place him above Rob within the context of this thread.
Incidentally, have you heard any of Messiah's albums outside of Candlemass? Both Mercy and Memento Mori have some great albums that should appeal to any Candlemass fan.
I haven't. Sadly, the list of things I really should check out has grown to preposterous levels lately. I think I need to retire and take up listening to metal full time.
Well Ben, it's what I did!!
Black Claw - Alone in a Dying World (2021)
Black Claw play, in their own words, dark and dirty death country and that pretty much sums them up perfectly. I loved their previous album, Thieving Bones and even managed to track down and buy a CD copy from Russian label Der Schwarze Tod. There is a real sinister atmosphere to their bluegrass-derived country tales of horror and Reverend Black Claw has a genuinely disturbing growl. This seems like the sort of album that Leatherface and his family from The Texas Chainsaw Massacre might have made whilst ripped to shit on moonshine. I don't know if blackened bluegrass is a thing but it damn well should be!
4/5
Here's the opening track f you're intrigued as to what they sound like:
Pan-Amerikan Native Front - Tecumseh's War (2016)
I've been meaning to get round to this for ages, so banged it on whilst going through my ever-expanding wishlist on Bandcamp (which is currently over 2400 strong and rising!). P-ANF are a solo project of Alan "Kurator of War" Avitia and he plays quite raw atmospheric black metal with a Native American lyrical theme. I really dug his 2021 album Little Turtle's War and it ended up in my personal top ten black metal albums of that year (even above WiTTR). This is very much in the same mould as Little Turtle's War and is almost as good, although I prefer the later album because it is more in-your-face and the songwriting has improved somewhat in the intervening years. This still stands as an impressive enough calling card however and paved the way for the later highs of Little Turtle's War.
3.5/5
Of course, you are right, but the Hall gives everyone within the respective clan the ability to vote, so my one clueless vote has as much weight as your own, which is based on actual knowledge and an ability to differentiate between genres that I could never hope to match. I mean look at last month's Lord Vigo feature release. It seems I upset Morpheus massively by suggesting I didn't think this was doom metal, a view I stand by. Now that may empirically be an incorrect statement, but it's what I think, so should I have the right to vote in the Hall with such wrong-headed views? Personally I think not and, to be honest, there are many Hall votes I genuinely haven't got a clue about, it is one reason I am reticent to participate in it. I understand it is important to the site's integrity, but it also has it's weaknesses. It is also a good reason why I think you and Ben are right to stick to your guns on the number of votes required as it mitigates fools like myself fucking it up.
I honestly think Robert Lowe might top Messiah for me. His work for Solitude Aeturnus is second to none. I really should check out his Candlemass work!
Both Messiah and Rob Lowe are exceptional vocalists with little to choose between them, but I think it is actually Messiah who defined the Candlemass sound vocally, with the help of their best material admittedly, so would place him above Rob within the context of this thread.
Incidentally, have you heard any of Messiah's albums outside of Candlemass? Both Mercy and Memento Mori have some great albums that should appeal to any Candlemass fan.
I don't think I've even heard the Candlemass albums with Thomas Vikström and Björn Flodkvist, so can't play along. I will say that I think all three vocalists making up your top 3 are outstanding, and I'd have to listen to all their albums back to back to make a decision. For one band to have all three of those doom legends involved is amazing!
Although inferior to the others, both Vikström and Flodkvist are still very good vocalists, Ben. Chapter VI is one of the weakest of the Candlemass dicography, although my recent relistens have left me far more open to it than I was previously. It is less doomy and more heavy metal leaning as it's overall pace is quicker and Vikström's vocals do suit it quite well. The two Flodkvist albums aren't bad, in fact From the 13th Sun is very good and is possibly more doomy. In addition there is the Abstrakt Algebra project that Edling wanted to replace Candlemass with, but which ultimately only ran from '94-'97 due to label (and fan) indifference. That band had Mats Levén on vocal duties, but in all honesty I'm not a fan, at least not until he teamed up again with Edling in Krux in the 2000s.
I don't know how many Academy members are big Candlemass fans, but I've been giving their discography a bit of a hammering over the last couple of weeks and although Candlemass have a distinctive style, I think each of the band's five different vocals have bought something unique to the table. So my question is how do you rate their vocalists in respect of how they define and refine the Candlemass sound?
Just to refresh memories the five vocalists and their albums are:
Johan Längquist - Epicus Doomicus Metallicus; The Door to Doom
Messiah Marcolin - Nightfall; Ancient Dreams; Tales of Creation; Candlemass
Thomas Vikström - Chapter VI
Björn Flodkvist – Dactylis Glomerata; From the 13th Sun
Rob Lowe – King of the Grey Islands; Death Magic Doom; Psalms for the Dead
For myself, I would go from best down:
Messiah >> Rob Lowe >> Johan Längquist >> Björn Flodkvist >> Thomas Vikström
So what's anyone else's take on the Candlemass singers?
Thanks Daniel. I kinda get it instinctively, but, much to my eternal embarassment, I am so absolutely fucking clueless that I don't even know what a scale is really and certainly not the difference between a blues scale and a minor scale. Also, and I know this may sound blasphemous to you, but if it's so hard for a layman to differentiate between them, does it really matter that much? I mean I can tell the difference between AC/DC and Slayer, but take a band like Motorhead (who Lemmy always denied were metal), some of their material sounds exceptionally borderline to me and could fall either side of the fence.
Hi Ben, my suggestions for October:
Horna - "Haudanusva" from "Perimä vihassa ja verikostossa" (1999) [5:33]
Cradle of Filth - "The Twisted Nails of Faith" from "Cruelty and the Beast" (1998) [6:51]
Beastcraft - "Satanist" from "Dawn of the Serpent" (2005) [1:33]
Sainte Marie des Loups - "Meurtrières" from "Funérailles de feu" (2020) [4:59]
Runtime: 18:56
I guess it comes down to what you understand rock & metal music to be, doesn't it? I was taught the different techniques for playing the two genres when I was in my early teenage years & those theoretical rules have stuck with me ever since so I see a well defined line between the two. As I've already explained in another recent thread, the point of contention shouldn't really be about how heavy or light-weight a release feels. You either have metal guitar & drum techniques being used or you don't as far as I'm concerned. Now, if we're going to be throwing the likes of Guns 'n' Roses, Def Leppard, Scorpions, AC/DC, Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin, etc. under the metal banner then I have to ask a pretty obvious question i.e. just what is hard rock music then because those are some clear examples of it as far as I'm concerned. To be open & transparent, my personal cut-off ratio for a release to qualify as metal is 40% i.e. if 40% or more of it's run time is legitimate metal then I'm happy enough to include it. Here's ten examples of some very big "metal" releases that I don't think should qualify as metal if we use that philosophy:
I think what you must bear in mind Daniel, is that for those of us with little to no technical musical ability or theoretical knowledge, this is not such a straightforward task. Without the ability to hear and understand as clearly as yourself then we are left to good old-fashioned "gut feeling". I don't for a second dispute anything you say and would absolutely take guidance from someone with undoubted theoretical knowledge, but for me it is a lot like listening to Neil DeGrasse Tyson explaining quantum mechanics in TV - I get some of what he says but a lot if it goes way over my head. He too would probably shake his head and wonder why I couldn't see what is so blatantly obvious to him.
What I'm trying to say, not very succinctly admittedly, is, although it must be frustrating, please don't judge us non-theorists too harshly, we are just trying to figure things out as best we can.
I think a more contemporary take on this is how much metal can you take out of metal music before it ceases to be such? I am thinking of some of the more -gazey sort of releases of recent years such as a coup!e of Alcest albums and the Lustre release I proposed for the Hall a while back.
Xephyr also makes an excellent point, I have also heard several obviously non-metal albums that sound like metal, such as The Visit's Through Darkness Into Light which is a cello-based album that manages to encaapsulate the essence of metal (at least to me it does), Dolven's 2015 album, Navigating the Labyrinth is classed as neofolk but sounds like Elizabethan doom metal and recently I've been listening to Darkher, an ethereal wave act whose material would definitely appeal to a number of metal fans I suspect. I wonder, is there any mechanism for getting releases like these added as non-metal releases that could appeal to metalheads?
Fuckin hell guys, I can't believe neither of you picked up the Darkthrone boxset. It's only six 12" vinyl LPs, a 7" single, four cassettes and a DVD fer chrissakes. Where's your dedication?!
Gospel of the Horns - Eve of the Conqueror (2000)
Australia's Gospel of the Horns are no longer an active band since 2018 having been around in blackened thrash circles since 1994. They are basically of the same sound as fellow countrymen Destroyer 666 or for a more further geographical reference, Desaster are also a good citation. Unlike either of the two aforementioned bands though, this is not as vicious in its delivery, almost like the low production values actually rob it of some power and presence. Now, don't get me wrong, this tries to be as grim and rough as the best of them. Howitzer's vocals are superb with their rasping (ravishing) grimness and Marauder's riffs are equally as cold and.....marauding. My only real criticism (aside from him calling himself Hellcunt) is the drummer sounds a bit lost in the background, and overall there is just a sense of there being a lack of sharpness to their bite.
As an EP, this works on a quick "smash 'n grab" level of entertainment. Just as GOTH get their hobnail boots and fist-band and chains to the bar, they sup up and are off to lay waste to some other drinking establishment. The synthy, atmospheric outro with its weird alien/subliminal devil speak is unnecessary as they do not strike me as a band who rely on pomp or circumstance to get their point across. At the same time the band certainly do not reinvent any wheels and as a result (having heard more than my fair share of this sub-genre by now) large parts of this EP just pass me by. It falls all too easily into the "Hells Headbangers" atypical trve/kvlt blackened thrash brigade - which in itself is a great place to be, but one that is well-trodden already for me.
3/5
Mr. Hellcunt (Marcus to his friends) is also the drummer in my favourite Aussie band, Bestial Warlust, so he's obviously got a decent track record in extreme black metal. Anyway, I listened to this because your review made it sound like it would be up my street - and it most definitely is. It is pretty badass, it sounds filthy as fuck and it doesn't outstay it's welcome at only twenty minutes. I wish more black metal acts would learn the lesson of "drag 'em in, kick 'em in the balls and get the fuck out of there" before they all start boring us (well me anyway) to shit with their latest sixty-minute-plus "opus". I'd give this one a 4.
Wall of Sleep - When Mountains Roar (2010)
When Mountains Roar was Hungarian band Wall of Sleep's fourth album released in 2010 on PsycheDOOMelic Records. I have a passing familiarity with the band, mainly via previous album, 2007's ...And Hell Followed With Him which I enjoyed a fair bit without it exactly setting my world alight. Wall of Sleep play a stonerised version of traditional doom metal that has a very prominent hard rock component to it, in fact I would even suggest that the song Bitter Smile contains a riff that was ripped straight off of Zeppelin's The Ocean from Houses of the Holy, so how much you enjoy this will be very dependent on how comfortable you are with rock grooves on metal albums. For me this isn't much of a problem as I grew up in the classic hard rock heyday when bands like Zeppelin and Deep Purple ruled the roost.
Wall of Sleep are still fundamentally a metal band, be assured, and when they go full-on stoner/trad doom, such as on Receive the Pain, then they prove that they are more than capable of cranking out some terrific doom metal. But these guys are definitely worshippers at the feet of Page, Blackmore and Iommi and in all honesty my favourite aspect of When Mountains Roar is the solos of guitarists Balázs Kemencei and Sándor Füleki who were obviously raised on a diet of Seventies guitar gods and turn in some brilliant six-string showcases. Vocalist Csaba Cselényi had joined the band a year before the release of the album and he has a fine line in gruff, blues-inflected vocals and his voice is perfectly suited to this style of material. The songs themselves are exceedingly melodic with anthemic, sing-along choruses in many cases that had me having to check myself from bursting into song myself as I was out walking the dog! In fact, I would have to say there is more than a little bit of Down about them at times with an inherent bluesiness to a large percentage of their material.
All-in-all I would personally hail this a success as it could successfully fill a niche for when I need to hear some metal that still harks back to earlier, less complicated days when I too was obsessed with the Zeps and Purples of this world. Sadly, I think this would probably get short shrift from the majority of Metal Academy members as it is probably too rock-orientated for most members, which is a big shame because it is very well done indeed.
4/5
Horna -Perimä vihassa ja verikostossa EP {1999)
This is exactly what I was hoping for from this new game. Although I fully expected to have to deal with some dross, I was hoping that occasionally a previously undiscovered gem would rear it's head from out of Metal Academy's primordial ooze of releases and let it's presence be felt. Well Horna's 1999 EP Perimä vihassa ja verikostossa (which translates as Inherited Anger and Blood Revenge I am reliably informed by google translate) is just such a release which is pretty good going for a first try with The North.
This is basically good old-fashioned second wave black metal and Horna seem, at least on this release, to have been quite heavily influenced by early Emperor (minus the synths), to such an extent that third track, Pimeys yllä pyhän maan, contains a phrase during the middle section that seems to have been lifted straight from I Am the Black Wizards. For me, this kind of shit is why I love black metal, the riffs are molten with just enough melody to keep them relatable and the vocals are the suitably ragged shrieks of a tormented soul. Sure the modern trend is for BM to be saturated with dissonance and avant-garde stylings, but give me some straight-up, bad-ass, evil-sounding, old-school blasting any day of the week and I'm happy as a pig in shit. Then, to put the icing on the cake, Horna even manage to pander to my doom metal cravings by including a slab of creeping blackened doom metal in penultimate track Ghash inras. The EP closes out with the eight minute title track which is a bit of a minor black metal epic and provides a suitably impressive end to a thoroughly enjoyable half-an-hour of old-school black metal blasting. Look, this isn't anything like an original take on the genre so if you want to be challenged by your black metal then this isn't the place to look, but if you just want a decent half-hour blast then roll on up.
I didn't realise until just now that the main man in Horna is Shatraug, guitarist/vocalist/bassist of Sargeist. Also, it is uncanny how similar that cover is to Storm of the Light's Bane.
4/5
Speaking as someone who likes Jurassic Jade, I think you're selling them a bit short. I can't tell you what to do, but judging by what you're describing, you basically listened to their first two albums, then this one, all in quick succession, which speaking from experience absolutely harms one's listening experience. Granted, I'm not going to pretend like Jurassic Jade are some musical geniuses, but I don't quite think one listen is enough even for them.
For me it is a minimum of three listens before a review. Granted not always the case as sometimes I can do many more listens before writing a review (Borknagar's Olden Domain springs to mind as one that hit double figures), but yeah, for me the minimum of three is what is needed for my brain to get enough experience of a release. Will vary i am sure from person to person, release to release.
Yeah, three is the minimum for me too. I have found from experience that opinions formed after a single listen almost invariably have to be reassessed at a later date.
It's unsurprising really that Dream Death have a strong doom element to their sound as not long after the release of this debut bassist Ted Williams left and the rest of the band changed their name to Penance, playing full-on Trad Doom. I love this album but only just realised I haven't reviewed it yet, so I'll look to rectify that over the course of the month.