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

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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

Friday for the final 10 gets my vote!

Viceroy, Wednesday, 15 January 2014 22:32 (ten years ago) link

Direct Link to poll recap & full results

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 22:40 (ten years ago) link

20-11 Thursday Starts 2pm(ish) UK time
10-1 Friday Starts 2pm(Ish) UK Time

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 15 January 2014 22:55 (ten years ago) link

Should be a good countdown today

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 09:20 (ten years ago) link

Got My Vote:

35 Anciients - Heart Of Oak, 370 Points, 11 Votes
34 Kvelertak - Meir, 375 Points, 12 Votes
27 Blood Ceremony - The Eldritch Dark, 416 Points, 12 Votes
26 Shining - One One One, 418 Points, 13 Votes
22 Gris - À L'âme Enflammée, L'âme Constellée..., 466 Points, 13 Votes

The Gris is fantastic; it was my #3 album.

Forgot about this one ir I would have voted for it

29 Moss - Horrible Night, 401 Points, 11 Votes

Want To Hear

40 Manilla Road - Mysterium 326 Points, 10 Votes
39 Church Of Misery - Thy Kingdom Scum, 335 Points, 11 Votes
38 Pinkish Black - Razed To The Ground , 358 Points, 9 Votes
36 Earthless - From The Ages, 368 Points, 11 Votes, One #1
31 Satan - Life Sentence, 386 Points, 11 Votes
28 Inter Arma - Sky Burial, 408 Points, 12 Votes
24 Jesu - Everyday I Get Closer To The Light, 436 Points, 14 Votes
23 VHÖL - VHÖL, 453 Points, 12 Votes, One #1
21 Oranssi Pazuzu - Valonielu, 477 Points, 14 Votes

The Satan is fantastic based on the songs I streamed.

Loud guitars shit all over "Bette Davis Eyes" (NYCNative), Thursday, 16 January 2014 09:29 (ten years ago) link

all this talk of lava lamp bullshit reminds me of the great spiritual hat controversy at the time of the all-time jazz poll

Kim Wrong-un (Neil S), Thursday, 16 January 2014 09:43 (ten years ago) link

that was deej tho

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 10:09 (ten years ago) link

Everyone ready? Will be resuming in 12 mins.

Predictions?
Hopes?
Thoughts on any album already placed?

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 13:48 (ten years ago) link

Beyonce!

Two days left to vote in the ILM EOY Poll! (seandalai), Thursday, 16 January 2014 13:51 (ten years ago) link

aren't you supposed to be getting everyone to vote in ILM 2013 | End of Year Albums & Tracks Poll | VOTING THREAD (Voting closes MIDNIGHT EST on Friday, January 17th, 2014)

or do you not want metal votes this year?

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 13:55 (ten years ago) link

Metal votes very welcome! It would only take a fraction of the voters in this poll to ensure healthy metal representation in the main ILM poll.

Two days left to vote in the ILM EOY Poll! (seandalai), Thursday, 16 January 2014 13:58 (ten years ago) link

do as the man says then - VOTE!

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 14:04 (ten years ago) link

20-11 today. Poll finishes tomorrow.

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 14:07 (ten years ago) link

20 Summoning - Old Mornings Dawn, 500 Points, 14 Votes
http://i.imgur.com/wmVlpRu.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/6n0RjK27OTSrR36I7HewBg
spotify:album:6n0RjK27OTSrR36I7HewBg
http://www.deezer.com/album/6899656
http://youtu.be/Ewc4-0Pdc_A

Everyone’s favorite dragon porn series has succeeded where so many others before it have failed. Against all odds, "Game of Thrones" has managed to make fantasy novels sexy: burly, hirsute tribesmen and corset-busting maidens populate an intrigue-infested feudal world, slicing and dicing their way towards Valhalla beneath a hypothetical soundtrack comprised of Motörhead standbys and Amon Amarth deep cuts. It sounds like The Silmarillion Mach 7, and has proven to be popular with everyone from the bumbling professor next door to your grandma’s hairdresser, but what about the old school fantasy fans? What about the nerds?

Fear not, fellow geeks. Summoning’s got your back. It’s undeniable that these Austrian keyboard enthusiasts are dyed-in-the-wool Tolkien obsessives, swiveling the epic scope of "Lord of the Rings" square onto the soaring highs and rumbling lows of Bathory’s Viking odes. There’s a lot more to them than that, of course, even in simply musical terms. Their latest album, Old Mornings Dawn, marks their seventh foray into Middle Earth (not counting a handful of demos and EPs) and will feel like a homecoming to longtime fans. Its lineage can be traced straight back to their 1995 classic Minas Morgul, but these old dogs have picked up a trick or two along the way as their stellar recent output will attest. Their last full-length, Oath Bound, came out back in 2006, and showed a marked progression from its predecessor; Old Mornings Dawn follows the same path especially when the guitar lines are concerned, but spends plenty of time looking backwards towards past triumphs, as well.

The core Summoning sound has barely changed since before the original Nordic black metal’s Second Wave entered its death throes, and Burzum and Emperor’s obvious impact on their sound is proof enough that its roots within that circle are still firm. Protector and Silenius adhere to a strict formula of hypnotic black metal riffs, grandiose keyboard melodies, and vocals that range from harsh, throaty croaks to rumbling spoken word, topped off with a heady swig of pagan folk metal’s chants and choruses. The title track features a rousing choir of Vikings in full voice, and more traditional male/female choirs add color to the majority of the album as well. There’s a sweeping cinematic feel to the proceedings; if any of you guys know Peter Jackson’s sound guy, now might be the time to give him a call. The keyboards often take center stage, piling on the cheese and, at times, stifling the guitar work. Summoning’s approach is an acquired taste, to be sure, but sports acres more heft than is offered by similarly key-heavy “epic” metal bands like Rhapsody of Fire or Blind Guardian. There’s a darkness to it.

That’s nothing compared to the rhythm section, though. Long a thorn in purists’ sides, Summoning’s now legendary programmed drums are unapologetically inorganic, an essential afterthought that come across as almost militaristic in their simplicity. They even skitter into bongo-driven territory on tracks like “Flammifer”, “Earthshine,” and “Of Pale White Morn”, the latter of which sounds like an outtake from Disney’s Tarzan soundtrack until the guitars... and Orc sounds kick in.

Yep. Summoning is so slavishly devoted to their cause that they’ll toss in Orc samples when the moment feels right. You’d almost wonder if these guys are serious, but the diverse and beautifully orchestrated songwriting on this album speaks for itself. Old Mornings Dawn is a more than worthy addition to their canon, and a wholly satisfying treat for fans who’ve been waiting nearly a decade for the next adventure. - Kim Kelly, Pitchfork, http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/18092-summoning-old-mornings-dawn/

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 14:07 (ten years ago) link

excellent album. The title track was of course #6 in our tracks poll!

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 14:11 (ten years ago) link

Eating breakfast before trudging in to do my civic duty. This one wasn't on any polls but there was certainly anticipation for it on Rolling Metal.

Smithy and Siegbran will be happy to know that the new Summoning does not sound like it was recorded through a layer of Jell-O like the last album. ― South of Hamster (J3ff T.), Saturday, April 13, 2013 10:27 PM (9 months ago)

sounds like another summoning album, then. works for me. ― (⊙_⊙?) (Alan N)

ILM Rolling Metal Thread: the only place on the Internet were people are more excited for new Summoning than new Black Sabbath. ― South of Hamster (J3ff T.)

I'm pretty sure that if you didn't like Summoning already, this one isn't going to swing you. ― Siegbran

I'm pretty sure that if you didn't like Summoning already, this one isn't going to swing you you should feel pretty bad about that ― (⊙_⊙?) (Alan N)

Sorry Alan, Summoning is on the wackside of music for me. And I feel fine about it. ― SeanWayne

Summoning is my 2nd favorite metal band after Mercyful Fate Sean Wayne, you and I now officially have beef ― not feeling those lighters (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned)

finally got my hands on the new summoning. my initial impression is that it rules and is the best. if you're a fan, there's no way you aren't going to dig this. if you aren't... leave the hall! ― (⊙_⊙?) (Alan N)

New Summoning already got me within a minute of the first song proper. Two bars of ominous medieval melody, HUGE FUCKING KETTLEDRUMS, then the wall of guitars crashes down and Silenius' cavernous roar comes in echoing from afar - at that point it's game over, everyone else can just pack up and go home. ― Siegbran

man oh man. I still don't have it because they're a top 5 band for me so I've been putting it off til I can get a hard copy of it and an afternoon to listen but God almight, I'm gonna be in a tour van for the next month, I should get mp3s to tide me over eh? in my experience Summoning is some of the best listen-while-traveling music ever ― Oral Sex in Sharp’s Ridge Park (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned)

love u summoning album ― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson)

i really, really like the new summoning (that prepared piano intro to 'earthshine'? so great!) and autopsy records. classic bands doing 'their thing' really well, with conviction and vitality. they're masterful. ― cb

Finally getting around to hearing the whole Summoning album, and yeah, wow, this is great. ― glenn mcdonald

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 16 January 2014 14:21 (ten years ago) link

If only some of those guys you quoted had voted then it would have been even higher.

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 14:24 (ten years ago) link

Summoning didn't make it past the first round in Last Rites bracket war or whatever it's called, though they were up against Darkthrone.

http://flahmr.files.wordpress.com/2013/12/bracket7.jpg

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 16 January 2014 14:28 (ten years ago) link

19 Ghost - Infestissumam, 502 Points, 15 Votes
http://i.imgur.com/v2OB6QT.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/4ofg5qqqL8ltO78qusROLq
spotify:album:4ofg5qqqL8ltO78qusROLq

http://www.deezer.com/album/6469649
#7 Revolver, #20 MetalSucks musicians, #20 Obelisk readers, #14 Stoner HiVe, #5 Metal Hammer, #12 Terrorizer, #177 Pazz & Jop

http://youtu.be/obkI7dE4o5w

The first time I saw Ghost, it was a revelation. These mysterious Swedish metallers were the perfect embodiment of my holy grail in music: melodic yet thunderously heavy; dark, yet hugely entertaining – and catchy. So very, very catchy. For a niche band (and really, what's more niche than the 13th Floor Elevators attempting to replicate Mercyful Fate's back catalogue with only a couple of scrawled notes as pointers?), their reputation quickly flourished and, among those who heard their 2010 debut Opus Eponymous, only the most curmudgeonly classic-rock fan resisted its flagrant charms. The stone-cold classic 'Ritual' became a stalwart at the cooler rock clubs and, for younger fans seduced by their “fresh new” 1970s sound, their stylings made them not only a gateway drug to the likes of Black Widow and Pentagram, but also such dark, infernal artists as Blue Oyster Cult and Uriah Heep.

But last year's leap from plucky indie Rise Above Records to UMG subsidiary Loma Vista, and the enlisting of heavyweight producer Nick Raskulinecz, means that, in time, the epithet 'cult' might only refer to their satanic affectations rather than their rarified appeal. So can they make the leap to metal's mainstream without losing what made them so great in the first place? And will Ghost die-hards, such as myself, who have been anticipating and dreading this second album in equal measure, make the journey with them? Here's a first impression:

'Infestissummam'
Like Opus Eponymous before it, the album kicks off with a bit of Gregorian chanting, but before the cloak of familiarity warms you, the drums and guitars kick in and knock you on your arse. This is a different beastie altogether, and is, on first listen, the best use of choral plainsong in a rock setting since Ennio Morricone's satanic-psychedelic freakout, Veni Sancte Spiritus. Yes, we're only one minute and forty seconds in, but things are looking good.

'Per Aspera Ad Inferni'
And we're off, and, by Christ, this sounds tough as hell. Raskulinecz has taken Ghost's sound and injected it with (in)human growth hormones. Papa Emeritus II weaves his swoony vocals - “Oh Satan, devour us” - over Celtic Frost guitars, fattened by gusts of Hammond organ. The keyboards are far more prominent than before – they've held to their promise that 'Genesis', the instrumental closer to Opus, was a sign of things to come. But while progginess is at the fore, the chorus doesn't skimp on a hook. And the coda comes with a gorgeous key change. Hooray! Ghost have still got it!

'Secular Haze'
Not an obvious choice for the single, this is a slow burner that is still smouldering, but it's worming its way into my affections. The spooky fairground organ motif makes far more sense in these surroundings than as a stand-alone track. In fact, I can see it joining the canon of those great metal songs written in waltz time, like, erm...

'Giggalo'
The pace picks up again with this lascivious thrust of swaggering glam-rock swing. “I am the one who comes richly endowed/ Harvesting fields that others have ploughed, ” drools Emeritus II in celebration of all things carnal. Fantastic! Not only have they rebooted Spinal Tap's classic, 'Sex Farm', but they've thrown in a bit of twiddly Peter Gabriel-era Genesis to spice things up. Is Glam Prog even a thing? Well, it is now.

'Ghuleh'
This is a surprise – a ballad to break things up a bit. A Spartan piano, organ and drum arrangement forms the background for some hushed, confessional vocals … aaaand just about as I was going to invoke the great music-journo touchstone of Berlin-era David Bowie, they pull a switcheroo and now we're off on a Peter Gunn/twangy-guitar car chase, but with Deep Purple pomposity. And here's the chorus: “Zombie queen. Zombie queeeeeeen!” And now the choral society are joining in – this is astounding! At seven minutes long, this is their 'Stairway To Heaven'. If played live, this would have the makings of an absolute show-stopper.

'Year Zero'
For those looking for 'Ritual' part II, this is probably the closest in spirit to its pop sensibilities. But where that was a spooky, abandoned church on a lonely hillside, this is a bloody massive Gothic cathedral with spiky, sky-scraping spires. The "Hail Satan" hook soars, with O Fortuna-style choruses lifting it ever higher. This is definitely the track that will inspire the daft grin/hairs-standing-on-end effect Ghost junkies will be craving.

'Body In Blood'
They've already mastered satanic prog-glam metal, so why shouldn't Ghost turn their hand to sleazy soft rock? Imagine for a second there is a late-70s Spanish semi-pornographic horror film called Los Esclavos Lesbianas De Satanás (there isn't. I've checked). Before the nudity and bad dubbing starts up, the scratchy Letraset titles would be accompanied by footage of a young woman in a summer dress walking along a small village's sunny harbour front while a monk spies on her from a castle window up on a cliff top. This is the only song that could possibly be playing during those titles.

'Idolatrine'
Back to the glam, and an evocation of that Luciferan classic, 'Blockbuster' by the Sweet. A fairly breezy, poppy number by this album's standards, with some (deliberately, you would imagine) saccharine harmonies disguising pretty dark lyrics; “Suffer little children/ come you unto me; Suffer little children/grant me sovereignty”. If, when played live, this doesn't feature monks in cowls, thumbs tucked in their rope-belts, doing that synchronised headbang/ elbow-swagger Tiger Feet dance, I'll be sorely disappointed.

'Depth Of Satan’s Eyes'
Probably the weakest track of the album, a catchy-enough chorus is let down a little by its pedestrian pace and NWOBHM-by-numbers riffing. But you can't really argue with lyrics like: "This swamp of faeces/ that is the world/ flatulates a whirlwind storm/ in which it swirls.”

'Monstrance Clocks'
So to round up this infernal feast, why not invoke the master of horror rock, Alice Cooper? The downbeat, funereal verse leads to a lovely, lighters-aloft chorus demanding that we "come together, for Lucifer's son", and ends with male and female choirs trading that refrain accompanied by a church organ. It's wonderful and wonderfully silly in equal measure, and a masterful end to an album of real depth.

So is it as good as Opus Eponymous? It's certainly not as immediate, but I think songwriters this talented would be doing themselves an injustice retreading the same ground. It's a statement of intent that suggests that in future people will stop describing them as x-meets-y (which I'm aware I've done throughout this piece) and simply refer to their ludicrously alluring mix of pomp, pop and power as "sounding like Ghost". The other occult rock bands du jour – Ancient VVisdom, Blood Ceremony and the like – are going to have a hard time keeping up. Ave Satanis! - Jamie Thompson, The Quietus, http://thequietus.com/articles/11613-ghost-bc-infestissumam-track-by-track-review

It’s difficult not to pull for Ghost B.C.: During the last few years, the mysterious Swedish metal outfit formerly known as Ghost have cultivated a sterling, alluring persona of subversion and symbolism. Their leader is a papal parody named Papa Emeritus II, who comes cloaked in inverted crosses and a sinister skeletal mask. He's flanked by five Nameless Ghouls dressed in matching black uniforms that suggest Darth Vader using the force to infiltrate and overrun the Catholic Church.

Despite mounds of speculation and the exposure risk the band’s touring schedules involves, the identities of the musicians remain unknown (or, at least unconfirmed), furthering the allure of their at-large intrigue. Ghost have risen to popularity in relatively antiquated order, too, parlaying the buzz behind a single issued via social media (a move now more democratic than issuing a 7”) into a record deal and a licensing contract for the exciting Opus Eponymous, a debut that upended many 2010 and 2011 year-end lists. The old-fashioned label bidding war that followed led to a contract rumored to be as high as $750,000 with new Universal Records imprint, Loma Vista. To recap: A major label funds a band that poses as the Anti-Christ and his henchmen and plays old-school heavy metal with hooks as addictive as sin while also covering the Beatles and ABBA: Why wouldn’t you pull for Ghost B.C.?

One compelling reason to forego the Ghost B.C. fanfare is Infestissumam, the band’s mostly laughable second album. The ballyhoo for Ghost’s follow-up has been so strong that it landed them on the 100th cover of Decibel two months before it was issued. A name change, an album cover so controversial some manufacturers allegedly refused to print it, and the fortuitous timing of the actual Pope’s early departure have only ratcheted anticipation. And though these 10 songs seem to be a logical progression from Opus Eponymous, Infestissumam all but abandons the twin senses of danger and discovery upon which Ghost once depended. This is a pop-rock record underwritten with childlike Anti-Christian sentiment; the tension between those underdeveloped directions-- surface-level darkness and near-translucent accessibility-- creates little but an insufferable stiffness.

Sure, Infestissumam delivers a handful of hooks you won’t escape and a few zingers that’ll make you smile, but that’s about it. “Ghuleh/Zombie Queen”, for instance, is the record’s eight-minute centerpiece. Above forlorn piano and Coldplay-earnest guitar, Papa uses his best Ben Gibbard croon to mix Latin and empty Satanic jingoism. The song eventually sidesteps into surf-rock, black metal, and a “Paradise by the Dashboard Light” sing-along; it is one of the most awkward things you will ever hear. At its best, Opus Eponymous capably laced Ghost’s pop ambition with heavy metal’s sense of danger, as with the bracing crunch of “Ritual” or the hangman guitar tone of the simultaneously clever and goofy “Satan Prayer”. At its best, however, Infestissumam is only a reminder of that earlier record’s now-apocryphal promise.

With their label’s largesse secured, Ghost B.C. surprisingly headed to Nashville, Tenn., to record with Nick Raskulinecz, a regular Foo Fighters producer who’s also worked with the Deftones, Alice in Chains, and Velvet Revolver. If Ghost B.C. were going to be a major-label metal act, they needed to sound like a major-label metal act, right? To that end, Infestissumam is at least a crisp and full production, from the grand theatrical choir that invokes the black mass at the start to the pitch-shifting synthesizer that goads along album closer “Monstrance Clock”. But Raskulinecz brightens the band until the mystery and suspense disappear, turning these evil thoughts into baubles that sound safe enough for big money and rock radio.

The record’s back half, for instance, is a half-marathon of bad stylistic decisions that put Ghost B.C. in settings that they just can’t make convincing. “Body and Blood” is about necrotic cannibalism, but it sounds like something Sloan might have left on the floor of the editing room. Its affable jangle and eventual surge wilt under Raskulinecz’s spotlight. If They Might Be Giants decided to cut a funny little metal record (and why haven’t they?), “Idolatrine” and its jaunting organ might form the fourth single. And “Depth of Satan’s Eyes” offers neutered quips about flatulence and feces above a vaguely doom metal clip; it’s the sort of flimsy, silly, and safe pap that suggests Ghost B.C. might be a side-project for another band in costume, the motherfucking Doodlebops. Infestissumam is a great critique of how self-serious yet puerile heavy metal can get, but that’s probably not the point of a lucrative record deal.

In the heavy metal community, Ghost B.C.’s defenders often talk about the band as a gateway for young metal fans, a new chance to expand the musty dark legions. In his smart 2011 piece for Invisible Oranges titled “Why Ghost Matters,” Justin M. Norton argued that metal needs new converts, and that Ghost was the band to do just that. “I could play [Opus Eponymous] for my mother, a Carly Simon devotee, and she’d find something to like. … I see The Undead Pope becoming an effective recruiter, much like Eddie or Anton LaVey. He is metal’s own Uncle Sam.”

But, in 2013, to what exactly is Ghost B.C. a gateway? Back to old notions of rock’n’roll, where Jim Morrison is still a poet waxing above organs and major-label polish is a requisite of important music? To an excuse for a lack of substance in the presence of great style and pristine surface? To a worldview in which darkness and anger and frustration serve only to become a punchline and where the Anti-Christ “comes into the daughters of men” and creates silly portmanteaus like “Idolatrine”? Is that even a gateway anyone wants to offer anymore? - Grayson Currin, Pitchfork, http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/17807-ghost-bc-infestissumam/

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 14:33 (ten years ago) link

Took a while to get into this actually as it wasn't as immediate but it got there in the end.

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 14:35 (ten years ago) link

Wonder how well it sold. I seem to remember Phil saying on the thread that it hadn't done well in its 1st week.

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 14:48 (ten years ago) link

Maybe I started countdown too early. I'll wait til more are around posting before posting the next one.

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 15:05 (ten years ago) link

ok, tried a couple of these.

gris : nope, not for me.
summoning : liked the write up thinking i would enjoy, but nope.

ghost of course totally hits my spot.

mark e, Thursday, 16 January 2014 15:31 (ten years ago) link

mark do you like blue oyster cult?

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 15:35 (ten years ago) link

no idea.

suspect i would if i heard some.

they have always been on my list of bands i should try out.

was going to get the boxset of their classics if i ever saw it, but i haven't seen it anywhere ..

mark e, Thursday, 16 January 2014 15:36 (ten years ago) link

amazon is your friend

im sure plenty of people will tell you which to check out

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 15:39 (ten years ago) link

yeah, its a little pricey to take a risk on though ..

mark e, Thursday, 16 January 2014 15:42 (ten years ago) link

i tried to listen to BOC this year because of all the ilm hype, but i just cannot make myself listen to any of their songs except 'reaper', it's so perfect to me that i hear the other songs and it's like a different band

j., Thursday, 16 January 2014 15:50 (ten years ago) link

trying one of the BoC classic albums now .. hmm ..

not sure.

love reaper of course ( esp the @440 version .. ahem !)

i.e. i think j nails it above ..

i will check a few more albums later on ..

mark e, Thursday, 16 January 2014 15:54 (ten years ago) link

Yeah they only sound like a gothy Byrds on that one. Haven't been called yet into a courtroom so can follow for a bit

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 16 January 2014 15:54 (ten years ago) link

18 Beastmilk - Climax, 529 Points, 15 Votes, One #1
http://i.imgur.com/JTsKz9A.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/0P2HwNQCAbfBreGtGDhvta
spotify:album:0P2HwNQCAbfBreGtGDhvta

http://www.deezer.com/album/7117257
#13 Terrorizer, #22 Rock-A-Rolla, #34 Metal Hammer, #259 Pazz & Jop

http://beastmilk.bandcamp.com/
"Death Reflects Us" - http://youtu.be/gIrehsz_1a4

The Joy of Disintergration

It’s almost taken as gospel that by the time December rolls around every album that you must hear has already been released… But that’s not always the case. As the ashes of 2013 blows away, there is still the odd ember that burns incandescently. Beastmilk’s debut full-length Climax is one such ember, and according to the recent hype and bluster mustered by this Finnish four-piece, it seems like there’ll be little chance that Beastmilk will be forgotten amidst the fiery furore caused by endless “end of year” lists.

Beastmilk are comprised of underground musicians, most notably singer Mat “Kvohst” McNerney, known for his involvement in black metal provocateurs Dødheimsgard and Code, and the psychedelic neo-folk ensemble, Hexvessel. However, lacking knowledge of those three underground bands is not essential to your Beastmilk listening experience because metal is all but a distant suggestion, mostly remaining in the aggressive way in which these musicians attack their instruments. Instead, Beastmilk suckle at the kohl-crusted teat of the major players of the early ‘80s goth, post-punk, death rock scene. And the band’s unabashed re-imagination of the music of their influences – the Sisters of Mercy, Echo and the Bunnymen, Bauhaus, Joy Division, Christian Death, Killing Joke, the Cure, Danzig, etc. – is so well conceived and unapologetic that the lack of originality at the heart of Climax becomes little more than an afterthought.

Beastmilk were first pressed to our consciousness by Darkthrone’s Fenriz, who championed the band’s two-song demo White Stains on Black Tape on his “Band of the Week” blog back in 2010. Last year the band followed up their demo cassette with the well-received EP titled, Use Your Deluge, and Climax pushes the band out from the shadow cast by their EP with a slicker, more brazen statement of what made the post-punk/goth music of the ‘80s so great.

Ironically, there is also a real freshness to the presentation of Beastmilk’s music, and the irresistibly huge choruses of songs like “You Are Now Under Our Control”, “Genocidal Crush”, and “Love in a Cold World” have massive cross-over appeal. This cross-over already seems to have its wheels in motion, given that indie-praising publications like the NME, who have recently streamed Climax in full over at their official website, appear to be fully on board. All of this amounts to brilliant news for the band and their excellent label, Svart Records, who have had yet another sterling year with releases from artists that cross the retrogressive and progressive divide, with Beastmilk possessing the potential to become a true break-out group.

What draws contemporary musicians to the music of the late ‘70s and early ‘80s is generally nothing surprising or premeditated. It’s more than likely a result of musicians who grew up with the dark pop of the times etched into their simple minds and who want to express this part of their musical genesis in adult life. 2013 has served up some of the best ‘80s-inspired albums, largely within the metal realm (although the ‘80s post-punk/goth influence within metal is nothing new), as bands like Vaura and In Solitude have both demonstrated their love for this particular movement on their latest (greatest) releases. Unlike these bands, Beastmilk have more in common with the current ‘80s-inspired groups who reside outside of metal – Interpol, Iceage, Editors, or Spectres – due to the fact that they don’t use post-punk/goth to add flavour to their metallic brew, be it post-black metal (Vaura) or traditional heavy metal (In Solitude). Alternatively, Beastmilk embrace the repetition and minimalism of ‘80s post-punk/goth wholeheartedly while retaining the heaviness and the dark lyricism of metal, as the self-professed “apocalyptic post-punk” band weaves bleak Cold War-inspired tales of nuclear death into the neurological throb of the bass-lines, the unfussy yet propulsive drum-beats, and the wintry, dystopian echo of the guitars.

The music itself has been written by guitarist Goatspeed (the band’s rounded out by drummer Paile and bassist Arino), and Goatspeed’s understanding of dark ambient tones and textures, grim moods and anthemic drive – all accentuated by the authentic, hard-hitting production job of Kurt Ballou (Converge) – recreates the haunting, gothic air that wraps itself around albums like the Cure’s Disintegration, Joy Division’s Closer, or the Sisters of Mercy’s Floodlands. That’s not to say Climax will go on to be as highly regarded as those albums; such achievements are not possible because of time and circumstance. But due to the high standards of the songwriting, there’s plenty take pleasure in: most remarkably the abundance of vocal hooks littered throughout each of the ten songs, not to mention the amount of shameless hand-claps used as rhythmic accompaniments.

Kvohst’s timbre drips with dejection and paranoia, and he can turn from Ian Curtis-esque detachment to Robert Smith-style heartbreak with ease. He also has the ability to transform a song like “Surf the Apocaplyse” from a post-punk exorcism to Danzig-worthy chest-thumper without dispersing the gloom that ensconces the entire album. His chameleonic call does bring to mind the aforementioned singers, as well as Andrew Eldritch, amongst others, and it can be stated that while he does a great job of channelling such talents, he lacks a distinctive voice of his own. And while this statement is true to a certain extent, the strength of his melodies as they coalesce with the rush of guitars, drums and bass towards each resplendent chorus more than makes up for such flaws, and the “spot-the-goth-singer” game passes by after a few listens.

What you are ultimately left with is an album that deserves the hype placed upon it, written by a band who wears their influences as a badge of pride rather than shamefully shoving said influences into the background, hoping nobody notices. Derivative? Yes – but Climax is immorally addictive and thoroughly enjoyable, in as apocalyptic a way as possible, from beginning to end. - Dean Brown, PopMatters, http://www.popmatters.com/review/177019-beastmilk-climax/

One of the down-low delights of 2012 was ‘Use Your Deluge’, the debut seven-inch by clandestine Finns Beastmilk. Despite being a heroically hook-packed take on early-’80s post-punk and goth, it mainly found favour in metal circles – vocalist Kvohst’s background includes various bands of that nature. But anyone who’s enjoyed this year’s Iceage and Savages full-lengths should embrace this splendid debut album. Recorded by esteemed hardcore producer Kurt Ballou, ‘Climax’ polishes Beastmilk’s iron-curtained grandiosity slightly (‘Ghosts Out Of Focus’ is eerily like Suede), while maintaining the Cold War-era paranoia in their lyrics. Basslines slash through fog, drums march us into battle and it becomes clear that Beastmilk offer ample sustenance for winter. - Noel Gardner, NME, http://www.nme.com/reviews/beastmilk/14976#bdizSOA9PzHZToaI.99

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 15:57 (ten years ago) link

brilliant album and one I'm sure could have done very very well on big ILM poll if anyone outside of metal thread had heard it.

post punk fans go check it out right now.

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 15:58 (ten years ago) link

DJP especially if you happen to be reading this

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 15:59 (ten years ago) link

seandalai you too

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 16:03 (ten years ago) link

Still time to vote! I was one of the few who voted for it on Pazz n Jop. I didn't even consider it for this poll though. Despite the involvement of metal musicians I think it's close to 0% metal. Certainly no more than Savages. Glad to see it get recognition though.

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 16 January 2014 16:09 (ten years ago) link

Being on Svart Records probably means it wont reach many non-metal critics?

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 16:12 (ten years ago) link

I'd try to persuade ilxors not into metal to check it out but I'm guessing the name and album cover would put them off.

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 16:13 (ten years ago) link

My biggest objection would be their font choices.

Johnny Fever, Thursday, 16 January 2014 16:18 (ten years ago) link


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