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sexta-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2014

Benighted in Sodom’s track from the forthcoming album


I first came across Benighted in Sodom through their split with Bethlehem (other band that I’m absolutely crazy about, by the way). It is a one-man band from the USA, formed by Matron Thorn, otherwise known for his work in Ævangelist or as a onetime guitarist in the aforementioned Bethlehem. I instantly fell in love with Benighted in Sodom’s doomish unorthodox black metal. Matron Thorn has published tens of releases in just seven years under the name of Benighted in Sodom, with an average of four or five releases per year! When I saw their discography in metal-archives.com the first thing that came to mind was “Ok, the split with Bethlehem was good, but this insane amount of releases must impoverish the quality of the music somehow”. Well, I was wrong. The albums I heard so far are really good! It is a sort of melancholic, psychotic doom/black metal, the guitar riffing reminding of old Shining at some points. Benighted in Sodom is the perfect soundtrack for a sojourn at the mental asylum staring at a blank wall under a heavy dosage of tranquilizers.


Last October, Matron publicized the title of the forthcoming 2014 full-length, "Do Not Go Gently Into That Good Night". One of the tracks to be included in the album, entitled “Sometimes I Don’t Mind”, was posted on Youtube. Check it out!






If you liked it, give a listen to the albums they have available on Bandcamp, “Reverse Baptism” and “Hybrid Parasite Evangelistica”.

quinta-feira, 30 de janeiro de 2014

Carpe Noctem - “In Terra Profugus”

Iceland is a place that has always fascinated me as a largely inhospitable land of extremes, where fire and ice meet, thus creating landscapes as much breath-taking as barren. Also when it comes to musical production, Iceland is a good place to be. It has nurtured fabulous bands of several genres - just look at Sigur Rós, Svartidauði, Sólstafir or Fortíð. Last year, we witnessed the release of the debut opus from one of the most exciting bands in the Icelandic metal scene and in worldwide black metal in general: Carpe Noctem’s “In Terra Profugus”. A masterpiece of sombre, frenetic, disharmonic black metal sprinkled with mid-tempo beats, slower, more ambient interludes with clean guitars, and occasional straightforward “classic” black metal riffs. Besides, I found out that two of their members have played in other amazing black metal band, which unfortunately split-up, Dysthymia (check out their only full-length, “The Shivering Opus”, released in 2008).  “In Terra Profugus” is a mandatory album for fans of Deathspell Omega and Carpe Noctem’s fellow countrymen Svartidauði.

Anyhow, since I’m aware I suck big time reviewing music, enough bullshit and listen to what they have to play.


quarta-feira, 29 de janeiro de 2014

This Will Destroy You - Black Dunes



Because Tunnel Blanket is still king among its post-rockian peers, and there won't ever be one chance to share this album too many.

Embedding a specific song is borderline criminal seeing as the whole album should be listened through, but it's the sacrifice one must make in order to keep up with the song of the day format. I know, I'm a modern day hero. As per usual, you can find the whole thing at the bandcamp page and if you haven't listened to it, you should.

Hypothermia - Självdestruktivitet Född Av Monotona Tankegångar IV: Warakumbla

Personally, I avoid the label “DSBM” (Depressive Suicidal Black Metal). I was amazed back in the first decade of this millennium when several black metal bands started to drop the satanic imagery towards a more intimate, individualistic approach towards music, and incorporate elements from other genres, such as doom metal, shoegaze or post-rock. Bands that started to give up on pseudo-religious themes in benefit of more introspective insights into the real darkness: the darkness that inhabits our minds and accompanies us until the final decline of our pointless existence. Bands that conjured up real demons; the kind of demons which haunt us every single day of our lives, driving us to utter misery and insanity, and lure us into the wickedest acts of self-destruction. The true blackness lies within.

But soon after, as it usually happens, individuals all around the globe copied the formula established by their predecessors, tinged their music with a supposedly “suicidal” sentiment, and - lo and behold! - here we have the “DSBM” sub-genre! Many of these projects had some quality, of course, but there sprung literally thousands of bands whose emotional intensity and “depressive” mood could easily be surpassed by Demis Roussos. Thus, I quickly lost interest in the “DSBM scene”. But that doesn’t mean I lost interest in introspective, melancholic or depressive black metal; quite on the contrary, it remains as my favourite branch of metal music. But it has to have good quality and by this I do not mean elaborate technicality or anything like that, but simply that abstract dimension so hard to define and impossible to quantify: feeling or, as phrased above, emotional intensity.

But enough chitchat. All this rambling served to point out how Hypothermia is one of the seminal bands in this specific variant of black metal. But if you’re remotely acquainted with this type of music, you probably know this already. Hypothermia’s sad, minimalistic, repetitive guitar riffs; its down-tempo, monotonous rhythmic section and Kim Carlsson’s anguished shrieking made them one of the must-hear bands to anyone who’s into saturnine black metal. The band has evolved to a considerable degree since its first recordings, although maintaining its essence (just compare older albums like “Veins” or “Köld” with their last full-length, “Skogens Hjärta”). Their music channels a sense of despondency and despair in a way that few other bands are able to do. They have a new full-length on the forge for already two years and released a new demo-track this month, “Självdestruktivitet Född Av Monotona Tankegångar IV: Warakumbla”, which is available for download on Bandcamp and for sale on the gigs they’re performing in Germany, Belgium and Netherlands during March, together with Svarti Loghin in the “Tanke & Minne” mini-tour. Check them out and unjoy!

 Here's the new demo: Here are the two tracks to feature in the forthcoming album:

terça-feira, 28 de janeiro de 2014

Ruth Garbus - And You Be



Today's song comes from indie-to-the-max label osrtapes, which seems to focus on dishing out minimalistic experimental singers and songmakers.There's some good stuff to explore at their soundcloud page, one of those being this song by Ruth Garbus, a singer who also apparently has some drawing skills to boot - if my google-fu is trustworthy to any extent, she seems to also be a designer.

Since I don't have any notorious skills I'll just stick to sharing other people's work. There's a place for everyone in this world it seems, for all that's worth.