Review by Rexorcist for Evoken - A Caress of the Void (2007)
Evoken had to step it up to compare this time, and while I don't feel that they did that with the titular opener, I still greatly enjoyed what I heard. The production was cleaner and less dense, so it was more accessible. But it didn't lose any of the structural strengths and emotional core of any of the songs from Antithesis. I could only hope that the other songs wouldn't sound exactly the same. Thankfully, Mare Erythraeum didn't. I've gone on about how Antithesis has some gothic touches, but this is more than just touches. This is the kind of heavily gothic doom you'd expect from My Dying Bride, and it's just as good as you'd expect from MDB. There are few changes in the main riff, but thankfully everything in the background is there to change things up and either get more melancholy, more artistic or even more melodic. It all depends on the section. This beautifully instrumental epic also goes into an amazing metal solo which is quite out of place for Evoken's catalogue, but also perfectly fitting for this album. That tells me that they're innovating once again.
We re-enter the death doom with a heavy dose on Of Purest Absolution. Despite that, it's surprisingly more melodic as well, and throughout the middle section, the doom is placed behind an aquatic guitar riff that carefully layers over the doom without drowning it out. The third section relies on none of that and goes right for tribal drumming and placing the vocals in the foreground to really bring out that deathly vibe. Astray in Eternal Light is dense in its production, but not so baritone. It's a very noisy track built on the same guitar sound as the middle section of the previous song. We also get clearer vocals to bring in more of a depressing tone as opposed to the deep-seeded hatred we've been subjected to before. But there's also something very sensual about the vocals, although this guy can't beat Peter Steele at this game. And I also feel that the monotone nature of the album isn't quite as strong as before, as much of it is simply going "up down up down" between two notes. So while it's a bit unique to the album for shifting focuses of similar elements in the same way that every song in Antithesis did, I can't help but feel it's a bit weaker than the previous songs.
Descend the Lifeless Womb is louder, deeper and slower, once again pushing the soul past its limits. And boy, does it feel epic. The general idea of funeral doom is extremely strong on this track. Unfortunately, because it's so standard, it feels like it's missing something in comparison to the first three songs. This is remedied during the third act, where things get more atmospheric and clear, as opposed to rough and dirty, and it features an ambient guitar drone which feels very astral. Suffer a Martyr's Trial begins very quietly and carefully steers into some droning sludge and doom. Throughout the thirteen minutes, it changes its monotone riffs and the back-layers of the density constantly, bringing back the overall high quality of the first three tracks as well as the previous two albums. And because of this, the longest song on the album goes by more speedily, even when much of it is snails pushing their way through heavy mounds of dirt. And finally, we have a single riff played with an orchestra of variation in the back, Orogeny, which has this post-metal vibe about it.
I have to say, I really like how straight-forward and accessible this is, not because a weird-ass like me who enjoyed Grand Declaration of War needs accessibility, but because it represents an incredibly healthy and high-grade kind of album which can be a very good introduction for noobs to get into both death doom and funeral doom, maybe even doom in general. I honestly don't know why these guys aren't more popular in the doom community. Is it the surrealism of esoteric? The traditional behavior of Skepticism? Either way, these guys are way underappreciated. Unfortunately, this also sometimes gets in the way of the emotional core, which didn't always feel so varied.
Well I can safely say that at this point, my favorite funeral doom band is definitely Evoken for their ability to deliver seriously heavy music. Even though this wasn't quite as creative as the last two albums, it more or less got the job done and would make a great introduction into doom, one that's very heavy but never too dense. So I'd say this is another success for the band.