Review by Shadowdoom9 (Andi) for Mercenary - First Breath (1998)
Formed in 1991 and having released 3 demos throughout the decade, melodeath fans get to witness the FIRST BREATH of Mercenary with their debut album. Unlike their later power metal-influenced albums, First Breath takes on a more thrashy melodeath sound. The band didn't have a full-time keyboardist and clean vocalist yet, and Henrik "Kral" Andersen (bass, growls) led this deathly quartet. The raw sound adds to this album's superb uniqueness!
What you can expect in this album includes brutal death growls, melodic thrashy guitar, and decent drum blasts. Kral sounds like a monstrous menace, and that's a compliment for death growlers. The music sounds darker and more violent than any of their subsequent releases.
"Symbiotic" kicks off the album with a more melodic take on old-school Death. "World Wide Weep" has more of a hardcore groove, but one you can really headbang to. Next song "Horizon" is a wonderful 8-minute epic. You can hear beautiful vocals by Irene Poulsen and mystical keyboards by Jakob Sivsgård, almost foreshadowing what the band would add from their next album onward. "Master Game" has impressive bass and soloing.
"Perceptive" has a similar vibe to late 80s Pestilence but more melodic. "Graveart" has some beautiful melodeath that Omnium Gatherum would later have, then ends with battle sounds similar to Braveheart. "Next to Nothing" has more of that impressive soloing. "Demon8" sounds more haunting in some places, and has some more keyboards.
"Watching Me" almost reminds me a bit of Dethklok. "Alternative Ways" has some slight alt-metal before becoming thrashy. "Sister Jane" is a lovely soft ballad to end the album, and it has more of the clean vocals Irene Poulsen, as well as Kral attempting to do his own singing in the duet. After 45 seconds of silence, we have the bonus track "Supremacy" from the band's 1996 EP. Although this is melodeath, the harmonics sound like they could've been used by Machine Head or Nevermore. That said, I like it.
All in all, First Breath is a brutal powerful start to Mercenary's journey. There's no way an exceptional album like this can be recreated by the band after the lineup and sound changed a lot, with only rhythm guitarist Jakob Mølbjerg still around. Any melodeath fan should start with this album before the rest. A near-perfect raw classic!
Favorites: "Horizon", "Master Game", "Graveart", "Next to Nothing", "Sister Jane", "Supremacy"