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sábado, 10 de agosto de 2013

Hexvessel - Dawnbearer

...and that wraps it up as far as old reviews go. Now I can focus on actual content! By the way, the album is still 10€ (8€ digital copy on bandcamp, which I'll link below) but I'm not sure whether the shipping is still free, I caught that last year so I was pretty pleased about it. Also this review is more in line with what I like to write, technical and concise. 

Previous archived reviews here, here, here and here.


Hexvessel - Dawnbearer (2011)



Arguably among the best releases of 2011, Hexvessel’s Dawnbearer is a psychedelic folk gem with superb ambience and progression.

Hexvessel were created by Mat McNerney (aka Kvohst), a black metal vocalist from England who moved to Finland, where he would unite with several other musicians (including people from the great Dark Buddha Rising) and build this project.

There’s nothing particularly innovative about Dawnbearer but again, there’s really not much more one can stretch within this particular genre. But what they manage to do, they pull it off with skill and feeling. The composition is strongly based on melodic repetitions, acoustic wanderings and of course background psychedelic noise, either by a distorted guitar or a dragging violin. There are of course some more folk instruments thrown in, such as the banjo, but the bulk of the music is centred around those elements. The vocals are impeccable and the album itself is very fluid and constant, perfect for those with a taste for more ambience-driven soft tunes. Its fluidity doesn’t compromise the creativity of each song however, and that’s probably one of the strongest points about this album, which is particularly difficult to pull off since it is a 15 (!) song composition.

At the time of my writing this review, the album is on sale for 10€ with free shipping – so there’s another reason why you should buy it. It’s totally worth it. Give it a go.

sexta-feira, 9 de agosto de 2013

Ufomammut - ORO Opus Primum

I have one more review after this one and then I'll get to some actual content. This review isn't half as bad as the previous others - that's good. Also I've seen Ufomammut two times already since I wrote this and shit's pretty intense, they are an amazing band live.

Previous archived reviews here, here and here.



Ufomammut - ORO Opus Primum (2012)

Italy’s spawn Ufomammut are as good as it gets when it comes to heavy music. This special blend of atmospheric doom and psychedelic/stoner metal will have you gaspless for quite some time, or at least until you feel like snacking. The munchies, man.

I will admit that I had been awaiting this particular album to come out for some time, now. Their previous installment (a sludge masterpiece called Eve) had already rotated far beyond whatever threshold of unhealthy obsession you might imagine, and knowing that this Italian trio had signed up with Neurot Records, it had to be good. So my expectations were pretty high.

First things go first though, and for those out of the loop Ufomammut can best be described as psychedelic doom, with some slabs of post-metal thrown in. Their sound is often heavy and slow, whose noise is highly centered around a distorted bass and drums, with psychedelic guitar effects and clean vocals. This may not sound particularly new; however, they pull it off with great originality and feeling. One of my favourite aspects is how their music stands out by having the instrumental bits go way over the vocals. Expect walls of sound – in fact, during the most heavy sections of their music you will be trying to dig through a powerful sense of noise while catching a glimpse of voice, covered by heavy riffs and an ungodly bass.

In that sense my album choice would still be Eve, mostly because I’m soft for sludgey post-metal and that album is filled with it to the brim with it. ORO is more of a return to the earlier Ufomammut it seems, slower and more minimalistic when it comes to noise. More doomy but less “dirty”, as it were; less physical but more psychological; less imposing, more destructive. It’s a trip and quite a big one too.

The album is great. It’s split in two (Opus Primum being the first, Opus Alter will be the second, set to release sometime around September) and reviewing this first instance alone is quite incomplete, I feel. But either way it’s probably going to be one of the greatest releases this year – or at least it’s got my sure vote.

A great album and a must have for anyone with decent music taste.

quinta-feira, 8 de agosto de 2013

High On Fire - De Vermis Mysteriis


Third review on the backlog, this time for an album that quickly faded after its hype. All in all, looking back, I think I might have overestimated how good it was, seeing as I never actually picked it up again. It's an ok album. King of Days is still a kickass song though, I'll link it below.
Check out my other archived reviews here and here.


High On Fire - De Vermis Mysteriis (2012)


The kings of electric stoner metal are back, and their latest album is a slap to the face and a punch to the groin. The good kind.

For those not living under stone, High on Fire is the influential metallic child of Matt Pike (who played guitar in Sleep), and can be best described as “Stoner Metal meets Motörhead”. It’s frantic, it’s heavy and it’s fun. It’s also pretty unique, in that great way where you can recognize a High on Fire song from a mile away.

Now a careful listener might think High on Fire went as heavy as it could get – maybe Matt is getting older, man, calm it down a bit. Nope. De Vermis Mysteriis is strong, powerful and metal in every way you grab at it, as its opening statement “Serums of Liao” clearly shows. Trash ain’t dead, people.

But even though its four first songs are the gist of what High on Fire is all about, it’s from then on that De Vermis Mysteriis gets interesting for me. “Samsara”, song number 5, is an instrumental piece that carefully introduces us to the next half of a slower, heavier, fuller album that really gnaws your teeth in. Madness, man – I really do love this second half. More so than the first, if only because this is where King of Days –a brutal, brutal song – really finds its place.

I can’t wait to see this bad boy in action. By which I mean watching High on Fire play this album live. Also, if you’re not sold on the hysterical experience that is Matt Pike, I still say that the slower second half makes up for an album just on its own – and you still get that delightful trashy four-track goodness up front.

Great album overall. Grab it while it’s hot – If only for King of Days*.

*Don’t buy it just because of this song; that would be pretty stupid. The other songs are great too. 

terça-feira, 6 de agosto de 2013

Corrupted - Garten Der Unbewusstheit

Second in my small list of backlogged reviews, this time I had picked up Corrupted's latest. Rereading this, I don't think it does justice to how good the album really is so I consider it a poorly achieved review. I also don't like the writing style, nowadays I'm more inclined towards something a little more technical and descriptive than this pseudo-poetic nonsense that I'm clearly not very good at. All filler is good filler I suppose, though.

Check out my previous backlog review here.


Corrupted - Garten Der Unbewusstheit (2011)


So after some phasing out I finally had myself listening to this album and let me say I was more than happy that I did.

Well, if by happy you mean stripped down of all hope and reason, screaming inside as each riff tore my soul apart limb from limb (o for all the limbs my soul possessed) and all that other cliché’d nonsense you usually get when listening to good doom. Yeah, happy in that sense at least.

But first, the basics: Corrupted are far from being strangers to the doom scene. They’re a Japanese band that more often than not sing in Spanish and are known for breaking the canon to a slight degree, bringing bagpipes and other folk elements to their music as well as a sense of “calmness” from times to times. All with a surprising coherence to it, not being one of those bands where they add things that don’t make sense and it’s your fault for “not getting it”.

…which brings me to this unpronounceable gem. Garten Der Unbewusstheit is a funeral doom masterpiece with delightful tones of atmospheric sludge that progresses slow but steadily into contemplative beauty. It starts out with a minimalist approach, teasing with slight tones and variances that set a great mood; it transforms itself acoustically while never failing to maintain the proper ambience; it explodes finally in destructive bliss, a catharsis you’d expect to witness at the end of the world.

Nevertheless, I wouldn’t say that it brings anything new – the melodies are your textbook doom riffs, the rhythm is as slow as you’d expect and the voice doesn’t really set itself apart from any other doom that you’d get. Its halfway song – Against The Darkest Days – is an interesting acoustic skit but again this is not novelty in the genre so if you’re expecting groundbreaking extravaganza you got your wrong pick.

However, if you’ve been craving your doom fix and like me think standard is pretty much awesome too, then I couldn’t recommend this enough. It is indeed a great album, both for chronic listeners and people new to the music genre.

Just get the damn thing already.


segunda-feira, 5 de agosto de 2013

Blood, Sweat & Vinyl

This is the first in a small series of articles I wrote for another blog last year that has, since then, been discontinued. I figure it shouldn't go to waste, but it's a little outdated regardless and I feel - hope - my writing style has improved a bit by now. Hydra Head went bankrupt some months ago - actually I'm not sure how that turned out - so take it with that particular grain of salt.

Documentary

Blood, Sweat & Vinyl: DIY in the 21st Century (2011)



Because metalheads aren’t pretentious enough, these good folks have presented a compelling argument as to why contemporary heavy music is awesome, and they’ve done it the right way.

Simple in its notion but undoubtedly hard in its execution, “Blood, Sweat & Vinyl: DIY in the 21st Century” (BSV) is the result of a five-year long project that accompanied three great independent labels – Constellation, Hydra Head and Neurot –, interviewed their bands and key people surrounding the scene, gathered high quality live footage and made an argument, a powerful argument, about the state of heavy music in the present.

So the story goes as follows: once upon a time, the mainstream music industry was grabbing bands by a stranglehold which greatly impaired their creative potential. Musicians felt the need for an uncompromised but serious deal, a label that would provide them with the creative freedom for them to expand on their music and the tools for them to achieve it, without imposing castrating deadlines or unreasonable contractual demands (such as “Have three albums up the next two years and make it snappy. Also, go cut that damn hair of yours. You look like a faggot.”). Cutting that story short, these are three labels that went through with it, because if you want something done right…

These are the labels built and fronted by the the people behind Godspeed You! Black Emperor (GY!BE), Isis and Neurosis, respectively (along with other bands and people, of course, these being the names that “stand out”, so to speak). This is where come the people with the ideals, the influence and the capability to keep up with the demanding task that is yelling against the wind. And here, I believe, lies the fulcrum for this documentary. It’s not so much the “hey, here’s some bands we’ve interviewed” but really it’s more “these guys are doing something great, and here’s why”. And they do it, I believe, by presenting three strong cases:

Firstly, none of the musicians “brand” themselves, everyone rejecting the notion that they play a specific “kind” of music. This is a strong point in the documentary and is one of the major arguments towards the idea of unbinding bands to a particular role or genre. This is also why every GY!BE album is unique in its way: they don’t feel the need to appease to a certain kind of play, a certain style.

Secondly, there’s an expansive thought process behind the music-making process which spans beyond “the band”. As you see with the Hydra Head case, albums are made with a concept and always thinking within a certain community of like-minded people. The extensive coverage of album art and the artists involved with creating said art, themselves free something which is often disregarded by music listeners, shows how the concept (or should I say the culture) that encompasses this particular musical context is one of multiplicity, to a point where the listeners themselves are involved in the whole process.

Thirdly, there’s a way of doing things, following the point above, which both involves and challenges the community towards that collective principle. Paraphrasing Steve Von Till (from Neurosis), they want the listeners to actually “look for” the kind of music they put out, instead of producing something that’s readily available for easy consumption. Which is to say there is a will to engage the community in the albums that they make, rather than maintaining the old separation “I make the song, you buy the song”.

More than simply exposing a music genre or bands, BSV engages you into the rich cultural environment that is contemporary heavy music. It shows you the sounds, the art, the people around it and it brings you into arguing what making music is really about nowadays. It questions mainstream labels, the music genre distinctions and the expansiveness of the cultural complexes surround a particular set of bands and the ambience they produce. It’s an awesome work that they did and a great way to show people who don’t know the bands or are unaware of this reality. It’s also a must-have for those who enjoy this kind of music and feel like they belong in this world.

The documentary has been screening all over the world in music festivals and other venues. There are clips of it on their website you can check out and that’s also where you can purchase the DVD. The box set comes with awesome live footage which you can show off to friends like I do. There’s no valid reason not to get it, truth be told.

domingo, 4 de agosto de 2013

Sundaze

Sundays are special days, stuck between saturday night craze and monday morning bore. Let's celebrate by blankly staring out the window:
I once had a scottish e-friend telling me that a sunny day in glasgow is truly something out of the ordinary.
I particularly enjoy this Radio Dpt. song because it's nothing like their other songs that I know.
Club 8 kinda drifts between nice chillout pop and clothing store muzak - or maybe they're the same? Wasn't sure that it would fit here, oh well.
Finishing off this set with a nice mixtape by Stumbleine, should keep you entertained for a while. I highly recommend you check the rest of Sumbleine's soundcloud, there's some superb shit going on there.