Review by Ben for Bethlehem - Dark Metal (1994) Review by Ben for Bethlehem - Dark Metal (1994)

Ben Ben / May 12, 2019 / 1

Dark Metal is a brilliant death doom album with a large dose of black metal influence.

My only previous experience with Bethlehem prior to checking this album out was their most recent outing Mein Weg, which despite the many negative ratings on this very site, I find extremely entertaining. Considering how strange the material is on that album, I guess I didn't really know what to expect on this debut album released 10 years earlier. From looking at the band logo and cover, one can't be blamed for thinking raw black metal, but that's not really an accurate description of Dark Metal. There are elements of black metal to be found, particularly in the vocal and riff department, but this is better categorised as death doom metal which caught me entirely by surprise.

Dark Metal is filled with immense atmosphere, created through extremely moving riffs and melodies, along with some truly great vocals. When the band choose to ramp things up a little (and they never hit high speed), such as on The Eleventh Commandment and Vargtimmen, they still produce some nice stuff, but the longer, more epic tracks are certainly the highlights here. Check out Apocalyptic Dance to find fantastic death doom with all the elements that comes with this emotionally crushing genre. Vocalist Classen switches between raspy black metal vocals and deep death growls, as well as the occasional spoken word section and his performance is totally captivating.

For some reason, even though I've stated this is more doom than black metal, the band that comes to mind often is Shining. I can't help but feel that they were influenced by the total despondency and depressive atmosphere of Bethlehem and the use of varying styles also found its way into the Swedes music. Highlights for me are Apocalyptic Dance, 3rd Nocturnal Prayer and Funereal Owlblood and I can't recommend this enough to fans of melancholic, depressive music, no matter whether they sway towards doom or black metal.

It's also worth noting that despite what the track listing on Rate Your Music states, there are only 8 tracks on Dark Metal. I was originally quite surprised by the running time of the album I'd downloaded, being over 70 minutes, and even more baffled by the final 2 tracks on the album which were of a lesser quality in the song writing department. I've since found out that Supplementary Exegesis and Wintermute are from the 1993 EP Thy Pale Dominion. They're still worth checking out but should not be considered part of the brilliance that is Dark Metal.

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