Atheist - Elements (1993)Release ID: 350

Atheist - Elements (1993) Cover
Ben Ben / March 26, 2019 / Comments 0 / 1

Disappointing yet still entertaining last album by these insanely gifted musicians.

Just check out the genres currently listed for this album to see just how creative and original it is. Technical and progressive death metal, with touches of thrash metal and jazz fusion should be enough to let you know this isn't your run of the mill death metal outing. Atheist's first two albums had already combined these elements (unintentional pun) to form brilliant, yet still extremely heavy albums. But the third and last release in my opinion takes things just a little too far and ends up being a still entertaining, yet flawed album. When things come together, such as on Air and Mineral, this is just as good as their more renowned releases. But unfortunately, a lot of it suffers from a lack of focus (another intentional pun for those in the know) and energy, with a few tracks feeling a touch under developed.

The musicianship as always is jaw dropping and the production is perfectly fine. I love it when extreme metal bands give the bass room to breathe and this is an example where you can hear it the entire time. Shaefer's vocals are a bit less chaotic on Elements than on Piece of Time and Unquestionable Presence and that suits the lighter intensity of this album. The four little instrumentals are all perfectly nice, but none of them really add to the album (except for Samba Briza which is a full-on jazz piece) and seem to be just filling up time. It may sound like I don't enjoy Elements but that's not true at all. It's just very difficult not to compare it to the band's former glories and it must be said that it's the lesser of the three. Still, if you want to hear some death metal that's filled with technical proficiency and unusual instrumentation, this should be very high on your list.

Read more...
SilentScream213 SilentScream213 / February 12, 2022 / Comments 0 / 0

Elements is, without a doubt, an incredibly fascinating album. Atheist retain their insanely technical and progressive style of playing, but traverse even further into progressive music, reaching the avant-garde. The music itself isn’t too bizarre, but the amount of styles crammed into any given song quite frankly is. There’s a lot of jerking around here, start-stop techniques and rapid changes not only in tempo, but also style and mood. The instrumental prowess of every member is nothing short of mind-blowing; the songwriting is hard to judge because it seems to purposely subvert expectations and go to odd places, but this doesn’t always work to its benefit.

Another interesting factor is the concept undertaken, focusing on the 4 traditional elements throughout the album. The album seems to loosely document the introduction and evolution of life on Earth via introducing the elements. This adds another layer of entertainment and intrigue for anyone willing to read along, and makes the songs more than just platforms for showcasing instrumental ability.

Unfortunately, the end result is far weaker than the previous two albums for me. First off, there is an abundance of interludes that offer nothing to the album, neither musically nor thematically. Along those lines, there are many passages in certain songs that are similarly shoved in there seemingly just to surprise the listener or do something “different,” but this usually takes away from the songs rather than add anything. Lastly, the music seems, on the whole, unrelated to the themes. When writing a song for each of the 4 elements, you’d think you would at least try to evoke the elements musically, but overtly this is not the case.

The title track is iconically a perfect combination of everything done right on this record, and one of the best songs of the band’s career. A fitting final track for their (at one time) final album.

Read more...
Shadowdoom9 (Andi) Shadowdoom9 (Andi) / February 11, 2022 / Comments 0 / 0

Atheist is one of the first ever technical death metal bands and one of the very few that could induce some tasteful interest. Their 3rd album Elements was their last album before they split up for over a decade and is more experimental than many other memorable death metal albums.

Those different things include more jazz than heaviness. Kelly Shaefer's vocals are not as death-growly as other death metal bands, leaning more towards thrash. The rhythm section is on fire with booming bass and blasting drums. Elements tear down the walls of death metal and let in elements (couldn't resist the pun) of other genres, alongside the unorthodox intricacy of time signature changes, riffs, and structures.

"Green" is an eccentric catchy composition to jam out at home. "Water" continues the catchiness. "Samba Briza" is where the jazz instrumentation really shine, break through the limits of death metal and adding something death metal fans thought wasn't possible. What a standout! The waltz-paced "Air" rises from jazzy guitar and cymbal into a riff blizzard. Shaefer's impressive shrieking strike the music down into the snow. Rather than being catchy, the windy music catches the feeling and drags through the breeze. After a bit more fury comes some more commanding jazz.

Self-indulgent progression doesn't work for the rest of the interludes, starting with "Displacement". The semi-thrashy "Animal" adds a more deliberate state of tempo while in a dreamy flow of vocal echoes, harmonies, and bass, a decadent turn through Coroner's progressive thrash. "Mineral" begins mechanically drilling into mathy chaos that they might return with in their comeback album Jupiter. But this was 1993, the year when death metal was adding gothic beauty, think My Dying Bride and Edge of Sanity, whereas Atheist's angelic riffs and bass add their own sexy near-perfection. Searing like the element, "Fire" is probably the best song here, tossing jazz embers into metal-fused inferno, the way that element represents.

"Fractal Point" is another one of the fractured interludes. There's atmosphere added to the relentless "Earth". The last interlude "See You Again" is something I wish to never hear again, like a couple pop songs with that title. However, the title track makes fascinating use of the last 6 minutes. All of the elements, both literal and metaphorical, are combined to summarize their sound entirely.

Elements is an underrated forgotten part of the 90s death metal scene. I've lost appreciation for all of death metal nearly a year before this review, but anyone enjoys original technical death metal should give this a listen to blow their mind!

Favorites: "Samba Briza", "Air", "Animal", "Mineral", "Fire", "Elements"

Read more...

Release info

Release Site Rating

Ratings: 17 | Reviews: 3

3.9

Release Clan Rating

Ratings: 14 | Reviews: 3

3.9

Cover Site Rating

Ratings: 7

3.9

Cover Clan Rating

Ratings: 6

3.8
Band
Release
Elements
Year
1993
Format
Album
Clans
The Horde
The Infinite
Sub-Genres

Technical Death Metal

Voted For: 0 | Against: 0

Progressive Metal (conventional)

Voted For: 1 | Against: 0