Review by Saxy S for Ellende - Todbringerin (2024)
In a futile attempt to clean up my metal listening in 2024, December (and likely into January) is the month I will be bolstering the more extreme clans here at Metal Academy that I frequent the least (i.e. Fallen, Horde and North), so there are going to be a lot of short little blurbs about a handful of records I heard in 2024. Hopefully, I'll be able to do something a little bit more timely come 2025.
From Germany, the fifth release from the atmospheric blackgaze group Ellende starts off broodingly slow and melancholic through the intro in order to prepare the listener for the depressive state of the rest of the music. When the black metal instrumentation enters on "Ballade Auf Den Tod," you can feel the hauntingly sad beauty behind this dance. And that emotion comes through in the production which is full in its scope; a fully functioning bass line to give this album some weight in its lower half. Songwriting is kind of lackluster, but for this style of black metal, where texture rules the day, the repetitive, droning nature of the tremolo guitar leads allows for these emotions to remain stagnant, which I assume was the bands intention.
Unfortunately for Ellende, I feel like they have this emotional technique down a little too well. With the depressive lyrical themes and tempos that only seem to get progressively slower as the album continues, Todbringerin is dangerously close to transforming into a doom metal album. This album would certainly benefit from having more tracks like "Verachtung" in the middle of the tracklisting to compliment the brooding of "Scherben" and "Versprochen..." And perhaps this is a personal anecdote, but I'm listening to this album on the first major snowfall of the season, which comes with its own emotional weight, so perhaps a record this emotional was not the best choice for a end-of-the-year cleanup.
Anyways, if doom metal is up your alley, but you wish it could have more tremolo picking guitars and shrieking black metal vocals, then you'll likely find a home inside the cold embrace of Todbringerin. Otherwise, I can tell that this is a good album, but something about it just doesn't sit right with me.
Best Songs: Ballade Auf Den Tod, Scherben Teil I, Verachtung, Am Ende Stribst Du Allein