~~~ 2014 ILM METAL POLL TRACKS & ALBUMS COUNTDOWN! ~~~ (Tracks top 30 first then Albums)

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (849 of them)

Lol at that

the legend of rapper chance (Drugs A. Money), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 19:19 (ten years ago) link

26 Shining - One One One, 418 Points, 13 Votes
http://i.imgur.com/e3y7aEp.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/3wqqfR8LO2VhBEvmiJ7TJy
spotify:album:3wqqfR8LO2VhBEvmiJ7TJy

http://www.deezer.com/album/6518814

#4 Pop Matters, #33 Rock-A-Rolla, #36 Terrorizer
http://fkadsjfkladshfkjasdkfsdalfkjdkaslfdjsajfdweqeqwqeravadfvfda.bandcamp.com/album/one-one-one

With 2010’s career-defining Blackjazz, Norwegian band Shining (not to be confused with the Swedish depressive black metal outfit of the same name) held back from polishing the roughness that was always present around its sonic edges. Despite moving away from its origins as an acoustic jazz ensemble and into the realm of extreme metal over the latter part of the ‘00s, even when it went all-out crazy, there was a surprising restraint on the part of the musicians. Take the groove-riff saxophone of “The Red Room”, one of the highlights from 2007’s excellent Grindstone; on the album version, it sounds solid enough, but in its live iteration—captured with magnetic intensity on 2012’s Live Blackjazz—it becomes something else entirely. On Grindstone, “The Red Room” is a blueprint; live, it’s a full-out auditory assault. The saxophone playing of frontman extraordinaire Jørgen Munkeby is unreal in a live setting; he manages to get noises out of the saxophone one would imagine impossible. It sounds like he’s torturing the thing at times.

On Blackjazz, Shining let the unfettered energy of its live performances dominate the style, and the results were nothing short of revelatory. The all-hell-breaks-loose free jazz of “HEALTER SKELTER” is still to this day the emblematic depiction of this band’s MO: simultaneously controlled and unrestrained chaos. One of Shining’s best assets, Torstein Lofthus’ tempo-eschewing drumming, stood out on that track; though it seems as if he’s just pounding on toms without aim, close attention reveals that underneath whatever technics the rest of the band members are doing, he’s always keeping a steady pace underneath it all. This is a group that realizes the key fact of free jazz: it’s not about foregoing all musical reference points, but rather about letting the music go with the flow dictated by the interplay of the musicians. Amidst the crazed structure of “HEALTER SKELTER” there are still grooves and even hooks present. Those latter ingredients are also part of what made Blackjazz so vital; for all the genre-melding Shining is keen on doing, it’s still aware of the need to bring real hooks to the table. Weird though the lyrics to “Fisheye” are, it’s easy to get Munkeby’s screams of “ONE THREE SEVEN FIVE!” stuck in your head.

And, as it turns out, it’s the hook that has come to play the biggest part in the newest addition to the Shining discography, One One One. Having adopted the title “blackjazz” as the name of its style, these Norwegian provocateurs have taken the visceral sonic of Blackjazz and incorporated it into the framework of… the pop album. There are no gonzo instrumentals or covers of King Crimson on this LP; every song follows a basic verse/chorus structure, and the most distinct characteristic of this music is the emphasis on hooks and memorable choruses. This is made evident right from the gates being kicked open with “I Won’t Forget”, whose ingredients are not what one might expect from Shining. The single-note chug of the first verse recalls surf rock, and the riff in the bridge preceding Munkeby’s saxophone runs comes close to copping “Footloose”. (The former aspect is especially evident in One One One‘s uncharacteristically bright sleeve art, which Munkeby has stated is a tribute to the record’s being mixed in California.) It’s both disarming and unexpected; far be it from anyone to think that Shining is above tinkering with pop fundamentals, but for the guys who on their last record were meshing industrial with Enslaved-esque prog, the music of Kenny Loggins is probably not a “logical next step” in the progression of a style. But, then again, “logic” has an interesting definition in the universe of Shining.

Though One One One is not as definitive a work as Blackjazz, it’s as much a portrait of the kind of outfit Shining is. Pop is as believable as a point of exploration for the group now as trip-hop could be on a future work. A word like “boundaries” is a curiosity in the outfit’s lexicon. Like Lofthus’ shifting-yet-consistent rhythms, however, the band’s core style remains the same even through differing individual genre explorations. The industrial stomp of “The One Inside” has clear predecessors in Grindstone and especially Blackjazz. The “Sexy Sax Man” opening of “How Your Story Ends” hints at the off-kilter moments of In the Kingdom of Kitsch You Will Be a Monster. Along with these instances there are also more blatant echoes of past works on a few of the songs: “Blackjazz Rebels” and “The Hurting Game” contain explicit call-backs to “Fisheye”. The former continues its affinity for counting, and the latter copies the saxophone riff nearly note-for-note. Some press materials for this LP have listed it as part of a trilogy (with Blackjazz and Live Blackjazz comprising the first two parts), and in most cases such a characterization is correct. In the overall sound quality and mixing, One One One is not at all far from the evolution that Blackjazz captured; the main points of departure from that LP comes in how the songs themselves are structured. The record’s title is itself an indication of the listening experience: each piece stands on its own, though when put together in a cohesive whole you’ll get as unconventional a pop metal collection as you’re likely to hear all year.

This individualistic streak in One One One is not without its downsides. Shining have never been keen on ballads—or whatever might resemble one in its sonic—and while the consistently high energy of this LP makes it an incredibly fun experience (and at 35 minutes, not a very long one), some breather room would have been much appreciated. Stacking nine excellent verse/chorus tracks on top of each other often has the effect of drowning a few out, which occurs to a small extent here. The monster hooks easily rise to the top—“I Won’t Forget” and “Paint the Sky Black”, for example—but if listened to all the way through, this can be, ironically enough, too dense a thing.

But, of course, part of the reason why this is the case is the nature of Shining itself; even in its thirty-second interludes, it’s always cramming in as many ideas as could be fit into a single piece. Like any expert jazz combo, these guys are acutely aware that exploration for exploration’s sake is no virtue, a fact made quite evident by the concise and meticulously organized One One One. Following its last LP, Shining have risen to the forefront of the global metal scene, and this album is only further evidence of its unmatched creativity. A pop album for metal fans, a pop-metal album for jazz fans… however one looks at it, One One One is yet another work of brilliance by an exciting band at the top of its game. “I Won’t Forget”, indeed. - Brice Ezell, Pop Matters, http://www.popmatters.com/review/170414-shining-one-one-one/

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 19:26 (ten years ago) link

Brilliant album

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 19:28 (ten years ago) link

one imago needs to hear

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 19:30 (ten years ago) link

Wasn't a big fan of the Shining. Felt way too monotonous to me.

J3ff T., Wednesday, 15 January 2014 19:31 (ten years ago) link

now don't get me wrong I loved Blackjazz but turned this one off p quickly. maybe I shall give it one more try but I am not hopeful

lovely cuddly fluffy dope (imago), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 19:37 (ten years ago) link

This record did nothing for me at all. Grew to like Blackjazz but this leaves me cold.

EZ Snappin, Wednesday, 15 January 2014 19:42 (ten years ago) link

HI! I missed the last two days of the rollout, plz recap it for me personally right now. thnx :P

Viceroy, Wednesday, 15 January 2014 19:46 (ten years ago) link

deveykus placed :)

Mordy , Wednesday, 15 January 2014 19:46 (ten years ago) link

25 Vaura - The Missing, 419 Points, 14 Votes
http://i.imgur.com/K61FrGn.jpg
#44 Rock-A-Rolla, #30 Pitchfork

http://profoundlorerecords.bandcamp.com/album/the-missing
http://youtu.be/N8xNxetdvhM

I have been putting this review on hold for quite some time and I was actually hoping one of the other writers on the Ech(((o)))es and Dust team would pick this release for reviewing instead. Then I decided to give it a go myself after all as I feel this album deserves a review it being one of the most interesting releases for me this year, so here it is. The main reason I've been putting this of is probably the difficulty to describe the exact genre Vaura falls in. There are bits of black metal, post-punk, progressive metal and darkwave, and the band combines it all effortlessly.

When I first listened to their new release The Missing it completely hit me out of leftfield. Where the opening title track kicks off with fast gnarly guitar playing and high tempo drumming you’re thinking this is just another black metal release. Then it all slows down to big pounding drums and with vocals that hit you with a deep, baritone voice singing very clearly and the whole song takes a complete turn. This is good stuff and it definitely hooks you from the word go. The rest of the song jumps back and forth between these faster black metal and slower new wave elements. The second track ‘Incomplete Burning’ is what created the being hit out of leftfield element to me. Where you expect the band to continue on this fast, slightly different and contemporary black metal style, they completely turn around and offer the listener a mellower, very 80’s sounding new wave influenced dark piece of music.

When you look at Vaura’s line-up it actually comes as no surprise that this band mixed various musical genres and elements. With bassist Toby Driver from Kayo Dot and Maudlin Of The Well and guitarist Kevin Hufnagel from progressive death metal band Gorguts, Dysrhythmia and his interesting solo work you have some of the more genre boundaries pushing musicians in the world of heavy music genre in your team.

On The Missing they definitely incorporate a lot of older new wave and post-punk influences into their blend of at times blackish metal. ‘Mare of the Snake’ for example is one of the most 80’s sounding songs I’ve ever heard, the majority of the 80’s back catalogue included. Listen to that bass sound, the drum rhythm, the vocals, it reminds me of Depeche Mode in their best period. You’ll find yourself humming along with the chorus before you know it.

What really stands out for me is Josh Strawn’s vocals on this release. He sings beautifully and the echoey production again draw that 80’s new wave comparison. At times Josh sounds like David Gahan, at other times he has a more Ian Curtis feeling to his voice and the deeper, darker singing parts even draw parallels with The National’s Matt Berninger. It makes an interesting combination on the faster black metal and post-punk sounding tracks, although these are limited to the opening track and ‘The Fire’ as the rest of 10 tracks that make up The Missing are more slower, focussing on the darkwave elements.

There are a lot of old references I can think of the more I listen to The Missing. From the already mentioned Depeche Mode, Joy Division, The National, the lead guitar even has that The Edge sound to it, the way the higher chords are played over some nice delay. It is quite clear what these guys grew up listening to and perhaps still listen to. If Ian Curtis would be reincarnated and join a progressive black metal band, this is what it would sound like. Final track ‘Putting Flesh To Bone’ brings all the mentioned elements together, ending this album perfectly.
If you want something different or you grew up in the 80’s like I did, then I would totally recommend Vaura’s The Missing. This is another great release by Profound Lore Records’ vastly growing musical output, again demonstrating why this label is one of the most interesting smaller metal labels around at the moment. - Sander van den Driesche, Echoes & Dust, http://echoesanddust.com/2013/10/vaura-the-missing/

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 19:46 (ten years ago) link

Hey, Vaura! Another one of mine!

the legend of rapper chance (Drugs A. Money), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 19:53 (ten years ago) link

some v interesting records today

lovely cuddly fluffy dope (imago), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 19:55 (ten years ago) link

NYCNative made a joke in the voting thread urging ppl to submit ballots lest his would wantonly skew the results; apparently that was really something to worry about w/r/t me

the legend of rapper chance (Drugs A. Money), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 19:58 (ten years ago) link

ok this shining record can srsly piss off now

lovely cuddly fluffy dope (imago), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 19:59 (ten years ago) link

Too low on Purson, that's all I got to say so far. Glad the Passaige de'French band placed. Loved that album, can't spell their name.

Viceroy, Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:05 (ten years ago) link

SHINING is OVER! I voted for the other Shining album nominated which was a totally different band that was really old skool black metal.

Viceroy, Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:05 (ten years ago) link

you're nuts

xp

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:05 (ten years ago) link

Purson is great. A grand new player in the Lava Lamp Bullshit genre.

Viceroy, Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:07 (ten years ago) link

24 Jesu - Everyday I Get Closer To The Light, 436 Points, 14 Votes
http://i.imgur.com/E0sVCpF.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/0s2ndGf74oaPa8A1not3Sc
spotify:album:0s2ndGf74oaPa8A1not3Sc
http://www.deezer.com/album/6915157
#1 Rock-A-Rolla

http://jesu.bandcamp.com/album/everyday-i-get-closer-to-the-light-from-which-i-came
http://youtu.be/rxWEes8WZvo

Justin Broadrick brings a little light on a fantastic new album.

Justin Broadrick’s career can be seen as one long, slow comedown from the birth of punk. As a teenager, he played lightning-fast riffs and helped write the world’s shortest song (“You Suffer”) as part of Napalm Death, the pioneering grindcore band. After only a couple demos and one half of a full-length, Broadrick left ND and formed Godflesh, and for over a decade soldered jackhammer backbeats onto mid-tempo industrial guitar squalls, turning out a number of classic albums in the process. After that band’s dissolution, he moved on to Jesu, essentially a solo project at this point. After an EP that sounds an awful lot like Godflesh, Jesu released a self-titled album that essentially set the template for all that would follow: glacially-creeping drums, acoustic or programmed, knock out 4/4 patterns under riffs that almost strictly stick to the downbeats, CHUN CHUN CHUN CHUN, as a voice slathered in vocoder and delay sings along with piercing synth and piano lines.

For four-lengths and a good number of splits and EPs over the course of 10 years, Broadrick has almost never wavered in his commitment that Jesu must sound this particular way. Though he has increasingly inserted pieces of shoegaze, electronica, and even Depeche Mode-style pop, the question comes down to whether one likes a particular riff, or whether one doesn’t, because, frankly, you’re going to hear it. A lot.

Of course, there’s variation to be found in Jesu’s work, just as Godflesh evolved over time. Everyday I Get Closer to the Light From Which I Came, Broadrick’s newest, is his poppiest, most beautiful, and, arguably, most satisfying collection since 2006, the year Conqueror, Sliver, and Lifeline, my three favorite Jesu releases, came out. “Comforter,” the second track, bears clear traces of Takk…-era Sigur Rós, with a glowing wall of voices running in reverse surmounted by sampled acoustic guitar and a clear, bouncing piano melody. Of course, the CHUN CHUN drops eventually, though in Everyday Broadrick seems to have traded in quarter notes for eighths, speeding up the songs slightly. In this way, it’s similar to “Clear Stream,” from Jesu’s split with Battle of Mice, both attempts at pop songs with clean harmonies and prominent vocals. For a man who made his name playing fast and ugly, Broadrick has come a long way.

Of course, this isn’t exactly news. His journey to the valley of slow riffs has possessed his entire career, and while countless acts before have blended harsh noise and stunning beauty, Broadrick always had a way of cramming one into the other. His thought process seemed to say, “You want heaviness and I want to write pop songs, so why don’t I just play both at the same time?” It turned out some great stuff, but almost felt sloppy, as if he wasn’t taking the time to properly integrate everything. The clearest example of this, Jesu, runs a little too long and can’t quite decide what it wants. In some ways, this is a positive, but viewed through the long arc of a career still very much alive, it feels more like a start, not an ideal in and of itself.

Everyday is a hell of a lot closer. Between the swooning guitar pings of “Everyday” and “Heartsick” with its Red House Painters vocal, it feels like a cohesive unit, a vision realized. Once again the album’s only performer, with the exception of string player Nicola Manzen, Broadrick has crafted five stunning pieces, each relating to the other but never the same. “The Great Leveller” unspools its 17 minutes wisely, beginning as a piano ballad marching to double-tracked snare drums, crashing into a sludgy pattern that splits the difference between Neurosis and Slowdive, and eventually decomposing at the half-way point before Broadrick’s heavily-modified voice jabs out into the mess, signaling that “there is no meaning” as Manzen’s rapturous strings swell. It’s possibly the most affecting piece of music that Broadrick has ever released, Jesu or otherwise. Symphonic without being melodramatic, it somehow feels huge and intimate in the same moment, in the same space. Where previous Jesu records would have pushed these dichotomies to their limit in the listener’s face, now they simply coexist.

Any listeners that enter at this point will have a large and confusing back catalog to enter if they want to hear anything else like Everyday from Jesu. But as much as it feels like another step towards that light, the album reflects the work that came before it. You have Conqueror’s pop, Jesu’s texture, Silver’s beauty, with a mix of the electronic experimentation that Broadrick has played around with on EPs and splits. If Jesu became slightly predictable over the years, this was partially due to its distinctiveness, born of a love of 80s pop that Broadrick’s imitators simply don’t have. Thankfully, Everyday innovates within that formula without corrupting it, and proves that the waters of his inspiration have yet to run dry. It’s a high mark in a career full of them. - Robert Rubsam, Pop Matters, http://www.popmatters.com/review/175457-jesu-everyday-i-get-closer-to-the-light-from-which-i-came/

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:07 (ten years ago) link

was talking to art skool metal boy imago

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:08 (ten years ago) link

Apparently 13 people were excited about Shining. I know it was really high on Adrien's year-end list. I don't get it, personally. I just found it agitating.

J3ff T., Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:08 (ten years ago) link

ah now this jesu record is vv gr8

lovely cuddly fluffy dope (imago), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:09 (ten years ago) link

I like the lava lamp description a lot, Viceroy – borrowed it for one of my reviews, actually. Credited it to "someone on the Internet."

J3ff T., Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:09 (ten years ago) link

but lavalamp bullshit genre is my favorite genre!

Mordy , Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:09 (ten years ago) link

this was a good Jesu album that I voted for. Not terribly exciting though but exciting isn't what Jesu is about anyway...

Viceroy, Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:09 (ten years ago) link

jeff and co just dont like noise

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:12 (ten years ago) link

I don't like boring.

J3ff T., Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:12 (ten years ago) link

shining album wasn't crazy, weird or intense enough, complete backwards step imo

lovely cuddly fluffy dope (imago), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:12 (ten years ago) link

23 VHÖL - VHÖL, 453 Points, 12 Votes, One #1
http://i.imgur.com/jRE6vZF.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/1dI706HBulz8TJsTwmP5do
spotify:album:1dI706HBulz8TJsTwmP5do

http://www.deezer.com/album/6966947
#12 Pitchfork, #38 Stereogum

http://profoundlorerecords.bandcamp.com/album/vhol
http://youtu.be/QENyul1-S6I

The end of “Set to Await Forever” hangs like an unexpected ellipsis: During the first 45 minutes of VHÖL-- the self-titled debut from four West Coast metal veterans so well-regarded that many are calling this a supergroup-- there’s very little space, pause or relief. The album’s blackened hardcore is generally restless and relentless; VHÖL colors the smallest of spaces with extra guitar lines and orotund bass parts, giving the italicized shriek a sense of unordinary saturation. But five minutes into “Set”, the record’s finale, the quartet slows suddenly, tempering their once-irascible sound into an atmospheric haze. The guitar and bass drift toward eternity, while the drums lazily march ahead toward anything, a kid kicking a stone down the street at sunset.

Initially, that slow fade from sustained bustle might have been an apt metaphor for VHÖL itself, a band originally assembled to record only one album. For more than a decade, guitarist John Cobbett and drummer Aesop Dekker played together in Ludicra, an intricate black metal quintet that announced their end in 2011. But Dekker and Cobbett wanted to make one more album together, so they recruited a pair of incredible equals-- Yob vocalist and guitarist Mike Scheidt, who only sings here, and Cobbett’s Hammers of Misfortune multi-instrumental bandmate Sigrid Sheie, VHÖL’s bassist. But when the four entered the studio late last year, they had enough fun and found enough chemistry that, as Dekker admitted earlier this month, they’ve already started writing new material.

That connection feels so obvious on VHÖL, a wonderfully weird intersection of black metal and hardcore impulse and attitude, evocatively laced with bits of prog, thrash and gloriously old-school rock ’n’roll. These songs put immediacy and intrigue shoulder to shoulder, so that genuinely oddball arrangements bolster songs that make you want to join the melee. You’ll likely remember the hangman riff of “Plastic Shaman” and its barked invocation-- “The wage of sin is death,” snaps Scheidt from his bully pulpit-- the first time you’ll hear it. But this isn’t some simplistic maul; VHÖL reconfigures time and expectation, shifting the tempo and tone so much that the song feels like a rollercoaster inspired by a rodeo. The great “Arising” first rumbles like Motörhead down the straightaway, an approach that likely won’t prepare you for the hyperkinetic, 90-second guitar solo that Cobbett takes during the song’s back half. Against most odds, the parts coalesce, and that’s how it works with VHÖL: Together or separately, these four musicians have been at it long enough to be discontent or uninterested in playing anything too straight, but they’ve also been at it long enough to know that it’s possible to embed strange tendencies within a framework that still sports a visceral magnetism. VHÖL hits on first listen; it captivates on the fifth.

That VHÖL is already at work on new material is good news for these players, because they sound not only reinvigorated in this setting but also somewhat emancipated. Cobbett and Dekker will long be linked with their work in Ludicra, and there are traces of that here, for sure. But VHÖL is a spotlight of their versatility that finds them not only comfortable but also rather exhilarated by such an open-ended platform. By limiting her role to bass alone, Sheie, perhaps known best as a keyboardist, delivers her lines with focus and force. She overruns the rhythm and steps out for sidewinding variations, injecting a position sometimes thought to be a bit big and dumb with a jazz enthusiast’s musicality.

Most of all, though, it’s Scheidt that’s the wonder here. He puts down the guitar and pushes away the typecast set by his work in Yob to treat these songs like very few vocalists could. He’s a chameleon, not only able to move quickly between hardcore berating and classic metal hook-setting but also capable of blending the two. “Insane with Faith”, for instance, is a bug-eyed roar, with the band racing headlong into a circle pit; from the tone of his voice, you expect Scheidt to be in the thick of it, barking while crowdsurfing, doing his best to pull the microphone cord along for the adventure. On the other side of Scheidt’s ostensible range, he delivers long arches of falsetto as the slow exit of “Set to Await Forever” approaches. He’s like a hirsute, heavy-metal soul singer, staring out at a mix of lit lighters and thrown horns. But some of the most intriguing moments on VHÖL come when he’s able to do both. During the chorus of “Insane with Faith”, he crests into a low-level cry, suggesting Iron Maiden reborn in a small rock club. During “The Wall”, his serrated bark comes backed real-time by his more operatic air. That’s the kind of multiplicity upon which VHOL depends, a quality that makes them less of a supergroup and more of a generative force with an unpredictable will of their own. - Grayson Currin, Pitchfork, http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/17806-vhol-vhol/

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:18 (ten years ago) link

Am kind of agreeing with those who say new Shining was meh

the legend of rapper chance (Drugs A. Money), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:20 (ten years ago) link

Was it R1p F0wler who coined Lava Lamp Bullshit? AG I can't remember, you might...

Viceroy, Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:28 (ten years ago) link

Pazz & Jop results are out. Chuck Eddy was the sole voter for the Satan album. Shining was #371 with votes from Adrien Begrand and Brice Ezell.

Fastnbulbous, Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:29 (ten years ago) link

Inter Arma was actually #173 in Pazz n Jop - http://www.villagevoice.com/pazznjop/albums/2013/U2t5IEJ1cmlhbHx8fEludGVyIEFybWE=/
VHOL #525

Fastnbulbous, Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:40 (ten years ago) link

Lee Dorrian on last year's Rise Above releases - http://youtu.be/YxuNGgHJewM

Fastnbulbous, Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:49 (ten years ago) link

I actually liked that "8 1/2" EP of the Swedish Shining better, that seems to have been overlooked a bit I thought - I hardly read anything about it.

Siegbran, Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:53 (ten years ago) link

It was pretty underground, I'd never heard of them before I was checking out the nominations list.

Viceroy, Wednesday, 15 January 2014 20:56 (ten years ago) link

22 Gris - À L'âme Enflammée, L'âme Constellée..., 466 Points, 13 Votes

#33 Stereogum

http://youtu.be/RWUr3JWi9ZM
Count Blagorath review - http://youtu.be/Jp4ZLJISOWM

I can’t believe it’s been almost six years since Gris released Il etait une foret…, one of the best depressive black metal albums ever recorded. As I said in my review of Thy Light’s No Morrow Shall Dawn, the depressive black metal scene became oversaturated with shitty bands shortly after the relese of Austere’s magnum opus To Lay Like Old Ashes. The scene then collapsed under the weight of all the shitty music and everyone moved on to the next, latest trend. This means that Gris just released their latest album, À l’âme enflammée, l’äme constellée…, to an empty house.

However, they’re not going to let this discourage them. They’re so confident in their musical abilities that their latest endeavor is ninety minutes long and comes on two discs. That’s ambitious. It’s almost as ambitious as Elysian Blaze’s Blood Geometry. Let’s just hope it was worth the wait.

The first thing I noticed was just how powerful the production is. It is so bold and powerful, and every instrument comes in as clear as day. Gris are making it obvious that they’re not a group of teenagers recording half-assed black metal in their parents’ basement. What they’re doing is a labor of love. This album is a true display of professionalism.

To be perfectly honest, due to how long this album had been in production, I thought they would change their formula so much that it would make me scream “BETRAYAL!” Luckily, it’s the same Gris I know and love. The drums play lots of double-bass as well as some really extravagant fills. They even play a few blast beats, such as those on “Igneus”. I especially love how powerful the snare sounds. They refuse to fall victim to the loudness war. The Austere-like screams still exude as much agony as they did on the last album. Icare found a vocal style that works and now he’s sticking to it. However, there is this one moment where he performs low, droning, clean vocals that provide a nice change of pace.

As for the guitars, they sound less like Burzum and are now focused on creating their own identity. The riffs are starting to take on a post-metal quality. I even hear a touch of avant garde in there. And of course, Neptune still plays those high-pitched lead riffs I enjoyed so much on songs like “Cicatrice”. One difference I’ve noticed is that the bass is much more prominent in the mix. It plods alongside the guitars and gives the music an extra layer of depth.

Their previous album, Il etait une foret…, featured a lot of non-metal elements, and this album includes even more of them. First, they include a lot more acoustic guitars, piano, and violins. Most of the time these help reinforce the somber mood of the album. However, there are moments where the acoustic guitar sounds much more joyous, such as on “Dil”. I especially love the band’s use of violins. They help make the music sound more rich and full. There are even times when these non-metal elements can sound scary, such as on “Samsara”.

As I wrote earlier, I was scared when I pushed play. I thought Gris would have changed things for the worse. The album cover is not something you would find on a depressive black metal album. They even went so far as to change their logo. That alone sent up red flags in my mind. Luckily, they didn’t change much when it came to the music. The black metal sounds more or less the same as it did on Il etait une foret…, and I especially loved the wider range of non-metal elements. The ninety-minute length may seem daunting, but it’s definitely worth a listen.

This is a slightly edited version of a review that originally appeared at The Autistic Metalhead blog. The album is available from Sepulchral Productions via this link.

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 21:12 (ten years ago) link

http://i.imgur.com/oqQ1bZE.jpg

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 21:12 (ten years ago) link

YESSSSSSSS this is awesome

Viceroy, Wednesday, 15 January 2014 21:29 (ten years ago) link

21 Oranssi Pazuzu - Valonielu, 477 Points, 14 Votes
http://i.imgur.com/q9vw7M6.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/5x661ma1OUrDabuFTxNZlg
spotify:album:5x661ma1OUrDabuFTxNZlg

http://www.deezer.com/album/7083551
#26 Decibel, #8 Pop Matters, #21 Pitchfork, #33 Metal Hammer, #4 Stereogum

http://listen.20buckspin.com/album/valonielu
http://youtu.be/rrZR6pUH-rU

NASA recently announced that the Voyager 1 probe, launched in 1977, has finally exited the solar system, sloughing off the tenuous hold of the Sun’s gravity and hurtling sleekly into the inky desert of interstellar space. Valonielu, the third album from Finnish experimental black metallers Oranssi Pazuzu, evokes that same journey. Tethered to an increasingly distant musical tradition, Valonielu finds the band ready to slip the reins and dart orthogonally — irresistably — to vistas unknown, and maybe unknowable.

For a small country, Finland has produced an absurd wealth of black metal. Interestingly, though, Finnish black metal has largely proceeded down two sharply dichotomous tracks, favoring either ultra-rigid orthodoxy or resolutely oddball experimentalism. Oranssi Pazuzu, however, seem to know black metal’s history without pledging fealty to it, and are willing to paint avant-garde lines with a familiar brush.

Valonielu is thus a bold, intelligently crafted statement that also manages a rare feat: it nudges black metal in directions that listeners outside of metal might find approachable, but in a manner that feels much less likely to drive traditionalists to apoplexy (cf. Deafheaven).

Regardless of its lineage, Oranssi Pazuzu’s music is inescapably psychedelic, given the way black metal signifiers are twisted and refracted through a prism of effects-heavy space rock. The trance-inducing results are honestly won, however, and not merely approximated via studio trickery. Despite the surfeit of bleeps and bloops – not to mention swoops and szzzzzzzrts — Oranssi Pazuzu’s oddness is compositional.

Both “Vino Verso” and “Tyhjä Tempelli,” for example, are written in 4/4 time, but they certainly don’t feel it, as guitar lines stretch across measures and queasy synths stab in jarring rhythmic counterpoint. And unlike the band’s previous album Kosmonument, which tended too much to meander, Valonielu has taken all the excesses of Oranssi Pazuzu’s influences – from Krautrock to ’70s prog to space rock — and honed them to a razor-fine point.

If you’re ever in a pinch to bring a phobic friend under this vast noisy tent of heavy metal, Valonielu contains enough signposts to direct fans of Hawkwind or Kraftwerk, and hell, the nervously insistent snare rolls on the chorus to “Tyhjä Tempelli” could even bring along a few Swans partisans (via Love of Life). Oranssi Pazuzu are likely no strangers to Rush, either, given how clearly Valonielu was designed and sequenced like a classic LP: each side features two shorter songs, followed by a lengthy, slow-burning freakout.

Album closer “Ympyrä On Viiva Tomussa” starts quiet and creepy, like an astral twin of Led Zeppelin’s “No Quarter,” but eventually breaks out into a widescreen squall. A brief calm in the song’s final third is anchored by heroically restrained bass playing, but ultimately the song cannot help but explode into a tantalizing choir of instrumental voices. It’s an immensely powerful crescendo made all the more affecting because of its brevity and internally faultless logic: We’ve burned past the old sun, so now, what’s next? —¬¬¬— Dan Lawrence, Invisible Oranges, http://www.invisibleoranges.com/2013/09/review-oranssi-pazuzu-valonielu/

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 21:39 (ten years ago) link

So 2 people wanted a thursday finish. Do you all still want that? or do you want 10 on thursday and the final 10 friday?

I know fastnbulbous would prefer a friday finish as he wont be around tomorrow.

I dont mind either way but would prob be a late finish tomorrow which might not suit everyone.

Any objections to a friday finish?

Just state your preference thursday or friday

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 21:43 (ten years ago) link

Oh shit, it's Wednesday already? Friday seems more appropriate.

J3ff T., Wednesday, 15 January 2014 21:45 (ten years ago) link

A slower countdown might be better, yeah

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 21:49 (ten years ago) link

I think it would also be better since fastnbulbous wont be around tomorrow

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 21:50 (ten years ago) link

Jury duty, blah.

Fastnbulbous, Wednesday, 15 January 2014 21:54 (ten years ago) link

It's your poll, dude. Sounds like you think Friday would be better. Make it happen.

J3ff T., Wednesday, 15 January 2014 21:54 (ten years ago) link

im not bothered im just thinking about fnb, hes put a lot of work in and it would be a shame if he wasn't around for the fun part.

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 22:01 (ten years ago) link

just to say that i'm listening to the Gorguts and it's kinda uh gone into my main-poll top 5 p much immediately

lovely cuddly fluffy dope (imago), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 22:15 (ten years ago) link

Colored Sands is a special record.

EZ Snappin, Wednesday, 15 January 2014 22:17 (ten years ago) link

it's like several times better than I imagined it could be and I really liked Obscura

this is just ridiculous songwriting

lovely cuddly fluffy dope (imago), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 22:18 (ten years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.