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

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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

I only checked out that Beastmilk album in the last few days, after wrongly judging by the name that they were some kind of crust thing, and hoo boy is it ever good. Got a friend into it as well.

Speaking of Svart, the reissue they've done of the Demilich album sounds amazing. It's from the original studio tapes, you can tell the drastic difference just from the sample on YT.
http://youtu.be/RT76I8R9RBw

Devilock, Thursday, 16 January 2014 16:19 (ten years ago) link

oh hey this is cool

SHAUN (DJP), Thursday, 16 January 2014 16:29 (ten years ago) link

17 Queens Of The Stone Age - ...Like Clockwork, 557 Points, 15 Votes, One #1
http://i.imgur.com/WFzKwlr.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/06S2JBsr4U1Dz3YaenPdVq
spotify:album:06S2JBsr4U1Dz3YaenPdVq

http://www.deezer.com/album/6619332
#10 Revolver, #32 Rock-A-Rolla, #5 MetalSucks musicians, #19 Obelisk, #3 Obelisk readers, #4 Stoner HiVe, #21 Pazz & Jop

"Vampyre of Time and Memory" - http://youtu.be/AEIVlYegHx8
theneedledrop review - http://youtu.be/5uvj_3nd5kY

Here are two things to get out of the way regarding Queens of the Stone Age's sixth record, ...Like Clockwork. First: Prodigal renegade bassist and facial-hair terrorist Nick Oliveri sings backup on one song here. That's it. So this is hardly a reunion of the QOTSA lineup that made 2002's Songs for the Deaf, which, if not the best "rock" album of the past ten years, is most certainly the best RAWK! record of the past ten years. Second: Yes, there are a number of guests on this thing, including Trent Reznor, Arctic Monkeys' Alex Turner, and Scissor Sisters' Jake Shears. They sing back-up vocals too, and honestly reside so low in the mix that you wouldn't even know (or care) except that their presence became a key component in the marketing buildup. (This is not a new phenomenon: If you could point out where Shirley Manson actually appeared on 2005's Lullabies to Paralyze, please let us know.)

Neither of these caveats should disturb you too much, though, for there is no need to sell a QOTSA album by invoking memories of modern-rock hits or speculating as to who dropped by the studio to try out the gravity bong. It's simply enough that Josh Homme, the finest hard-rock songsmith of our times and a none-too-shabby guitar player to boot, is back in action after an extended break.

A well-deserved extended break. Following the tour for 2007's Era Vulgaris and a brief stint with his Dave Grohl and John Paul Jones collaboration Them Crooked Vultures (not bad, as supergroups go, though clearly an affair where songwriting took a backseat to instrumental prowess), Homme devoted much of his time to his new family. (He and wife Brody Dalle, late of the Distillers, have two children.) He also fucking died for a few minutes on an operating table. So his recent lack of productivity is understandable, as is the dark cloud of unease that wafts through Like Clockwork, as if it were a poorly ventilated smoke room.

Plenty of bands handicap themselves by trying to be the Heaviest Group on the Planet. Homme's genius is that he long ago realized that the lane was wide open to be the Sexiest Heavy Group on the Planet, and he's achieved this goal without looking corny. His collaborators have always pummeled with the best of 'em, but they were always just as interested in taut grooves and slithering melodies as, say, guitar riffs that sounded like a whale being thrown against a skyscraper. That blend of seduction and destruction is still present, which is fortunate, because otherwise things are starting to get really tense here.

Homme has always had a defiant, contrarian streak: His band's name was a deliberate rebuttal to late-'90s mook-rock culture, and he followed up Songs for the Deaf's commercial breakthrough with a hard zag into the murky psychedelia of 2005's Lullabies to Paralyze. Clockwork is the first Queens record to feel like a conscious return to a previous sonic identity; though perversely, it evokes the group's least-known period — the Devo meet Black Sabbath nerviness of their 1998 self-titled debut. Here, "I Sat by the Ocean" and "Smooth Sailing" mercilessly ride minimal, circuitous grooves that offer little variation or relief — just unremitting propulsion as Homme's and Troy Van Leeuwen's guitars team up to block out the sun. This isn't tension and release. This is tension, then more tension, then even more tension on the chorus until your subconscious has been thoroughly scrambled; only then does release come, usually in the form of a gnarled guitar solo.

None of this is immediately sticky, save single "My God Is the Sun," which boasts the sort of swallow-the-sky chorus most bands quit writing after they leave their major label. (After concluding their deal with Interscope, QOTSA recently signed with indie institution Matador.) By and large, Homme has yet again submerged his talents for hooks in knotty, controlling arrangements that border on sadomasochistic, but there's pleasure to be had once you give in. Even if bassist Michael Shuman rarely lets these grooves open up, there's still a sideways swing in the way he tightens the vise grip; the lethal precision reigning throughout only insures that you'll be in the exact proper position when the aforementioned gnarled guitar solo knocks you to the desert floor and takes your wallet. Also, as you've probably heard, Deaf MVP Dave Grohl plays drums here about half the time, and even though former QOTSA mainstay Joey Castillo was no slouch — and new guy Jon Theodore is a goddamn monster — there's a joy in the way Grohl caves in your chest with fills that even his most adroit peers can't quite replicate.

It should be noted that this all sounds fantastic. The band self-produced Clockwork with James Lavelle, the man from trip-hop-rock collective U.N.K.L.E., and the full-bodied guitars, crisp drum fills, and naturalist dynamic range further fuel the ongoing Steely Dan studio-rat revival that Frank Ocean helped kick-start and Daft Punk amplified. But all the well-buffed guitar tones and boldface guest stars can't distract from what's really going on here.

This is an album about ratcheting up the tension, which means it's also an album about sex and death: the two ultimate forms of release. (I mean, just look at that album cover.) Homme's deep croon and sensuous approach to the groove have always implied seduction, but "If I Had a Tail" is so unabashedly horny that the Weeknd might be obligated to cover it. (Sample lyrics: "I wanna suck / I wanna lick / I wanna grind / I wanna spit.") The otherwise dominant, panic-inducing strut slackens somewhat for that one, but on the title (and closing) track, Clockwork unveils a stark piano ballad that suggests Homme has been studying his friend and occasional QOTSA cohort Mark Lanegan closely, too. It's a look at mortality that demonstrates the skill with melody and concise imagery our host is usually more apt to undercut, playing it straight as he admits, "Not everything that goes around / Comes back around." After an album of dark vibes and measured dread, it feels like a moment of hard-fought relief from a man forced to realize how little he can truly control, and how rewarding the relinquishing of control can be. - Micheael Tedder, SPIN, http://www.spin.com/reviews/queens-of-the-stone-age-like-clockwork-matador/

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 16:30 (ten years ago) link

Beastmilk are one of the bands I'm looking forward to most at Temples (pending the announcement of the APMD replacement tomorrow).

Ian Glasper's trapped in a scone (aldo), Thursday, 16 January 2014 16:38 (ten years ago) link

16 Hell - Curse And Chapter, 560 Points, 14 Votes, One, #1
http://i.imgur.com/Qf2yUTT.jpg

http://open.spotify.com/album/56BWXWIQxJ5V44QsOs7IBp
spotify:album:56BWXWIQxJ5V44QsOs7IBp
http://www.deezer.com/album/7181610

#29 Metal Hammer

http://youtu.be/91XC4cydj5Y

here’s an interesting history behind Hell. As a part of the original NWoBHM, they were close to releasing an album alongside contemporaries like Saxon and Iron Maiden, but bad luck and personal tragedy brought them low and derailed their best laid plans. Though they never made it past the demo stage, they were influential in the scene and championed by folks like producer and former Sabbat guitarist Andy Sneap. So taken with their old demos was he, that he encouraged the members to reform and give it another go with him on guitar, which resulted in 2011s Human Remains opus.

That platter featured some ancient tunes loaded with NWoBHM flair and a noticeable Mercyful Fate influence, and while the music was highly enjoyable, I struggled mightily with the delivery of front man Dave Bower, which was overdone, uber-theatrical and at times, very cheeseball parmesan. He undermined the material and made it difficult to fully embrace the band, as talented as they were. Now they return with their sophomore outing, Curse and Chapter and though they remain true to their core sound, they’ve made a few changes. The music still has the old time charm, but it feels less retro this time and reminds me more of King Diamond‘s solo work mixed with early Savatage. Mr. Bower still overdoes it, but less than before and he’s much more focused and restrained, which greatly helps the flow of the songs. While a bit uneven, it’s mostly classy and engaging and the band’s obvious talent isn’t undermined this time.

I love the vintage swing of opener “Age of Nefarious” and the guitar harmonies crackle and pop. Bower keeps things relatively leashed, but the chorus mimics the “Age of Aquarius” from the musical Hair, and that’s far too much Broadway in my metal. Apart from the very silly chorus, it’s a rousing tune with top-notch guitar play. “The Disposer Supreme” sports a very big King Diamond influence and some wicked riffs, but Bower battles a terminal case of Martin Walkyier Syndrome (i.e. the compulsive urge to cram so many words into a song that the music nearly suffocates). Things improve greatly on ”Darkhangel” which is overflowing with tasty fret-board gymnastics and surprisingly restrained vocal harmonies by Mr. Bower. It runs too long, but shows the band dialing in on their strengths.

Hell_2013They also succeed on more simplistic, straight-ahead, galloping numbers like “Harbringer of Death,” “End Ov Days” and “Something Wicked This Way Comes.” Other nice moments include the very Blind Guardian-esque hook-fest of “Land of the Living Dead” and the slick, vintage King Diamond rumble and roar of “A Vespertine Legacy.”
Although they still struggle with some bloat in the song writing department and some tracks could easily be pared down, the only one that face plants is “Deliver Us From Evil,” which features a weird, jazzy swing, cowbells and Bower running a metal spelling bee during the chorus (“Deliver us from E…V…I…L”). It just doesn’t gel and feels overly trite, silly and too much like a bad musical written by Powerwolf.

As with Human Remains, Kev Bowers and Andy Sneap let it all hang out with their playing and their riffs and harmonies buoy every song. Their solo work is extremely impressive and over the course of the album, they paint quite a tapestry of foot-on-amp guitar heroics. Their playing saved the last album and it’s as good or better here. While many of the riffs have a certain old school feel, this never sounds like a dusty relic from the 80s and every song has a hook or two that keep you listening and grooving along. Top-notch stuff!

Dave Bower seems to have settled down into a comfort zone somewhere between Jon Oliva and Hansi Kursch and he wisely distances himself from the compulsive Warrel Dane chirps, squeals and caterwauls this time (though they aren’t gone completely yet). He also seems less intent on stealing all the attention, over-emoting and running his lines all over the songs. He may never become a vocalist I look forward to hearing, but he’s talented and learning how to fit in with the music better.

Hell is a band with major potential and you can definitely hear the progress toward something bigger and better. They don’t quite show what they’re capable of on Curse and Chapter, but they’re heading in the right direction. I still think they’ll uncork a monster at some point and I’ll keep watching for it. In the meantime, this is a fun, accessible listen with some moments of true inspiration shining through. Keep on questing! - Angry Metal Guy, http://www.angrymetalguy.com/hell-curse-chapter-review/

Bit of a tragic backstory for Hell

Hell are an English heavy metal band from Derbyshire, formed in 1982 from the remaining members of bands Race Against Time and Paralex. Due to a series of unfortunate and tragic events, the band originally folded in 1987, but were generally regarded as being many years ahead of their time, and have been cited as an influence by many notable musicians and bands of the genre. They were amongst the first bands to wear proto-corpse paint as part of their stage show, which features hysterical ranting from a Gargoyle- adorned pulpit, along with the use of a pyrotechnic exploding Bible which caused outrage amongst the clergy when it originally appeared in 1983.

They signed to the Belgian label Mausoleum, but two weeks prior to the recording of their debut album, the label collapsed into bankruptcy. Kev Bower subsequently quit the band. He was briefly replaced by Sean Kelley, though Hell split up soon afterwards, which led to the suicide of Singer Dave Halliday by carbon monoxide poisoning.

Although they were largely ignored by the media and record companies in the 1980s, their music became known through the underground tape trading phenomenon, and the band achieved a degree of cult status. In 2008 they reunited, and were signed by Nuclear Blast.[1] Their first full-length album, Human Remains, was released May 2011.[2] The album topped at No. 46 on the German album chart in its first week of release.[3]

The remaining original members of Hell reunited in 2008 to finally record their album which was entitled Human Remains. Sabbat members Martin Walkyier and Andy Sneap agreed to play on the album to replicate Dave Halliday's vocals and guitar tracks respectively, with Sneap also acting as the producer. Although Walkyier completed recording vocals for the entire album, the band have stated that no-one was really happy with the outcome since Walkyier's voice was so distinctive, and the result sounded "more like an unreleased set of Sabbat songs". Kev Bower's brother David (who is known as David Beckford in his career as a stage and television actor) was invited to do a voiceover for the song "Plague And Fyre" and subsequently joined the band as lead vocalist, re-recording all the lead vocal parts. Sneap subsequently also joined the band as their permanent second guitarist.

By the beginning of 2013, Kev Bower and Andy Sneap had completed demo recordings for the majority of songs which would appear on the band's sophomore album, with recording proper set to commence in the Spring. Since no early demo recordings were this time available to fill a bonus disc, the band elected to record a live DVD as a bonus complement to the album, and this was shot and recorded at the band's first 2013 show at Derby Assembly Rooms (UK) on February 23. The sellout event also unveiled the band's full Church Of Hell stage set and pyrotechnic show, with fans travelling from 13 different countries to attend. The band played a headline show at the R-Mine Metalfest (BE) and also appeared at Turock Open Air (DE), Hammer Open Air (FIN), Bang Your Head Open Air (DE) and made a return mainstage appearance at Bloodstock Open Air as one of the most heavily requested bands on the BOA user forum, and once again won the 'Best Mainstage Performance' vote. It was subsequently discovered that technical problems with the DVD recording at Derby had made some material unsalvageable, so additional footage was added from the band's appearance at this festival.

It was announced in August that the second album would be entitled 'Curse And Chapter'. To coincide with the album release, Hell were subsequently announced as being principal support for Amon Amarth and Carcass on the whole of their extensive European tour, taking in 25 shows in 13 countries, opening in Oberhausen (DE) on November 7.

Hell are most often described as a NWOBHM band, although they strongly distance themselves from this movement, citing that the NWOBHM was already in rapid decline by the time the band actually formed. Their progressive musical style incorporates elements of thrash, power, symphonic, gothic, speed, doom and black metal, encompassing great variety, and with no two songs ever sounding exactly alike. Underlying lyrical themes in much Hell material focuses on the occult and the darker sides of human nature. Typical themes include a distaste for organised religion, alien abduction, political imprisonment, mental illness, and historical events such as the Black Death and the Bubonic Plague. Although primarily guitar-driven, the band's sound is fleshed out by the use of keyboards and digital sampling to add depth and texture to the material. Their approach to songwriting is often unorthodox, with numerous complex tempo, time signature and key changes, along with a signature series of atmospheric, theatrical interludes and introductions to their songs.

― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Sunday, January 12, 2014 8:08 PM

Awesome live version of Darkhangel (the track that WON ILM Metal Poll 2014)
http://youtu.be/Ol1KyuCHC8U

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 17:00 (ten years ago) link

I guess fnb has been called

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 17:21 (ten years ago) link

i actually saw that HELL cd a couple of days ago in the racks, and it dawned on me that a few weeks ago i would have not given it a second look, whereas now, i know so much more.

still didn't buy it though as i'm holding back for Electric Wizard albums ;-)

mark e, Thursday, 16 January 2014 17:29 (ten years ago) link

i think you will only like the last 2 electric wizard albums (you liked the youtubes you heard from them) since you didn't like Dopethrone those earlier albums youre unlikely to be into

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 17:32 (ten years ago) link

Holy shit this Beastmilk record rules!

Simon H., Thursday, 16 January 2014 17:32 (ten years ago) link

sadly its too late to make any impact in ILM 2013 | End of Year Albums & Tracks Poll | VOTING THREAD (Voting closes MIDNIGHT EST on Friday, January 17th, 2014)

OR IS IT

VOTE!

ps seandalai would let you edit your ballot

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 17:34 (ten years ago) link

Wouldn't have guessed it's a Ballou production, but damn does it ever sound great. And "Genocidal Crush" is an instant earworm.

Simon H., Thursday, 16 January 2014 17:40 (ten years ago) link

yeah wish id nominated it for tracks poll

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 17:49 (ten years ago) link

15 Nails - Abandon All Life, 561 Points, 16 Votes, One #1
http://i.imgur.com/TmygtJX.jpg
http://open.spotify.com/album/0HCZqugYM0BJmzsJJs5Mb5
spotify:album:0HCZqugYM0BJmzsJJs5Mb5

#5 Revolver, #13 Decibel, #20 SPIN, #17 Stereogum, #16 Rock-A-Rolla, #14 Pitchfork, #24 Metal Hammer, #9 Terrorizer, #192 Pazz & Jop

http://nailssl.bandcamp.com/album/abandon-all-life
http://youtu.be/Kt1gYAMICpc
theneedledrop - http://youtu.be/8cyqJakd27c

Nails are making some of the most thrillingly extreme music right now but the California quartet is difficult to recommend casually. They cram their brief, constantly shifting tracks with a chaotic blend of hardcore, D-Beat, grindcore, powerviolence, and death metal. It's complex music that plows ahead while moving internally in dozens of directions.

But technical descriptions don't capture what they do so well. When Southern Lord picked up and re-released their 2010 debut LP Unsilent Death after its smaller first pressing sold out, they offered a comparison of 90s AmRep bands and early Cro-Mags going faster than either. That sort of works. So does Eyehategod's songbook played by 2013 Converge. This music is more suffocating than it is Suffocation; it also pulls largely from hardcore and comes with plenty of raw emotion attached to it.

Unsilent Death's 10 tracks sped past in 14 minutes; Abandon All Life's 10 tracks just barely break the 17-minute mark. Both releases were produced by Converge's Kurt Ballou. It's assured, sturdy music, and Ballou knows how to make it sound deep and strong. (He does an even better job of it on the huge-sounding new collection.) With this kind of material you also need a vocalist who can stand up to it, and Todd Jones (who used to play in the hardcore band Terror) keeps up with the mutating landscape behind him: he scowls, snarls, howls, screams, spits, and even quietly sighs (in the black metal minor scales and Celtic Frost-like opening of standout "Wide Open Wound"). At times he feels like a conductor holding together a maelstrom, and when he repeatedly shouts "I want to see you suffer" in the 42-second-long "Tyrant" and "My goal: cause you pain" in the 55-second-long "No Surrender", you believe the sentiments, even though his approach brings a lot of pleasure.

Nails' songs are largely about power and control, suffering and degradation; you get dozens of lines like "On your knees before me/ I humiliate, I torture/ I celebrate your failures" in the escalating five-minute doom-to-feedback-implosion closer "Suum Cuique". But these songs are also about overcoming those situations. There are sentiments like "Resolve your vengeance make them pay" in opener "In Exodus", the title track's "Wield the fucking blade/ Pierce the fucking hate… / Your will is beyond what those cowards posses" and "Burn all white flags/ No fucking surrender" in "No Surrender". For all the negatively people talk about Nails espousing, they're ultimately a positive band-- in the sense that they provide a rallying point and a will to power for people open to these kinds of violent pep talks.

But back to the beginning: Abandon All Life is a bracing, cathartic, darkly anthemic collection, but those not used to this sort of thing will probably need to spend some time with so it can slow down some and make more sense. People usually don't think of hardcore punk as "headphone" music. Nails should be played loudly, of course, but they should also be listened to carefully on headphones at some point to appreciate how they're layering these elements and creating something so seamless. This is smart, well-plotted music, which makes its anger all the more effective. - Brandon Stosuy, Pitchfork, http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/17784-nails-abandon-all-life/

When I saw Nails at New England Metal and Hardcore Fest in 2011, I was instantly won over. They had such a raw, no nonsense sound and were able to replicate that spirit so perfectly live that I couldn't help but rush upstairs to buy one of their T-shirts and get hold of all of their music. And while Unsilent Death is a fun blast of "Entombed-core" grind, it did not quite live up to how the band sounded live. On Abandon All Life, Nails has made a gigantic improvement with a punishing, albeit brief slab of fury and aggression. Abandon all pretenders, Nails is the real raw thing.

The loud, punchy, Converge-meets-Entombed fuzzbox sound embodied by Nails, Black Breath, and others has to be one of the best developments in metal in recent years. It takes metal back to basics, while putting a new twist on the hardcore-metal brand that has gone largely unheard in the past (it was years before I even heard of notables like Citizen's Arrest). Abandon All Life contains much of the same punch and grit that made Unsilent Death such a breath of wonderfully filthy air. But this time, Nails has better writing, better riffs, and a better approach that makes for a much more memorable listen. Much of the band's hallmarks remain from the previous record, though the vocals are less guttural and more high pitched this time. From the outset, Nails lights a fire of blastbeats and screaming anger that only morphs later into menacing wasteland of the mid-album highlight, "Wide Open Wound". Where Unsilent Death sounds like a band getting together to have some fun making noise, Abandon All Life sounds like the same band saying "Ok, let's focus on this noise and make something really great."

If I had to give the band one suggestion: write some more longer songs next time. It feels funny to say that, since I'm often listening to more proggy stuff and thinking, "these songs need to be shorter" and going on about how I like things straightforward. But in this case, the longer tracks like "Suum Cuique" give Nails to room to breathe and add something more to their rapid fire grind blasts. Not that they should abandon these shorter sings outright, but it would be nice if Nails could give us more…well, Nails. However, perhaps in this brevity lies Abandon All Life's greatest success: it leaves you battered, exhausted, and breathing out the only appropriate request, "Please sir may I have another?" - James Zalucky, Metal Injection, http://www.metalinjection.net/reviews/album-review-nails-abandon-all-life

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 17:50 (ten years ago) link

I am man enough to admit that Nails are just too damned much for me to deal with 99.99% of the time.

Simon H., Thursday, 16 January 2014 17:53 (ten years ago) link

That's a surprise to see this high! It's a stunner, but definitely not the friendliest sound in the world.

EZ Snappin, Thursday, 16 January 2014 18:02 (ten years ago) link

those breather tracks are really key; love "suum cuique"

a chance to cross is a chance to score (anonanon), Thursday, 16 January 2014 18:04 (ten years ago) link

14 Darkthrone - The Underground Resistance, 597 Points, 17 Votes
http://i.imgur.com/qqnXHuk.jpg

#8 Decibel, #6 PopMatters, #21 Stereogum, #7 Pitchfork, #25 Metal Hammer, #4 Terrorizer, #278 Pazz & Jop

http://youtu.be/Juthvm7QjuM
theneedledrop - http://youtu.be/3Ckbk-P7JxM
coverkillernation - http://youtu.be/7yxVv9QdYPw

The thing about Darkthrone some 25-plus years into their career is they don’t give a fuck. A lot of bands say that, but few say it as convincingly and have the fuckall in their approach to back it up that the long-running Norwegian duo seem to toss off on their records like so many squibbly riffs. Where that attitude has manifested itself over the course of their last several full-lengths as a raw, lo-fi punk aimed hard at the very roots of the black metal Darkthrone once pioneered on albums like A Blaze in the Northern Sky (1992) and Transylvanian Hunger (1994), their newest full-length and 16th by my count, The Underground Resistance (Peaceville), finds them blending that rawness with a traditional metal approach manifesting many of the influences they’ve claimed since 2007′s N.W.O.B.H.M – New Wave of Black Heavy Metal single signaled their transition from the blackened material of 2006′s The Cult is Alive – actually it was kind of stagnant — to later 2007′s F.O.A.D. (Fuck off and Die), at once a declaration and defense of its own stylistic shift.

But at this point, having pushed that punkish sound as far as it could go or at least as far as they were interested in pushing it with 2010′s bored-seeming-but-still-effective Circle the Wagons (review here), I honestly think that praise heaped on The Underground Resistance and harsh criticism of it sound the same in the ears of multi-instrumentalist/vocalists Ted “Nocturno Culto” Skjellum and Gylve “Fenriz” Nagell: It’s all just noise. If that’s actually the case, I don’t know, but it’s at least the perception and that character has become as much a part of Darkthrone‘s sound as Fenriz‘s campaigning on behalf of classic underground metal, so fervent that band recommendations on the last couple albums have come on a per-track basis in the liner notes, with Darkthrone cited on occasion as influencing themselves. All this makes the duo a fascinating entity, but ultimately has little to do with the music, which on The Underground Resistance remains as confrontational as ever in this semi-novel aesthetic sphere. The sound of the album’s six tracks is fuller and occasionally grander than that of Circle the Wagons or 2008′s Dark Thrones and Black Flags before it — as heavy metal was when it emerged early in the ’80s to distinguish itself from punk — but raw enough in its production to be called consistent. That is, between Nocturno Culto‘s trademark gurgle and the speedy gallop of the riffing on the penultimate “Come Warfare, the Entire Doom,” there’s little doubt you’re listening to a Darkthrone record, whatever kind of shenanigans they might be getting up to this time around.

And while homage is paid throughout the album’s 41 minutes to the likes of Manilla Road, Pagan Altar, Celtic Frost, Bathory, Iron Maiden and Mercyful Fate — Fenriz rounding out the album with some pretty mean King Diamond-style vocal drama on the 14-minute closer “Leave No Cross Unturned” — whatever sonic references they might be making are filtered through their own approach so that Darkthrone still sound like Darkthrone. I don’t know if I’d call The Underground Resistance re-energized as compares to Circle the Wagons, but as a band who’ve emerged as being pretty self-aware over the last decade or so, they probably could sense it was time for a change in their approach, even if it wasn’t a conscious decision between the two members as they wrote their individual parts. Three years is also the longest break between Darkthrone albums since 1996′s Goatlord and 1999′s Ravishing Grimness, and if the extra time was spent developing this material, I’d have to believe it. Even “Leave No Cross Unturned,” which seems to switch back and forth between Fenriz and Nocturno Culto parts, nonetheless winds up with one of the collection’s strongest hooks in its chorus with the oft-repeated title line. Finding earlier companionship on the album in “The Ones You Left Behind,” which works from a similar foundation musically, it’s all one could reasonably ask of a closer for an album like The Underground Resistance, which makes a weapon even of its most accessible moments.

An initial tradeoff between Nocturno Culto‘s “Dead Early,” which opens, and the subsequent “Valkyrie,” credited to Fenriz, introduces much of the album’s breadth. The two will often switch off between each other in a tracklisting and the effect is a more versatile-sounding whole on The Underground Resistance. As a general rule — so much as there are any — Nocturno Culto‘s material is darker, Fenriz‘s more classic. At very least, that holds true on “Dead Early” and “Valkyrie,” as the grittier riffing of the one leads to the grandiose intro stomp of the other, and Fenriz‘s vocals, which have grown braver and cleaner. He doesn’t quite soar, but he makes a style of the howls on “Valkyrie” and ultimately it works to the song’s favor, especially moving into “Lesser Men,” the chugging riff of which makes for a lethal groove when set to the half-time drums, a guitar solo echoing high in a break in the first half before Nocturno Culto comes in with the second verse. Fenriz once again takes the reins in the speedy “The Ones You Left Behind,” also the shortest cut at 4:16, and at 2:16 lets out a high-pitched wail that’s almost more righteous for its imperfection, makes a reappearance at the beginning of “Leave No Cross Unturned” and is bound to show up again should Darkthrone continue down this road (one never really knows, but it’s an easy guess). Another catchy chorus leads to the likely-collaborative “Come Warfare, the Entire Doom,” which is more complex part-wise than the ensuing closer, but still some five full minutes shorter.

It spends some time meandering, but even on “Come Warfare, the Entire Doom,” Darkthrone are fairly to the point, and the echoing, effected leads that pop up amidst the gallop make for intriguing landmarks along with the satisfyingly metallic thrust. When it comes to “Leave No Cross Unturned” — the most apparent collaboration (I’d dare to say for sure, but hey, digital promos) between Fenriz and Nocturno Culto on The Underground Resistance — the song is also invariably the album’s greatest triumph, moving smoothly between its verse and chorus, so predictable and still so engaging, and slamming headfirst into the dirtier Celtic Frost-style riff and grunt of its midsection. Classic even unto its titular wordplay, “Leave No Cross Unturned” shifts back to its verse and chorus, layering clean vocals with screams in the chorus before running through once more at top speed and finally ending with the slower, groovier progression that showed up earlier as contrast, presumably donated by Nocturno Culto. Ending there, Darkthrone make a final statement no less present in its volume than anything prior on The Underground Resistance, affirming this next stage in their evolution with a big rock finish that’s as much a middle finger to anyone who might’ve thought they knew what Darkthrone would do next as anything on F.O.A.D. ever was. As with any band who’ve ever managed to last as long as Darkthrone has, their fans will likely divide into factions loyal to one era or another, but in their latest work, Darkthrone show themselves not only to still be driving toward territory not yet covered over the course of their career, but doing so in a vital manner worthy of the influence their music and their attitude has had on the international underground. Whatever The Underground Resistance might lead to, the only safe presumption is that Darkthrone

won’t give a fuck what you think of it. - The Obelisk, http://theobelisk.net/obelisk/2013/03/05/darkthrone-the-underground-resistance-review/#sthash.uaWlnpeF.dpuf

When you think of Darkthrone, you think of fun, right? If you scoffed, guffawed, or simply disagreed, don't worry-- you're safely in the majority. The Norwegian band are best known, of course, for what their 1999 album labeled "ravishing grimness"-- savage, belligerent, and unfiltered black metal, epitomized by a blitz of icy hot classics that started with 1992's A Blaze in the Northern Sky and end, depending upon your stance on Second Wave orthodoxy and eclecticism, sometime just before or after the turn of the millennium. They're the dudes that epitomized ghoulish corpsespaint covers, brandished the credo "True Norwegian Black Metal," and fended off Aryan allegations as Varg Vikernes headed to jail. So, no, maybe fun isn't the first adjective Darkthrone conjures.

But it's hard to imagine two middle-aged men having more fun than Fenriz and Nocturno Culto-- the band's lone multi-instrumentalists, songwriters, and singers for two decades now-- do on The Underground Resistance, their inescapably enthusiastic 16th studio album. Darkthrone long ago gave up on black metal, turning instead to an open-ended and unmitigated interest in recombining the metal they loved as kids: thrash and crust punk, high-flying British metal and blustery hardcore. Those influences were always tucked within Darkthrone's most famous albums, but lately they've given over to them entirely. The simple joy of these influences is the thread that ties together The Underground Resistance, an album about unfit enemies and deserved death that nevertheless delights in its own music-making élan. Darkthrone's already been involved in a movement that revolutionized heavy metal both sonically and stylistically; The Underground Resistance, then, is simply the latest and most propulsive homage to the bands that sparked that revolution for them.

In the early days of Darkthrone, Fenriz didn't give many interviews, or at least he didn't say much in them. These days, though, he writes liner notes in which he conveys his influences and intentions. And his Metal Band of the Week blog advocates for young acts he likes and older acts he thinks went overlooked. He's made up for that early media quiet by seemingly giving interviews to most anyone who has asked. In doing so, he's often surprised journalists with his forthrightness and humor. "Isn't it normal to want to communicate your life's work?” he asked That’s How Kids Die, questioning those surprised by his newfound verbosity. For a guy who once posed in corpsepaint, he sure uses a lot of emoticons and knows a lot about Pink Panther.

But Fenriz rightly insists that there's not a lot of humor in Darkthrone's new music. (With a song sporting a name like "Leave No Cross Unturned", though, there is certainly some.) Still, The Underground Resistance flaunts the sort of vigor you'd expect from old friends out to have a good time: "Dead Early" is a menacing five-minute race that suggests Motörhead loaded on piss and vinegar, while the relentless chug of "Lesser Men" pogoes from circle-pit invocations to head-down, horns-up headbanging. "Valkyrie" begins with a classic doom feint, craggy acoustic guitars introducing a riff that unfurls over cascading drums. They return to that slow burn for the coda, but the middle is all blustery thrash, with Fenriz chasing himself in circles behind the drums while his falsetto peaks above the din. The album's real clincher, "Come Warfare, the Entire Doom", is a series of swivels and sprints, once again teasing doom before harnessing the band’s death metal past in an eight-minute anthem. The aforementioned "Leave No Cross Unturned", the disc's 14-minute finale and the longest song ever in the Darkthrone catalog, confirms the band’s gumption to simply go for anything. They hint at Saxon and Maiden with operatic vocals and an incredibly sharp hook and then at punk with the blissfully simple but successful outro. What’s more, Fenriz and Nocturnal Culto even circle back toward their weighty black metal reputation with the blanket of serrated guitars near the song’s start. A few minutes later, Fenriz howls from some deep abyss. In turn, they leave no relevant idea unturned.

Fenriz and Nocturno Culto own one of the great unimpeachable brands in all of heavy metal, and they've protected it not by limiting it but by letting it expand and fluctuate as need be. Rather than retread what's made them famous, Darkthrone have continually confirmed their status by refusing to kowtow to old expectations. They don't play live, and they don't depend on this band for their income; therefore, they don’t need this band to sound like it did it 1993 so they can cash in on the past rather than risk their image on the present. Amid tides of ceaseless band reunions and reissues that more often than not repeat what we already knew, Darkthrone in 2013 find themselves in an extremely enviable position because they have done exactly what they've wanted. Legends encumbered by being legends, they stick true to the title of The Underground Resistance-- they are two veterans having fun by continuing to play like they're carefree teenage rebels. - Grayson Currin, Pitchfork, http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/17642-darkthrone-the-underground-resistance/

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 18:13 (ten years ago) link

Maybe I didn't start too early. no buggers around later either! Glad we're not finishing today haha

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 18:25 (ten years ago) link

I was one of the 12 people called to be interviewed by judge and lawyers first. I simply expressed an opinion that Chiroprctors are quacks and I was one of the few not picked YAY. At lunch still supposed to report back to room after blah

Fastnbulbous, Thursday, 16 January 2014 18:26 (ten years ago) link

so hes avoided jury duty in the trial of the great chiropractor massacre of 2013

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 16 January 2014 18:34 (ten years ago) link


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