Showing posts with label Blackened. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blackened. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Maveth- Coils of the Black Earth Review

Maveth - Coils of the Black Earth

Band- Maveth
Album- Coils of the Black Earth
Origin- Helsinki, Finland
Mark- 4/5
Label- Dark Descent Records









I sure hope this gets posted after my Sorcery “Arrival At 6” review because this can be the ying to it’s yang. The good to it’s bad. The old Metallica to it’s new. Well, but where are my manners? First let me speak of what we’re dealing with here. Remember the time Finland was crucial to Death Metal? Me neither, but Finland was one of those countries that when Death Metal came out of it, it kicked your ass back to second grade, wherein your priest molested your ass back into your mom’s womb. From Demigod, to Demilich to Abhorrence, while not as popular as their Swedish counterpart , they always offered a unique and innovative listening experience. But now fast forward 20 years, and what’s new and brewing within Finland? Well, much, but it certainly has not become the Death Metal mainstay that is Sweden. While a Metal capital for all things such as Folk Metal (ala Korpiklaani, Turisas, Finntroll, Moonsorrow, Ensiferum, and every other band that can hold a myriad of acoustic instruments) , Black Metal (ala Behexen, Impaled Nazarene, Horna, Sargeist, Archgoat and any other band who can’t afford proper amps/guitars/heating system) and of course, probably their biggest export, Melodic Death/Power Metal ( Children of Bodom, Norther, Wintersun and any other bands who’s guitarist can shred and wail at the same time.)

But oddly enough, this gem of a Blackened Death Metal band comes from Finland. Who are our brave troubadours? None other than the Hebrew named Maveth! (because fuck yeah adding an H to Hebrew words makes perfect sense! Just ask KatatoniaElohim Crystal Meth) While I disagree with the odd Scandinavian way of adding h’s to Hebrew words (ala Meshuggah, Elohim Meth, ETC ETC,) this band takes rough, ugly, dirty (no, I’m not listing adjectives regarding Devon Townsend’s visage) and uncompromising BDM and does it right. If Arrival At 6 brought nothing new to the table, Coils of the Black Earth does everything to both be oldschool and refreshing at the same time. Right off from the samples of rain on “The Devourer Within The Gulf” (Saddam Hussein-Ben) one can see the beginning of the V’s on his Metal checklist . Dark? Yes, moody? Fuck yes, Evil? To quote Nergal, “blacker than the devil’s ass” and we’re only on the first song. What I like about this band is that their versatile. The band manages to install their grim, vicious brand of DM both on the slower mammoth like tracks, or the fast blastbeaty ones such as the aforementioned opener.

Hymn To Azazel is a mix of both. Mostly sticking to the super fast core of this album, by this track you can somewhat feel the line the band draws between Black and Death Metal. How so? Secret, nananana, you can’t make me tell. No but, you can notice the DM styling via the distortion and drumming which is very reminiscent of oldschool Euro Death with some very Taake/Marduk esque riffs and screechy guitars , with the Slayer a-melodic solos throw in. Sounds familiar? Of course, but Maveth again, gives it there own twist. In the modern world of oldschool DM where pretty much everything has been tried (or declared poser ;) ) it’s refreshing to see band with a taste. This is why, at least I think, bands like Maveth and Necrowretch, who are on their first release, garner so much success.

Remember how I mentioned slower hulking tracks? The first of these is Hymn To The Black Matron (black matronOprah Winfrey?) it’s a slow track, with those churning blastbeats and guitars that smell of evil. It gets faster at times, but it really somewhat reminds me of a more evil, a bit more Swedish, lower tone Asphyx slow track. And hey ho we’re in the last 4 tracks!

Stating Eritcho is of the more melodic tracks on the album, while nothing to gawk at and yell Metalcore, the guitar line is memorable and the vocal patterns are reminiscent of Nile/Behemoth to me. It is also one of my favorite tracks on the album, so you know it’s quality (I am the say all and end all, the alpha and the omega.) Before the last two parter track of the album, there’s a quote that goes “dream, dream so the day may come” (major Barack Obama points to you there) that then kicks into the Blackened Death Doomy goodness of this track. Definitely the slowest track on this album, the power of the bands American vocalist “Christbutcher” (couldn’t find his real name anywhere.) While he supplies good vocals all along the album, his Ross Dolan (Immolation) esque vocals really shine on this one. The album ends on a two parter named Terminus( no, not Where Death is Most Alive.) So they basically took my “oh my fucking god burn it with fire” hatred for “throwing all our tricks at one song and making it super long” and took it to a wholeeee new level. But by doing this, it feels like two more normal tracks. Which are a fitting close to this album. Grim, uncompromising , and gritty as the rest of it.

Burn the cats and draw the pentagrams, it’s one of those kind of nights.  

Behemoth - The Satanist Review

Vinyl Cover of Behemoth's new opus, The Satanist 



Band- Behemoth
Album- The Satanist
Origin- Gdansk, Poland
Score 10/10



For the sake of full transparency, i'll get this off my chest right off the bat- Behemoth is my favorite band. I think that ever since my taste in music really reached the point where it became solidified, and I became invested in the world of Metal, Behemoth began speaking to me. The sense of real grandeur, the heaviness, and the fact that everything the guitar tone, to Inferno's monstrous blastbeats and Nergal's vocals sat perfectly with me through pretty much every release, gave these Polish monsters the status of crown jewel in my musical pantheon.

Yet, there was always a concern. You see, Behemoth are not the type of band which is comfortable with settling. Every release sounds different, at least slightly from its predecessor. From the Pagan/Black Metal style of Sventieth (Storming Near The Baltic) and Grom (which means Thunderclap in Polish,) to the unpolished Blackened Death style of Pandemonic Incantations and Satanica, to their steady upwards slope in Death Metal through Thelema 6 (my personal favorite) to Evangelion. This is not a band which is comfortable staying in one spot. Now, while this is one of the main reasons I love them, it is also always a risk. I have faith in the lads, and much security in their ability to keep evolving well, you never know. For every Enslaved, Amorphis and Watain, or bands who made transitions successfully, there are about 3 Morbid Angels gone trance, Satyricons gone Black N' Roll and Opeths gone Progressive Rock.

So of course, when it came to my attention that my nearest and dearest were having a new album, so soon after Nergal, thank Satan, won his battle with Leukemia, I was both incredibly happy, and incredibly afraid. Especially when Nergal kept throwing around words like “innovative” and “sincere.” Usually when artists start saying that i'm afraid they're going to go on to make a heart breaking and frankly uninteresting record that capitalizes on the “we're trying to be interesting” rather than actually being interesting through the music. Yet, being a believer, I kept my faith in Nergal. The man who brought me Demigod and Thelema 6 deserves some kind of trust, so trusted him I did. So the months went by, promotional images and materials were released , and come December 7th, there it fucking was.

The first single and video which opens the album, Blow Your Trumpets, Gabriel. Of course, first came the video from them preforming it in Brutal Assault (a Metal festival in the Czech Republic,) there it already sounded good, but damn it, I needed to hear it properly! So, with trepidation, and a heart beat reaching the 200's pretty easily, feeling like my bullets were trying to shoot out of my chest, I clicked on the link to the video on YouTube. Thinking to myself “ this better be good.” Slowly, the songs starts into a mammoth of an opener. The stomping, burgeoning riffs sounded like the gates of a sinister temple opening, with Inferno's drum beat sounding like a beat to this mesmerizing trance. With Nergal supplying the text for this ritual, it became abundantly clear. Behemoth are back, baby.

Fast forward two months of me tapping my table and looking at the calendar like an anxious idiot, the day finally came. February 4th was a cold, snowy day in New York City (where I was at the time,) and while I knew of the what was happening that day, I initially didn't plan to take place. My resolve was “yeah, I have this and that editions waiting for me at home, I'll just wait. I don't have to get it at launch.” Now that held pretty nicely, but a thought occurred to me “wellllll, I might as well pop into a Best Buy to take a look at it.” Popped in I have, and my resolve last around 4.5 second with the CD in my hand. 10$ are not worth the pain of being in NYC for two weeks and not knowing what this fucker sounds like until after everybody else has.

So, after two months of hearing Blow Your Trumpets, Gabriel (and Ora Pro Nobis Lucifer, but that doesn't fit the order of this review so we'll talk about it later,) I was finally treated to the track which follows that grand entrance into The Satanist's pandemonium. Furor Divinus does justice to its name (Divine Fury) as Nergal sounds enormously angry, as if he was enraged by his time away. The track breaks forward full speed, and begins to shed light on the differences between this album and the few before it. This album, to me, rather than being the per-ordained evolution from Evangelion, is actually closer to a more perfect vision of Satanica. An intelligent, Blackened Death release that is organically mastered and cooked to the point of perfection.

Yet, I feel that the biggest achievement Behemoth have made with this album, disregarding the circumstances which were not easy, is that it is enormously varied. For example, passing onto the third track Messe Noire (French for Black Mass,) you can already see the dynamic of the album. A mid-paced to slow track, with the vocals sounding like a sermon on the street of a Black Plague infested Europe. The tracks open with the line “I believe in Satan!” and the slow guitars laid down behind the vocals somewhat support a “sick” or “plagued” atmosphere. Messe Noire and it's following track, Ora Pro Nobis Lucifer are a show of the exact beauty in the duality of this release. While Messe Noire is one of the least catchy and hardest to digest tracks on the album, Ora Pro Nobis Lucifer is the exact opposite. Easy to digest, beautifully quick and with a unique rhythm, it is absolutely no wonder that this song was picked as the second single from the album. Ora Pro Nobis Lucifer (or, in translation, Prey For Us Lucifer,) starts off sounding almost a bit like Chant of Ezkaton without the the melodic over-layering, but the sound and the drum beat make all the difference. Inferno keeps this really cool and irregular tempo throughout the whole song that actually gave this song the majority of it's personality. Then of course is the epic slow down. Around midway through the song, Orion does this groovy bass bend and Inferno sticks his drum just once as Nergal kicks into a crushing part near the end. Invoking nearly any demon you can think about, the lyrics end with another phrase that stuck with me from this album “the black sun will never set, because it never rose.”

Reaching now into the middle of the album (5th track out of 9), is the track Amen. Amen is kind of a touch back with newer Behemoth and I actually thought that it purveyed a strong point of brutality that I really enjoyed. In all and all, it is one of the angriest, shortest and heaviest tracks on the album, with lyrics that would turn a nun into a prostitute and a prostitute into Cee Lo Greene. This track kind of takes the other newer Behemoths into the Satanist's era. The Satanist's title track closes what to me is the first part of the album. An epic if softer track, it shows one of the many new “shades of Behemoth” so to speak. For me, the Satanist, alongside with the closing track, O Father, O Satan, O Sun, shows Behemoth bringing a new instrument into making their pieces sound larger life. They do so by making big sounding yet gritty pieces. That are both at once cataclysmic yet relate-able. This is to me is the personification of what Nergal meant by a more personal album. It's not meandering, it's not full of coded messages or lyrics that you have to watch interviews to understand, but rather, it takes some of the earlier philosophy of Behemoth and applies them to a much more personal basis. It is a manifesto in that it applies to people and individuals rather than to specific topics like earlier topics taken up by the band. The album then continues to Ben Sahar (a track title that has my name in it? Supreme points!,) a mid paced romp that most closely is linked on the album with Ora Pro Nobis Lucifer. Fun, and like the track I paired it up with, beautifully headbangable to the point of breaking several joints in your neck. I also think the usage of choirs near the end was an enhancing touch, and unlike when many other bands use it, was done with a great sense of elegance that doesn't feel exaggerated. .



A moment before the end, a breath before the last track of the album I waited a whole 6 years for, comes my favorite track of the album, In The Absence Ov Light. A barrage of The Satanist era heaviness opens this mammoth of a track with a blast, and Nergal wastes no time growling his decayed and grim heart out within moments. This track, like most of the album, is a contradiction. While (alongside Amen,) it contains without a doubt some of the fastest and most brutal riffing and drumming of the album, it also contains a curious and almost Shining-esque acoustic part mid song that changes the whole atmosphere. From a furious attack , the song mellows out almost entirely into the acoustic guitars, with a saxophone accompanying Nergal reading a spoken word speech of sorts in Polish. When the speech reaches it's end, the song takes a split second of a breath before kicking right back into high gear to close off the strongest and for me, one of the most memorable Behemoth songs of recent memory. It absolutely cracked my top ten Behemoth song list of all time, and that list has only been cracked by two The Satanist tracks ( alongside Ora Pro Nobis Lucifer.) Here we are, at the last track. So far, not only Behemoth fulfilled my expectations for their comeback, but they have far exceeded expectations. But now come the last check on the list, the cherry on the icing on the cake, will the last track be great? Will it leave a taste for more? Will it suffer from a “longest track on the album, lets put everything together incoherently” syndrome?

Yes, yes, and obviously, no. O Father, O Satan, O Sun, the closing song, is Behemoth's equivalent of Led Zeppelin's Kashmir (or Immortal's Tyrants, take your pick.) A track that you'd imagine was played in a movie as the camera zooms out onto the sprawling wastelands while the army marches. The track sounds like what you'd imagine describes a conflict, yet the lyrics take that conflict into an internal spot rather than an external spot. On no track on the album, or matter of fact, in Behemoth's career, has the the representation of Satan's philosophical importance in their music been any clearer. An incomplete deity, a deity which is perfect in its imperfection, the Satan described in O Father, O Satan, O Sun represents human rebellion, represents humanities' conflict internal conflicts to develop and seek enlightenment. An allegorical champion for the duality of existence, to show that divine and complete perfection is but an invention used to limit the mind as to stop it from understanding it's own ability to grow in an imperfect state.


As you might've guessed at this point, I believe The Satanist was not only worth the nail-biting 6 years wait, but then some. For 6 years I didn't know what was going to happen, from the band facing the danger of losing it's leader, and to be honest its essence to disease, to the general doubts one has before his favorite band releases a new album, not to mention a comeback album. 6 years later, I realize that it's moments like these, when I can smile such victories rather than sigh a relief, when I got not only the joy of it scratching by and being decent, but the roaring thunder of it being an absolutely excellent release that marks a new chapter in the history of my favorite band, is why i'm so deeply attached to music in the first place. While there's the sadness of failure and the moments of disappointment, the happiness and emotional relevance of seeing the music that you love prevail, is legitimately a feeling which is hard to match.


Sunday, April 22, 2012

Of True Hate- An interview with Konrad "Destroyer" Ramotowski of Hate


             (Konrad "Destroyer" Ramotowski left, Adam "ATF Sinner" Buszko, random girl and myself)

Of True Hate 

Hate is a force to be reckoned with, the single emotion which can turn your fellow human beings into wretches, which can justify any act of destruction. Hate, the Polish Death Metal band from Warsaw, is also a force to be reckoned with. The Metal titans stood the test of time, being irreplaceable members of the same scene which spawned other giants such as Behemoth, Decapitated, and Vader.  With their latest opus "Erebos" being a fan favorite and their recent heavy touring is bringing the evil, heavy war machine that is Hate to the masses, We found this time an auspicious one to sit with guitarist Konrad Ramotowski for an interview

Key-
M- Metalist
D-Konrad “Destroyer” Ramotowski
-

M- cześć Konrad, have been a fan of your music for a long time, thank you for this interview
D – Hello! Thank you for good words.


M- How was Hate formed? Could you tell us a bit about the early beginning of Hate? when did you join Hate ?
D – Hate was formed in medieval past by ATF Sinner and some guys that wanted to play death metal. With a lot of line-up changes they've recorded some demos and albums becoming quite popular in Poland. After  recording “Awakening of the Liar” in 2004 - the first album for french label Listenable – some things around the band has changed for better, for example there was first European tour with Decapitated in 2005. I  joined the band in 2006 as a session guitarist after recording the “Anaclasis” album, playing on tour with Carpathian Forest and Keep of Kalessin. After the tour I became a regular band member.
 M- what do you feel you contribute to the band? How do you seek to advance with the project?

 D – I have a lot of useful ideas and I'm responsible for almost all guitar leads and solos for last two albums. All guys have their part of responsibility when it comes to work around the band's things, I mean websites, merchandise, transportation etc.  and of course I have my part too. It's like our own company and it's amazing. 

M-how do you feel your music has changed since the early days?  What elements do you feel are stronger now than they used to be?
D – The most important thing is that our music is no more just typical Florida-based death metal, like it was in “early days”. We decided to do something new, fresh - still extreme music, but not so typical or predictable. Now it is much more complex, including a lot of influences from black metal, industrial and even rock – music that inspire all of us.
M- what inspires you to write? What’s the riff writing process for Destroyer of Hate?
D – When I write solos, I have a lot of inspirations in rock, blues and heavy metal music. There is a lot of great guitarist like Slash, Zakk Wylde or Gary Moore that inspire me to play. When it comes to riffing – I improvise and sometimes play something interesting:)
 M- what do you feel is special about Erebos in contrast to the earlier albums?  How has the working process changed between that, than earlier works?
D – At the moment it's the most diverse and complex Hate's album. Most dark, radical without any doubt. It's our best sound production. We tuned guitars lower than before and it gave us  better, crushing sound. We  were well-prepared for the session. We recorded a detailed demo version before coming to the studio. ATF Sinner and Hexen entered it to start recording drums only two days after long USA tour – it was insane:) After last five years of hard touring we are much more experienced and it makes some things going faster and effectively. We recorded “Erebos” in five weeks only! It was very intensive work. In the past everything took longer time.
M- how much of your life revolves around the band? Do you feel it is a large part of your life?


D – At the moment, the band is my priority. We spend a lot of time touring around the world, working for our name all the time. During last few years my  involvement in  the band is growing, and yes – it's a large part of my life.

M- what do you think makes Hate as a band unique? For example, I noticed that the subject matter of songs is often deeper, and more personal than other bands on songs such as Wrists in the Erebos record, and Immortality of the record, Anaclasis: a Haunting Gospel of Malice and Hatred, what are some of your philosophies and beliefs?

D – I think that in last years we earn our musical style – something that we can call “Hate's sound” or “Hate's riffing”.  Using the electronics as an important element,  especially  playing live, makes us different than others. We listen a lot of music styles, and you can hear it in our compositions.  When it comes to our ideology or philosophy – we are interested in dark part of life and human nature. We represent the rebellion against all captivating systems that supress human powers. Some inspirations come from classical philosophy, mythologies, occultism and history. What is the most important, we don't want to use “traditional” symbols and trivial blasphemies so typical for death-metal scene. We are bored with these. We look further and want something serious.   
M- in recent years, Poland in particular has one of the most fruitful Death Metal scenes, with veterans such as Behemoth, Vader, Decapitated, Lost Soul, and yourselves alongside newer bands such as Escape From and many others, why do you think Poland has become such rich, fertile ground for Death Metal? What makes that scene so unique? 


D -Well, it's a question for a sociologist. And a good one! I was asked this question a lot of times, and I cannot find a really good answer for it.

M- recently you have been touring with other important Metal acts such as Sepultura, Melechesh, and Belphegor, as well as performing in large festivals such as Metalcamp, where do you see yourself going from here? What's the future of Hate? 


D –  Today we start our headlining European tour with Vesania and Negura Bunget. We play 20 shows. In November/December we have more than 40 shows with Mayhem in the USA. It means that we have 150 gigs altogether these year. We signed a new contract with Napalm Records and we are going to record a new album next year. I can see very good future for Hate. As you can see we work very hard for our success and some years we can see results.  


M- last but not least, any words to the Israeli Metal crowd?


D – I've heard a lot of good things about Israel metalheads, so I do hope that we will visit your country and spread our musical disease soon.
M- thanks again, here's to seeing you guys on the road some day!
D – Thank you for the interview!