Hell (USA) - Hell (2017)Release ID: 9984
When I listen to a Hell album, I expect something soul-crushing. I will not settle for anything less, not after thejobs Hell II and III did to me. I gave both of those albums five stars for the way they improved on the imaginative but flawed debut. I've been meaning to finish up the Hell / MSW catalogue for a while now, and reviewing is the best way I can think of to spread the word about this brilliant act. I had full faith in Hell IV to deliver the atmospheric goods, and it didn't let me down.
Now the digital bandcamp release takes the outro, "Seelenlos," and makes it the intro by putting it at the start of the album. So depending on which version you'd like, be careful. the spoken word post-rock is a pretty standard but nice intro / outro track that either puts the listener at a calm at the end of the album, or one that's that's obviously going to build up into that soul crushing power, playing to a weird avant-garde poem with some odd and intriguing imagery to it. I listened to the album with the song at the start, and then decided to play it again at the end so that I could absorb both effects.
The album rarely takes part in the same drone metal that was the major focus of the first two hell albums. The soul is crushed very quickly by the brutal heaviness of "Helmzmen," which seems to incorporate the slightest hint of Sabbath in the melodies while MSW uses weird effects to make either him or his guitar (I can't even tell sometimes) sound like a literal fucking demon. I gotta get myself that voice box :P. We get slight variations of this pattern throughout the whole album. I found myself patiently waiting for the next demonic growl, squeal, screech or whisper to echo through the canyons, and thought it was just the COOLEST thing when they vocal effects morphed into powerful wind-style effects at the end of SubOdin. Beautiful combination of tech and imagery there. But the raw power of the album really emerges with the brutal and loud "Machitikos", which takes the percussions up a heavier notch while multiple guitars chug to an excessively eerie and heavy chugging riff before we get a freaky black metal guitar solo turning the album from a standard doom album into a METAL album for a short time. Next we have a kind of stoner track building up atmosphere through weird voice samples being overpowered by Sabbath and Saint Vitus style riffs: WanderingSoul. Basically, this is the track for the metal fan rather than the atmos fan, although it still has a decent atmos to it. Then we have something more on the drone side with "Inscriptus," which is all about the dark atmosphere. The rhythm is a little more complex that most of what we've had before, and the fear factor on this track is pretty high. I'd say this is the track with the most creativity thus far. The album ends with the twelve-minute epic, "Victus." This is where everything comes together for a complete breakdown of all the types of styles that the album wrought upon the ears of the listener, especially when the black metal riffs merge with the windy storm effects and the death metal growls, the very combo that proves that this is a Hell album. Afterwards it gives the listener a very slow and symphonic midtro that calms us down with depression after such a heavy wave of evil had been beaten upon the listener's head for the last 40 minutes, before bring us back to the despair of doom basses and black guitars.
Most of the crush factor is performed by the guitars and bass. MSW made a point of bragging about the bass on his Bandcamp, talking about how "disgustingly awesome" they are. I'd say MSW earned his bragging rights, because the filth level here would make some of the dirtiest sludge bands on earth jealous. This is filthier than Melvins ever got, and I expect nothing less from Hell. I wish the percussions were a bit harder-hitting, and they felt a bit like the weakest point of the album. On top of that, I didn't get the full sense of variety that made numbers II and III so good. But at the same time, while the album was soul-crushing, it was never too much or too challenging, because the two main focal points of the album were atmospheres and riffs. This was less about drawing out the fear factor and the concept and more about using the music as a more accessible way to get into the concept of the series. I can get behind that. As such, I can also get behind the notion that this is the more accessible of the four albums, and is also a good intro for the four-album series. I honestly recommend this as the starting point for Hell, as I and II might be a little more challenging due to their usage of length as an atmospheric tool. I can also appreciate the lessened usage of post-rock, which made Hell III feel like a sadness album as often as a fear album, but also seemed like the very thing Hell III needed to separate itself from the first two albums and wasn't necessarily needed here.
The whole Hell catalogue can be found on MSW's bandcamp page, and I recommend you get through all of them. I don't care if you decide to go through them chronologially or not, because you really don't need to, even though that's what I did. But I still recommend you get through the least challenging album first, and to me that's Hell IV. This lived up to the atmospheric factor as well as I could've hoped for, and because of that alone it will stand with the other Hell albums as modern classics, even if its stronger sludge and doom sounds might not attrack the gothic, black and death fans that II and III could. The writing might not be as clever, but the power is still there in full force. I'd even go as far as to say that, as an album, it's better than the debut.
Release info
Genres
Doom Metal |
Sludge Metal |
Sub-Genres
Sludge Metal (conventional) Voted For: 0 | Against: 0 |
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Doom Metal (conventional) Voted For: 0 | Against: 0 |