
Shadow of Intent - Imperium Delerium (2025)
Genres: Deathcore, Melo-Death Metal
There are very few deathcore bands I get excited for, and Shadow of Intent is one of them. Hell, one of my hottest music takes is that their debut, Primordial, is the best deathcore album I've ever heard, but of course, I've only heard 120 right on the zero. I'm certain Metal Academy has a quite a few people who've beaten me in that vein. As far as Shadow of Intent goes, I though their first three albums practically cemented them as the greatest deathcore band in the world, but found myself a little disappointed in the generic fourth, Elegy. I had no way of knowing where this would go. All I could do was beg the deathcore gods that Shadow of Intent learned from the experience, and hope for the best. I mean, it's another 55 MINUTES of deathcore, and it's easy for deathcore to get tiring after 55 minutes.
By the way, let me point out just how grotesquely nerdy I can be: I've been working on a ranked list of every artist I've ever heard. I'm obsessive, apparently. I take the top 5 (or bottom five, depending on how often the artist makes good albums), and tally an average. That's the short version, anyway. Shadow of Intent has an average of 88.2 out of the top five, including Elegy, and I'm really hoping I can raise that bar today.
Now the issue I had with the last two albums was that the music wasn't quite as diversified as before. What I loved about Primordial is a careful shift between symphonic metal, deathcore, prog metal and melo-death, a very careful balance on par with the mix of prog, symphonic, neoclassical and power boasted on a couple Symphony X albums. But if all tracks are doing all of these things, then the diversity caves in on itself. Now the opener, "Prepare to Die," boasted the majority of these signature traits in a single track with a fixation on symphonics, whereas the follower, "Flying the Black Flag," only barely touched on symphonics and focused mostly on speed and edge. Taking that as a good sign, I can safely say that both songs were good jams that already proved themselves to be better than the decent but disappointing fourth album, Elegy," and potentially on par with the sophomore, "Reclaimer." The third track, "Infinity of Horrors," seemed to stylistically be placed between the two songs in terms of sound and genre balance, and I ended up interpreting that as a sign of potential lack of creativity, leaving riffs, melody and speed to the the job, which is fine, but not a perfect situation. By the fourth track, I was wondering where the prog metal that made the first three so good was? It was largely absent in place of general speed and riffs. I had come to know what to expect from this album in the long run, which I was hoping wouldn't happen.
Thankfully, there was a key difference that helped track five, They Murdered Sleep: it was much more crushing with its slower tempo and extra heaviness, so I'll take what I can get from that at least. With the atmospheric intro of track 6, The Facets of Propaganda, I found myself wishing they would play into the vibes the set up in the intros more often, and thankfully this track did a little of that before returning to the general deathcore form. But this is also one of the more well composed and catchier tracks, being a bit more thought-provoking on both an atmospheric side and a technical side. By this point, I just figured, "It's only going to be fairly diversified between songs, so let's just see how generic it does or does not get overtime." I even got bored with detailing each song, but that's easily because I was hoping for more than "pretty good." Although, Vehement Draconian Vengeance did a great job showcasing their best abilities with better composition and production, and it already had strong points on both accounts.
In my hopes that Shadow of Intent would improve their game, the only thing I can say right now is that they're in the same league as before, but not the same ballpark. There were a couple of great songs I can take away from this, but otherwise, it only managed to get Elegy kicked out of the band's top 5 slot on my major list. It's basically a couple of great hits and some technically-proficient filler with great production.
76.5. This knocks out Elegy with a score of 72, adding 0.9 to the average score, making it 89.1, raising Shadow of Intent's position from #566 to #522.