Tuesday, 8 April 2025

Doomsday "Never Known Peace" (2025)

 

A few weeks on from discovering Crossover Thrash outfit Doomsday, a new record drops! In fact, Never Known Peace is their debut "full length", a trim, lean, concise thirty minutes of fiery metallic blasphemy! With a tight production in place, the band straddle Slayer worship with a modernized arsenal of slick sprinting riffs and roaring, evil evoking lead guitars. The latter aspect gets nail to the cross. Echoing King and Hanneman's dueling, unhinged guitar solos, the record's ten cuts flow with melodic chaos as the arrival of spurious shredding illuminates the tone, a consistent high point.

Oddly, its high tempo rhythm guitars chug and gallop chops to a lesser luminosity. They serve as the mood's aggressor, continuously grinding out stomping grooves in a menacing formality. Lacking surprise or novelty to seasoned ears, the ceaseless flow of rhythmic assault runs warm. When set up for a big breakdown, it lands somewhat soft. When the rhythm guitars aren't accompanied by face melting leads, things feel thin despite continuously punishing with notable touches of Hardcore dance groove.

 Stepping back from my analytical dissection, Never Known Peace is a heck load of fun. Despite being one mean best, its tone feels fun and uplifting, a dark demeanor for show, not to be taken seriously. The thirty minutes blaze by without a foot step wrong. Its surprisingly consistent, without a dull moment and nothing truly remarkable to rattle off on, although whiffs of potential linger. Only instrumental interlude track Extinction's Hymn gets a mention for its utilization of a sinister synth to add a textural flare to its main galloping guitar riff. A small footnote on a record that sticks firmly to its design.

Rating: 7/10

Friday, 4 April 2025

Nobuo Uematsu "Final Fantasy VII Original Soundtrack" (1997)


As the peaks of youthful adoration converge on true musical magic, the stars aligned. This form of wonderment, powerful and persistent, has shadowed me like a ghost, unveiling its brilliance at every return to the epic. Mirrored alongside an unforgettable storey told through the medium of RPG, Nobuo Uematsu's genius provided a deep imagination to enrich format constraints. Low polygon graphics and narratives projected through text on cathode-ray tubes, his soundtrack brought the vision to life. So too were orchestrations shackled to the eras technology. Despite compact discs offering outsized audio fidelity, producers opted for MIDI driven synthesizers that have stood the test of time. It speaks volumes to the fundamentals of melody, harmony and rhythm in the face of artificial aesthetics, which do have a charm.

Housed within a mammoth four plus hours, the music is remarkable absence of filler. With intent to imbue the storeys many twists and turns, characters and settings, each of its ninety songs come sharpened by vision and intent. Tone and temperament are always aptly poised to illuminate the emotional narrative told through its charming melodies and emotive backing tracks. From emphatic portraits to mischievous sketches, Nobuo brings these characters to life. Glorious battle tracks and luminous Fanfare victories reign supreme, undoubtedly deeply engrained by there repetitive placement in the game, these galloping riffs and triumphant tunes are utterly iconic.

So too can this soundtrack cut into sombre, shadowy, esoteric corners when called upon. Sometimes with a majestic utilization of minimalism, its often these dark compositions that show the power of balance. Nobuo is wise to hear the strengths of timely quietness. At its opposite end, a large collection of playful, quirky songs, upbeat in nature and warm spirited await within. The delights of the various Chocobo tunes and storeys happier grooves swirl with joyous melody, often dressed up by creative rhythmic hilts and inspired backing instruments. It gives an unusual sense of depth to what can seem simplistic on first glance. A subtle brilliances resonates on every track.

Having heard these songs re-imagined on the recent FF7 Rebirth remaster, I am transported back to that youthful magic that seems ever more evasive as the years grow old. These freshly updated tracks are fun but the originals still hold a nostalgic power. Although I'll yield to the notion that my epoch of exposure greatly amplifies my connection to it, I do not doubt the excellence on display here. Given how many casuals mention this soundtrack in comparison to other games speaks volumes to the genius operating behind it. For anyone who has never heard it before, Its a quirky listen in original form. I only hope you hear the magic FF7 fans were bestowed with.

Rating: 10/10

Thursday, 3 April 2025

Krusseldorf "Laidback" (2017)


For now, our Krusseldorf venture concludes at a lower altitude. Distant are those charmed curiosities that drew me in. Laidback is certainly calm in demeanor, easy on the ears but much of its lengthy runtime circles over dulled ideas and bland aesthetics. It suggests the artist enjoyed the subtle details of its sound design much more than this listener. Lacking melody and groove, the focus seems to lay in the textural craft of these dreary downtempo drives. They Fall conjures a soothing mood with its dreamy warmth. The following Rebuilding Icarus flips the script for a lean cut, darkly intent with sharp brittle beat. From those distinctions, the record drifts into obscurity. Tracks drone on, seemingly fixated on strange Industrial like samples and breathy snippets. These ideas are scant, ruminated on endlessly, A tired slump I didn't enjoy much.

Rating: 3/10