Review by UnhinderedbyTalent for Kvelertak - Kvelertak (2010)
Kvelertak’s sound is the kind that your parents would refer to as being a “racket”. Imagine a teenage you trying to piss your folks and neighbours off and Kvelertak is the soundtrack to that nefarious, hell-raising lifestyle. It is the noise blaring out of the youth’s earphones on the train that the whole carriage can hear because they have it turned up so loud. Whilst I may not one hundred percent get along with it, I can still hear the decadence and anarchism in the sound of a band who bring a bizarre mixture of hardcore punk and metalcore applying a blackened edge to it all for added interest.
The problem for me, being an underground dwelling black metal fan is that the record is just far too accessible with its over-emphasis on the “n’ roll” element of their sound. For all the murky production values here, I cannot help but think that this happened by accident and the expectation of the band was that this would sound cleaner. I am reminded of the Cancer Bats from the start of this record, such is the mainstream direction of the sound. They are earning straight A’s for energy and maintain these levels consistently across their debut album. I can imagine at the time this dropped it was lapped up by a marketplace eager to explore the more blackened side of the core trends that had developed. It has the ethics of a metalcore album played in a blackened punk style that maximises appeal whilst making (subtle) attempts to try and stay as punk as possible.
Tracks like Sultans of Satan are examples of this and how it does not work as they bounce between punk and some soaring rock riffs whilst deploying a chorus line that is near laughable at best. Still though I guarantee you will find your foot tapping along to this track as you listen to it. In many ways, Kvelertak are doing nothing wrong, it is only their association with black metal that sees them at the wrong end of my judgement as the other elements of this record are far more dominant than the bm input. I do not think that the Norwegians set out to be lumped in with the Darkthrone’s of their homeland for one minute – if they did then they are really, really, really misguided folks – instead their sound is geared to exploration of styles and transcending genres all whilst having a good fucking time in the process.
I almost want to enjoy it more than I do, especially given the concerted effort that they put into the record. However, it just is not in my realm to like this enough to even make me curious for a revisit every now and again. Kvelertak set their stall out early on their debut and I am kind of done with it before the halfway point in all honesty.