Showing posts with label Black N Roll. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Black N Roll. Show all posts

Tuesday, 3 October 2017

Satyricon "Deep Calleth Upon Deep" (2017)


Satyricon may not be the first band to come to mind when discussing Norwegian Black Metal but they have their place in its history. Around since the dawn of the 90s as a Death Metal outfit the group quickly switched to the new rebellious sound, releasing a couple of demo's before the scene blew up in the wake of scandalous church burning and murder. After a handful of records some consider classics, the duo Frost and Satyr strayed from the scenes roots leading into the millennium and developed their slower, discordant, somewhat atmospheric take on the music which has never received much critical acclaim but has grown them an niche audience.

Their last release, the self titled, was said to be a real stinker and so I gave it a pass, thus arriving at this new release with pretty low expectations. "Deep Calleth Upon Deep" is a murmuring stroll of a record that wanders through its various arrangements of ideas at a leisurely pace. With little urgency and barely any gusto the duo muster together riffs in a dull and dark setting. The tone is drab, linear and aesthetically rather flat despite a crisp distortion tone. The music is all guitar led and the only apparent chemistry is between the weaving riffs and Frost who throws down uninspired beats in varying degrees of intensity as Satyr wails thin and grisly half screams on queue with the songs tempo.

Monochromatic is the word that comes to mind, this record is narrow and lifeless. In an odd way there is a charm about its one dimensional vision. Something I think a different listener might find get a kick from but for me it was mostly dull bar an occasional moment to perk the ears. Everything here is driven by one guitar track, interlining sliding guitar leads and plucked notes between low end power chords. On occasional its technically impressive, almost always leaning into the unusual and unexpected spectrum of composition but lacking the inspiration to whisk these ideas into proper songs.

In a scattering of moments other sounds enter the music like half baked ideas. Satanic, worrisome operatic chants wobble in the distance with a guest vocal on the title track. The opening of "Dissonant" includes avant-garde trumpet playing buried under the guitars and wherever another dimension of sound opens up its always half committed, taking the wind out of its sails. Disappointing, this record could have been better as it does encroach on a unique flavor and moments of interest but with mainly weak and forgettable tracks it plays like a grey wash of blandness.

Favorite Tracks: Deep Calleth Upon Deep, Burial Rite
Rating: 3/10

Monday, 23 May 2016

Kvelertak "Nattesferd" (2016)


Prior to this record I had never heard of this Norwegian six piece band Kvelertak. It would seem that they have had a significant success selling records in their homeland and have been praised by critics for a unique blend of Rock n Roll and Black Metal. On "Nattesferd", the groups third, much of the black sounds like a hangover heard in singer Hejlvik's rough, tonal screams and guitar distortions that are a touch more visceral and thick than whats warranted for the Rock N Roll core of their sound. They are not the first too fuse the two sounds together but maybe the first where the artistic intention comes from a much brighter and expressive place than the scornful fire and hate filled noise of Black Metal.

The sounds of a generation gone by echo through this record 70s Rock and Hard Rock leanings reminiscent of Thin Lizzy, see "1985", and other acts of that era make up a large portion of the sounds between the occasional blast beat and shredded guitar riff. Its fluid, organic, full of twists and turns led by solid guitar riffs often accompanied by bright acoustics that accent the rhythm guitars direction. These songs have a fantastic sense of direction and expansion as they evolve through many riffs and progressions that become pretty captivating when in the mood to enjoy whats on show.

With this they certainly carve a unique identity for themselves on a gorgeous sounding production that breaths a ton of life into the guitar tones and strikes a sweet balance with the drums. Everything sounds peachy except for two things which I always found dispelling. I'm not a fan of the vocals, they feel out of place, a little raw and flat and for the most part become tiresome when in the music. As well as that some of the guitar tones get a little weighty and aggressive which feels unnecessary. With that said there are plenty of blacker moments in this record that flow very well between its counterpart. There is artistic creative and vision in abundance but the way it comes together just isn't quite for my taste all of the time. Despite my annoyances I still think its a fantastic record.
Favorite Tracks: Nattesferd, Heksabrann
Rating: 7/10