Reviews list for Type O Negative - World Coming Down (1999)

World Coming Down

Really running out of words for this band, and I do not get the acclaim. The guitar tone here is awful, and carries this static, poorly produced sound that makes it grate on my ears. The guitars sound thin, weak and annoying. The riffs are simple without evoking anything; they don’t sound sad or gloomy, they don’t sound evil or dark, they’re just there. Drumming is, similarly, repetitive and boring. For Doom/Gothic Metal, repetitive slow drumming is totally fine if it’s supporting well-crafted atmospheres or emotional performances, but this album is sporting neither of those qualities in spades. The vocals of Peter Steel continue to leave me unimpressed, and his lyrics do far worse. The stupid little skits found between certain songs are atrocious and not funny in the least.

Does the album have strengths? Yeah, I can recognize some. There is more presence of backing atmospherics such as keys, organs, choirs, which help add some density. They aren’t particularly… moody, but they sound nice enough. The variety in said backing elements is pleasant as well, with pretty much each song introducing some new sounds, keeping things fresh. The layering of instruments is done very well, though the terrible sounding guitars render this point null at times. The title track in particular has some great moments, but as it’s over 11 minutes, it’s still not consistently good. The ending of Everything Dies is similarly fantastic, but it’s hardly worth getting through 6 minutes of mediocre Gothic Metal.

I’ll just have to say it again… I don’t want my Gothic Metal filled with jokes, college frat humor and lacking emotion.

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SilentScream213 SilentScream213 / August 31, 2024 11:13 AM
World Coming Down

I am a gigantic Type O Negative fan. I couldn't say which album is my favorite, but this is the one I have the deepest personal connection with. This is the album that got me through my darkest days. I've never touched hard drugs, so  I don't directly relate to "White Slavery" but I remember living in a shitty 1 bedroom appartment, with no furniture, hungry and cold in the middle of December in Michigan (It's so goddamn cold up here man), sitting on the floor listening to the album and when Pete says "I've Lost Myself Again". Please believe I felt that to my very core.

While that was happening I was working a soul destroying job at an evil fucking company, and my mother passed away of a sudden heart-attack at 52. I talked to her at about 7pm one evening and she was dead by morning the next day. No warning, just dropped dead. Sometimes people just fucking die. I think you know where I'm going with this if you know this album.

I was driving to work at that god forsaken place debating whether or not to drive into to oncoming traffic and I decided to do a double shot of "Everyone I Love is Dead", and "Everything Dies." Instead. My grandmother also passed later that month, and wifey and I put down our Huskey  (first dog as a couple) 2 months later.  Marriage wasn't exactly failing, but it had been strained for sure, and yeah... "I know that my World is Coming Down-so bring it down". 

This is a rough album, but it's also got "Creepy Green Light", and "All Hallows Eve" which keep the bands usual October vibes going. Fun songs for the season.

"Who will Save the Sane?" Is admittedly kinda mid, at least it doesn't do anything for me. "The Beatles Medley" Is weird but that's just fine.







I saved the best for last. It's time to talk about "Pyretta Blaze". My favorite song by Type-O-Negative. 

Lyrically this song describes a fantasy Pete had of setting a house on fire and making love to someone inside of it, as the flames burned it to the ground and then perishing with his lover as the flames engulfed them both. That's gonna sound like some messed up stuff, but if you were in tune with gothic imagery in the late 90s and early 2000s this was considered incredibly romantic. It's meant to be taken metaphorically not literally. Pete wants to die with this lover, and given that her name is Pyretta Blaze, it's not a woman but the fire itself. I choose to believe this is a song about going out on your own terms. 
The music that surrounds it has that ominous impending doom feeling, the verse riff sounds like "Into the Void" or "Lord of this World" from Sabbath's Master of reality. I think it symbolizes all those heavy depressive feelings-contemplations of suicide, of being crushed by the outside world, but it lifts into this chorus that is straight up pop-the resolution to carry it out, and the relief that all these terrible feelings will finally go away.
It's a hell of a song, on a hell of an album.

This is not an easy listen, but it's worth it if your strong enough.



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Gator Gator / May 31, 2024 04:26 PM