Demilich - Nespithe (1993) Reviews Demilich - Nespithe (1993) Reviews

UnhinderedbyTalent UnhinderedbyTalent / May 26, 2020 / Comments 0 / 1

An album that I don't think I have ever (or will ever) fully fathom, Nespithe is certainly unique in both sound and delivery.  From a vocal perspective it is indecipherable, genuinely sounding like the vocalist is so low that the sound must be resonating off the very walls of his own bowels.  Although you cannot get away from them being the focal (or vocal point - get it?) point of the album they are but one piece of a very strange puzzle.

The whole album appears to lurch and flounder to me.  That's not say it is out of control in anyway though, it just feels barely controlled, like the band have unleashed something that even they were not expecting on the world and aren't really sure what it is going to do next.  Even for the more avant-garde side of DM there's some elements here that conjure up more than a few curved balls.  

Tracks seem to veer and swerve a lot of the time and (again - not necessarily a bad thing) this has me constantly trying to ground everything and play catch up after what feels like multiple reset buttons have been pressed.  In my day job I have to work with a lot of complex equations and sums and Nespithe feels like it is one that has multiple variances on how the total can be reached, like it needs looking at from different approaches and I am still never sure how I got to that figure.  It's mathematical genuis is fascinating, like it sees things from angles that I cannot.

The ability of the muscians involved can't be questioned as they deliver a demanding yet clean and competent performance.  I have no doubt that the challenges that I have with this record are with me and not the actual band/album.  Sonics dive in and out of tracks like swopping songbirds, emitting some cosmic chirping that bends the very air around it.  The drummer surely has more than two arms in order to be able to map the rhythm of such complex structures and the audibility of the bass at all times is a rare trait in death metal.  You have to work to get all this though, there's no "background music" here folks, this is stuff that demands your attention.  You have to listen to the detail to even begin to understand the bigger picture and that may be a bit too much for some death metal fans.

For a band with such a small amount of recorded output, Nespithe is a standout release not just in the discography of Demilich but it is also a very big flux in the biological mass of death metal as a whole. Take a shower in its madness whilst you try and figure it out.

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Ben Ben / April 15, 2019 / Comments 0 / 1

Unique and fascinating album with vocals the must be heard to be believed.

This is such a unique album! In the realms of death metal, where there are strict rules and boundaries, it is extremely rare to find an album that sounds like no other. Demilich appeared, released one bizarre yet captivating album, and then seemingly disappeared off the face of the planet. In fact, it wouldn't surprise me in the slightest to find out that the band were only visiting Earth when they decided to record this album before shipping off back to whatever galaxy they came from. After all, those vocals are surely not human! They're so incredibly low and guttural that I just can't imagine them emitting from a mere man's vocal chords. As many have mentioned below, they do take some getting used to, but once you get past the amusement factor, they really do suit these strange and wonderful riffs perfectly.

The whole album has a kind of alien feel to it. The cover is truly creepy, the song titles and lyrics are completely bizarre (The Planet That Once Used to Absorb Flesh in Order to Achieve Divinity and Immortality anyone?). I find it really refreshing that a band cannot take themselves too seriously, and yet still spend the time creating such a complete package. Most tracks contain violently shifting riffs that while making a lot of the album sound very similar, are always entirely captivating. I'd like to give Nespithe a higher score than 4 but the fact remains that I can't tell a lot of these songs apart from each other. They found a truly unique and awesome sound, but it's perhaps a bit too strange for my human mind to come to grips with at times. The album deserves all the praise it gets for, at the very least, not being afraid to take their own path. I hope Demilich are still having this much fun wherever they are situated in the universe today.

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Sonny Sonny / August 29, 2023 / Comments 0 / 0

Demilich's sole release Nespithe is an album who's name I have seen dropped all over the place. However, it being tagged as technical death metal has always found me looking the other way and filing it under the heading "nothing to do with me". And now, after finally listening to it, I have got to say, "Fuckin' wow!!" I genuinely don't think I have ever heard an album so out there that I have actually enjoyed as much as this. With it's bizarre, seemingly nature-defying, technicalities and the inhuman sub-sonic growls that pass for vocals this is like the very personification of H.P. Lovecraft's stories of impossible realms and sanity-destroying astral horrors. I can see why Demilich never released another album as I cannot even conceive of how you would follow this up. In fact, it seems like three of the four members fell out of the metal scene altogether after Demilich split following it's release - and I understand why. This is the death metal equivalent of Lovecraft's legendary tome, The Necronomicon, a book so horrifying it causes any who read it to go completely insane.

All hyperbole aside, I don't possess the technical musical knowledge to even begin to explain what is going on here with Nespithe, other than to say that it is quite unlike anything I have ever heard in it's seemingly chaotic grooves and it needs to be heard to be believed. It seems on the surface to be exactly the sort of technical exercise I would normally hate, but for some reason it's constantly shifting sounds overlaid by that smothering inhuman growling just appeals to something inside me. I have seen any number of complaints about those vocals, but I think they are some of the most fascinating I have ever heard, the sheer depth of the croaking growl genuinely sounding like the proclamations of some extra-dimesional deity. The lyrics too are suitably eldritch and hint at multi-dimensional horrors whose only reason is to destroy the minds and souls of the human race, to which Antti Boman's voice gives perfect expression.

Where Nespithe scores high over most other technical death metal for me, is because it is so dripping with atmosphere and that is something I think is ignored by most technical DM bands, Nile perhaps being the only other technical outfit I know of who put any store in atmosphere... but Demilich take it to a whole new level that even leaves the Egypt-obsessed Nile floundering. The four band members are evidently supremely talented musicians to pull off such intricate instrumentation and that combined with such a singular, horror-invoking atmosphere gives this a real one-of-a-kind feel. One thing is absolutely certain, once you have heard it, this is not an album you are ever likely to forget. For me, this is a classic.

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