2015 POLL RESULTS COUNTDOWN - ILM Metal(ish) Albums of the Year

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (1315 of them)

Nechochwen is one I'm likely to buy.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 13 December 2015 23:43 (eight years ago) link

I always find the bottom parts of the poll the most interesting as that's where I pick up good recommendations.

Cosmic Slop, Sunday, 13 December 2015 23:44 (eight years ago) link

1:30 into Ken Mode. Wow, so this is basically a Shellac record?

EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 13 December 2015 23:48 (eight years ago) link

Ken Mode also going on the to-buy list.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Monday, 14 December 2015 00:22 (eight years ago) link

This Amestigon is very good. Nice one voters

Cosmic Slop, Monday, 14 December 2015 00:28 (eight years ago) link

Caina still sound very good, although I think I'd like to hear a more traditionally good singer on the melodic part in "Orphan". This still works in its own way.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Monday, 14 December 2015 00:51 (eight years ago) link

"Orphan" is one of the best songs I've heard this year. The rest of the album is decent but can't hold a candle to it.

EZ Snappin, Monday, 14 December 2015 01:01 (eight years ago) link

1:30 into Ken Mode. Wow, so this is basically a Shellac record?

― EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, December 13, 2015 11:48 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

yah Albini's presence couldn't have been signposted any more explicitly but tbafh Shellac haven't banged that hard in ages

roughest.contoured.silks (imago), Monday, 14 December 2015 01:06 (eight years ago) link

"Orphan" was v cool tho yeah, seems weird that I was listening to Caina in like 2006 but not really much since

roughest.contoured.silks (imago), Monday, 14 December 2015 01:23 (eight years ago) link

but HEY what's THIS

Brothers Of The goddamn Sonic Cloth - fucking fabulous - absolutely destroying everything Neurosis have done since the 90s, which is probably why Neurosis signed them, having settled rather nicely into curatorial mode by now. 'Unnamed' is ENORMOUS

this is my favourite discovery of the day I think, although three of the others were discovered yesterday and subsequently voted for

roughest.contoured.silks (imago), Monday, 14 December 2015 01:41 (eight years ago) link

you familiar with Tad?

Cosmic Slop, Monday, 14 December 2015 01:43 (eight years ago) link

nope, sounds like I should be

roughest.contoured.silks (imago), Monday, 14 December 2015 01:46 (eight years ago) link

Good thing I saved up a bunch of eMusic credits before this rollout. So far Absconditus and Ken Mode are going on my shopping list. Still working my way through today's list.

o. nate, Monday, 14 December 2015 02:11 (eight years ago) link

i'm liking this vastum more than their last couple

j., Monday, 14 December 2015 02:11 (eight years ago) link

Apparently I should check out both Absconditus and Amestigon. Literally only have heard two from the list so far, one of which made my top 10 (Nechochwen) and the other that didn't but I wish it could've (Nile, because they used to be one my reliable favs and if every song had been as perfect as "In the Name of Amun" the album would've killed).

Devilock, Monday, 14 December 2015 02:14 (eight years ago) link

I prefer this stretch of the poll because it's where everyone makes great new discoveries. As we move on I think it's albums more of us have heard.

Cosmic Slop, Monday, 14 December 2015 02:23 (eight years ago) link

Amestigon looks to be going on the list as well.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Monday, 14 December 2015 02:39 (eight years ago) link

Way to go Locrian & Kylesa! I didn't vote this year but looks like my favorites are going to be ok. I'm sure Windhand and other things I've liked will show up. Good job, voters.

La Lechuza (La Lechera), Monday, 14 December 2015 02:43 (eight years ago) link

Albums that made my Ballot (Bolded was the highest)
93 Locrian - Infinite Dissolution
91 Sigh - Graveward
87 Nechochewn - Heart of Akamon

Albums that made my Top 101
102 Corsair - One Eyed Horse
90 Ahab - The Boats of the Glen Carrig
89 Noisem - Blossoming Decay
86 Intronaut - The Direction of Last Things
85 Brothers of the Sonic Cloth - Brothers of the Sonic Cloth

Albums I will visit (revisit in some cases)
100 Nameless Coyote - Blood Moon
93 Vastum - Hole Below
93 KEN Mode - Success
92 Kylesa - Exhausting Fire
84 Boris - Asia
81 Caïna - Setter of Unseen Snares

Album I most disliked
98 Lucifer - Lucifer I

Loud guitars shit all over "Bette Davis Eyes" (NYCNative), Monday, 14 December 2015 04:23 (eight years ago) link

The Lucifer album is very enjoyable.

i;m thinking about thos Beans (Michael B), Monday, 14 December 2015 07:11 (eight years ago) link

Pretty sure my #1 won't make it :(

ArchCarrier, Monday, 14 December 2015 07:37 (eight years ago) link

Glad Absconditus squeaked in (I think it was in my top 10)! I also had Vastum somewhere in my ballot.

Imperial Triumphant is insane, first time I've checked them out, already decided to buy it.

prickly festive towers (GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ), Monday, 14 December 2015 11:11 (eight years ago) link

Really like that Dead to a Dying World album, pretty strong and engaging post-metal which is not something I'd expect these days.

Nechochwen and Kylesa were both enjoyable but not amazing to me.

Caina and Amestigon should on paper be right up my street, but they're both deeply unconvincing to me for different reasons. Caina tries to do everything but despite the variety it always sounds like a poorer version of something else.

Amestigon I heard earlier in the year and found it a real snoozer.

I might give the new Sigh album a try tonight, for some reason Imaginary Sonicscape is the only record of theirs I've been able to get into. The guest appearances do not fill me with much hope.

ultros ultros-ghali, Monday, 14 December 2015 11:38 (eight years ago) link

I'm not usually one to say this either but Imperial Triumphant: TOO FUCKING LOW

ultros ultros-ghali, Monday, 14 December 2015 11:39 (eight years ago) link

if there's people around I shall start the rollout in 10 mins then. Just need a cup of darjeeling first

Cosmic Slop, Monday, 14 December 2015 12:21 (eight years ago) link

http://i.imgur.com/E8m6eZT.gif

ArchCarrier, Monday, 14 December 2015 12:25 (eight years ago) link

80 Prurient - Frozen Niagara Falls 195 Points, 6 Votes
http://i.imgur.com/Qv3LP3S.jpg

https://open.spotify.com/album/5Pm2WvqxlDttK4hTx1vKe3
spotify:album:5Pm2WvqxlDttK4hTx1vKe3

http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/20463-prurient-frozen-niagara-falls/
8.5 BNM

Prurient, the main guise of Dominick Fernow, peels back the grislier aspects of the human condition within the boundaries of noise music. He doesn't just talk about desire and hate and pushing oneself in his music, he soaks those very feelings into his works. Within his massive discography, littered with limited-release tapes that can be frustrating to any would-be collector, are his "statement" records, which often introduce new elements that advance his artistic growth. Among these are 2006's Pleasure Ground, where his talents for rhythm really started to bloom, 2011's Bermuda Drain, his blackened new wave masterpiece, and 2013's Through The Window, where he nearly ditched noise for unknown-hours techno. Frozen Niagara Falls, Fernow's latest double album, is definitely one of his "statement records," and it brings back much of the harsh noise that faded away from his more recent works, but it's neither a "return to form" nor a retreat into his early career. With Niagara, he's taken strengths from his entire oeuvre to reach deeper into himself and produce what may be his best record yet, one that brings all the fulfillment of noise and transcends them all the same.

Fernow's moved back to New York from L.A., where he was briefly a member of Cold Cave, and Niagara cements that return. There's none of the techno of Window or any traces of his European adventures following his side project Vatican Shadow's frequent touring there, and only some of Bermuda's bizzaro synth-pop. There are no remaining traces of Fernow the underground playboy posting swanky selfies on OkCupid; on Niagara, he is once again the man standing shirtless outside in the New York winter. The closest to anything resembling Bermuda is "Every Relationship Earthrise", which would make for excellent darkwave if the hiccuping beat would hold still.

Fernow takes the tools most noise artists use as ends themselves and uses them to further narratives and enrich the compositions. Take "Traditional Snowfall", which starts off as a murder-romance fantasy—"I want to rip out your lower back/ And suck the air out of your lungs/ And wrap my hands around your neck/ And collapse your throat/ And squish your thorax/ And kiss you"—but turns into a rumination on the ambiguity so prevalent in modern love: "Friends are everywhere but I'm always leaving/ Dismantling us with rumors." (Maybe some of the club weariness of Window stuck around after all.) Fernow takes that confusion and buries it in the hisses and frantic electronics, so that it bleeds through every element of the track. Huge blasts of static and contact mic chaos come back into the fore, a passionate and turbulent dance between beauty and ugliness. To work with contrasts like that, on that deep a composition, is a rarity in noise.

It may seem weird that Prurient would have "hits" or "fan favorites," but they do exist. Fernow designed Niagara to be sprawling and cohesive, and there are multiple competing candidates for new ones here, across the spectrum. The first would probably be "Dragonflies to Sew You Up", with percussion that resemble Godflesh's drum machine becoming sentient and suffering a panic attack. Beneath the barrage, blue synthesizers and pianos chime, barely surviving the mortar-fire of the percussion. In the lyrics, Fernow flips the script on how lust is portrayed in noise—it's far from the simplistic objectification that comes too often with big, burly loud music. There's a conflicted pain when he screams, "IN AUGUST/ YOU'RE OVERDRESSED/ PLYWOOD BROKEN/ UP ON IMPACT." A line like "I promise I will only fuck prostitutes" may seem comical on paper, but add in the context of Fernow's vocal performance, and it's clear he takes no pleasure from yelling such a thing.

Fernow's synths sound both lusher and icier than they did on Drain, thanks to producer Arthur Rizk, known for his work on Power Trip's Manifest Decimation, Inquisition's Obscure Verses for the Multiverse, and other notable recent metal and hardcore records. Fernow has pushed the limits of what lo-fi can do—Pleasure in particular is a testament to the beauty of buried synths—but with his grander ambitions, he needed a bigger sound, and Rizk's contributions are so invaluable he may as well be Prurient's second member. Niagara is Prurient's most developed record, not just for its length, but the attention to detail that Rizk provides.

Fernow's original intent for Niagara was to source all of the material acoustically, with no electronics at all. That would have been radical, even for him. Still, upon first listen, it is jarring to hear acoustic guitars, provided by Rizk and Fernow, in the beginning of "Greenpoint", Niagara's peak New York song. From there, it descends into throbs of darkness, but that's only part of the point of the song. While "Greenpoint" is about someone Fernow knew, when I read the lyrics my mind went to Oliver Sacks' New Yorker essay on monologist Spalding Gray's descent into irreversible depression that led to his suicide in 2004. Gray's thoughts of suicide always centered around drowning and his mother, whose own suicide figured heavily into his work, and it's eerie that "The East River isn't romantic anymore you know/ That's where the suicides go/ Or maybe that's what you want in the end/ To be mixed together and reunited with your mother" are almost as if they were about him. It's specific yet flexible, adding another layer of complexity as only Fernow can.

Like "Greenpoint", closer "Christ Among the Broken Glass" shows a side of Prurient that is sometimes overlooked: poignancy. It's also the closest thing to Fernow's original vision for Niagara, which makes it an even more appropriate ending. The sound of fire combines with the guitars, evoking a séance more than a campfire. Like "I Understand You", the closing track from JK Flesh and Prurient's Worship Is the Cleansing of the Imagination where fragile glimmers of serenity are eaten without mercy by squalling feedback, "Christ" reveals itself slowly. Niagara was recorded "in the spirit of homelessness," and Fernow's lyrics in "Christ" capture how winter brutalizes the homeless and how self-sacrifice can make one appear messianic, especially when that figure is among the afflicted themselves. The man, "Jesus of cities," becomes both more noble and more destitute with every verse—"Cobbling together syllables/ Over a frostbitten tongue/ Trying to remember the prayers"—though this isn't about pity, but about reality. Fernow's hushed vocals don't even come in until close to the end of the song, and they make his silent stalker tone on Window sound pronounced in comparison. Who knew that one of the least noisy Prurient songs would strike the deepest?

A double noise album is a lot to take in, and Prurient's never been about accessibility. He's also not about acceptable signifiers; he's bigger than noise. He offers an endless, probing self-exploration that simply isn't found in noise, metal, hardcore, power electronics, whatever harsh music you can think of. In that regard, Niagara is a landmark not just in Prurient's discography, but within extreme music. His few utterances in "Falling Mask" sum up the experience of the album, and of his body of work: "What we do/ We invite pain/ It's ok to be hungry/ Hunger is normal/ I'll meet you there." He knows Prurient isn't for everybody, and that's part of the appeal, but if you're not going to invite growth and reveal yourself, why bother?

Trump's Gaz Coombesover (Cosmic Slop), Monday, 14 December 2015 12:32 (eight years ago) link

haha I love how you all disappear now

Trump's Gaz Coombesover (Cosmic Slop), Monday, 14 December 2015 12:49 (eight years ago) link

we're all waiting for an actual metal album to comment

moans and feedback (Dinsdale), Monday, 14 December 2015 12:50 (eight years ago) link

thread is missing emil.y this year

Trump's Gaz Coombesover (Cosmic Slop), Monday, 14 December 2015 12:53 (eight years ago) link

79 Arcturus - Arcturian 196 Points, 6 Votes
http://i.imgur.com/Zti743M.jpg
https://open.spotify.com/album/5yJ9F1Md1I14N0r1LcIF58
spotify:album:5yJ9F1Md1I14N0r1LcIF58

https://arcturus-no.bandcamp.com/album/arcturian

http://www.angrymetalguy.com/arcturus-arcturian-review/

It’s really no secret; I fucking love Arcturus. There is nothing that can be done about this fanboyism of mine and I don’t care to fix it. Since the first time I heard The Sham Mirrors in 2002, I have not only loved them, but find Mirrors to be one of my favorite albums ever. I don’t expect everyone to agree with me and, again, I’m not going to fix it. Sadly, bad things started to happen for the band after that release. Garm (or whatever the hell his name is) was replaced by I.C.S. Vortex in 2005. The same year the band dropped the disappointing Sideshow Symphonies. They broke up (and broke my heart) in 2007, and there hasn’t been any sort of release from them in ten long years. But now these lovable Norwegians are finally back. After a songwriting and recording process that lasted nearly four years (cut them some slack or we won’t be getting anymore Borknagar and Mayhem albums), 2015 brings us their new opus, Arcturian. Does this mean Arcturus will reclaim their rightful place at the head of the avante-garde table? Is this the comeback album of the year? Are there more ridiculous band photos this time around? Did Hellhammer actually eat Dead’s brains? All legitimate questions but let’s just focus on the first two.

Before we begin, let me be clear about something. My issue with Sideshow Symphonies is not the addition of I.C.S. Vortex. I absolutely love I.C.S. Vortex and own every stinkin’ album he ever appeared on. My issue is the lack of that indescribable beauty that makes Arcturus who they are. Without the passion and splendor in their sound, it becomes run-of-the-mill ambiance. Thankfully all is forgiven (mostly) and I can sleep easy again (seriously, this is why I haven’t slept in ten years). While not as grand as The Sham Mirrors, Arcturian does well to guide Arcturus on the right path after the aforementioned misstep. The weirdness of old Arcturus is present once again and Vortex’s confidence is through the roof as he finally gets the chance to be himself in boots once sported by Garm. And it’s oh so good. Vortex is on top of his game and in command of everything from his malicious rasps on “Demon,” his mid-range Peavy Wagner-isms on “Angst” and his ball-busting shrieks on “Pale.” There’s even some “yodeling” in “Crashland” and falsettos in “Warp.” No more comparisons to Garm need be made; Vortex fucking owns Arcturian.

Arcturus - Arcturian 02Another player that – not surprising – leaves his mark on this release is Hellhammer. I don’t even need to look it up to know that this relentless beating is the result of the thunder feet of this BM god. The way he manipulates his four (?) limbs does just as much for the signature sound of Arcturus as the creepy carny shit that finds its way into every release since La Masquerade Infernale (I direct your attention to Arcturian closer “Bane”). Vocals and drums accounted for, the orchestrations and keys soak this outing in an atmosphere so thick, no amount of sunshine would ever break through. Be it the soundtrack-like qualities of the outro in “Crashland,” the ridiculously catchy X-File-esque melodies of “Warp,” or the industrial machinations of “Demon” and “The Journey,” the mind-fuckery of Arcturus has survived and now wreaks havoc on Arcturian with full support from the other instrumentation.

However, the brain warping has mellowed out since the days of Masquerade and Mirrors. Arcturian (much like its predecessor) is more accessible than releases of old. However, the biggest difference between Arturian and Sideshow Symphonies is that the band brought along that old spark to ignite this new record. Spontaneity and flow is abundant as Arcturus tosses clean-guitar licks into “Game Over,” acoustic pluckings in the semi-instrumental “The Journey,” and some ethereal violins for “The Journey” and “Bane.” And if that wasn’t enough, you’ll also get an end-product dressed with a respectable DR7 rating and a solid balance in the instrumentation. The drums are crisp, the vocals are out front, and the guitars get to choose when to be muddled in the atmosphere or make their way to the surface as the electric axes are substituted for the acoustic ones.

Overall, we have a winner here that most disgruntled Arcturus fans can enjoy. Not to the levels of La Masquerade Infernale or The Sham Mirrors, but we can’t always get what we want. If this were to be Arcturus’ swansong, I wouldn’t lose sleep over it.

Trump's Gaz Coombesover (Cosmic Slop), Monday, 14 December 2015 13:00 (eight years ago) link

Is that metal enough?

Trump's Gaz Coombesover (Cosmic Slop), Monday, 14 December 2015 13:02 (eight years ago) link

Need to listen to that. They're usually good fun

roughest.contoured.silks (imago), Monday, 14 December 2015 13:04 (eight years ago) link

78 Huntress - Static 196 Points, 7 Votes
http://i.imgur.com/dCAgZrU.jpg

https://open.spotify.com/album/7F3H6bcFfaj4DE51MsJE54
spotify:album:7F3H6bcFfaj4DE51MsJE54

http://burningambulance.com/2015/09/25/huntress/

Huntress is a relatively young band, having been around for just over five years. Vocalist Jill Janus, then going by the name Penelope Tuesdae, hired the Los Angeles-based band Professor to perform at a weekly club night she was hosting in Hollywood, and they joined forces. (This interview fills in more of Janus’ background; she’s also been a DJ and had a covers project with guitarist Dave Navarro.) In 2011, the group, renamed Huntress, signed to Napalm Records, releasing their debut album, Spell Eater, the following year and their second, Starbound Beast, in 2013.

The band’s music started out as a mix of thrash and old-school trad/power metal. Janus is a theatrical vocalist with a wide range, capable of almost operatic singing in the vein of Judas Priest‘s Rob Halford, Iron Maiden‘s Bruce Dickinson, or Ronnie James Dio, but she didn’t fully exploit it on the band’s early recordings. On Spell Eater, she frequently employed a hoarse, witchy screech strongly reminiscent of Nicole Lee, frontwoman of cult ’80s thrashers Znöwhite; it was a style some listeners found off-putting. It meshed relatively well with the thrash/death riffing the band was pumping out at the time, though. Huntress toured hard in search of an audience; I saw them open for DragonForce, and Janus was a stiff, awkward presence, strutting back and forth and frequently ducking behind the amps during guitar solos.

Starbound Beast was a more confident and musically ambitious effort. It included an instrumental intro and songs that had real, memorable melodies and choruses; ended with a capable cover of Judas Priest‘s “Running Wild”; and Motörhead‘s Lemmy contributed lyrics to “I Want to Fuck You to Death.” Janus was synthesizing the various elements of her style into a multifaceted but unified voice, emphasizing her singing over her shrieks, and becoming a better live performer, too. I saw them again, this time opening for Killswitch Engage, and she engaged the crowd much more capably, striking fewer gawky poses and delivering the songs with authority. Lyrically, she moved beyond the fantasy-metal tropes of the debut, seeming to hint at realism, if not autobiography.

Static, out this week (get it from Amazon), is the biggest step forward yet for Huntress. In every respect, it’s a more accomplished and focused album than its two predecessors. The band have stripped down their style, largely abandoning the thrash/death metal of the debut and going classicist/’80s instead. The intro to the first single, “Flesh,” nods to Slash‘s playing with Guns N’ Roses, while “Mania” could easily have fit on a pre-British Steel Judas Priest album; actually, its main riff sounds ripped from Black Sabbath circa Sabotage. Lead guitarist and founding member Blake Meahl‘s solos are showy without being absurd or overtaking the song, and rhythm guitarist Eli Santana and drummer Tyler Meahl (new additions to the group) are fluent in a variety of styles, from doom to the almost punky hard rock of “I Want to Wanna Wake Up,” while avoiding a trying-on-hats feel. All these songs sound like Huntress songs, not like covers or style-pastiches.

Lyrically, Janus has shifted gears in a big way, too. On Spell Eater and Starbound Beast, as their titles likely indicate, she mostly kept things in the realm of fantasy, singing about witches and spells and monsters, and dealing with life through metaphor (a tactic with a long history in metal, going back at least as far as Ronnie James Dio). The first five songs on Static—”Sorrow,” “Flesh,” “Brian,” “I Want to Wanna Wake Up,” and “Mania”—make up a kind of suite, in which the lyrics reflect very real, autobiographical pain. (This interview with Revolver offers more detail.) Janus sings about suicidal thoughts, about drinking and drugging oneself into oblivion, and on the album’s most surprising song, about mania as a force exerting a lycanthropic transformation on her. “Mania” features extraordinarily vivid lyrics, supported by Huntress‘s most steamrolleringly heavy music ever. At nearly nine minutes, the song serves as a bridge between Static‘s two halves, while also showcasing the band’s ever-increasing instrumental power.

The album’s second half is a little more escapist, returning to the occult, science fiction and fantasy lyrical tropes of previous releases. “Harsh Times On Planet Stoked” sounds like a lost Rob Zombie title, and “Static” is social commentary disguised as a monster story. But the feeling that all these songs are deeply personal for Janus is inescapable. That’s not the direction many would have predicted for Huntress after hearing either of their first two albums, but it’s a welcome and impressive evolution. They’ve always been good, but with Static, they’ve become really good.

—Phil Freeman

Trump's Gaz Coombesover (Cosmic Slop), Monday, 14 December 2015 13:27 (eight years ago) link

dont even know if phil voted

Trump's Gaz Coombesover (Cosmic Slop), Monday, 14 December 2015 13:58 (eight years ago) link

77 Killing Joke - Pylon 196 Points, 9 Votes
http://i.imgur.com/HoFvWF5.jpg

https://open.spotify.com/album/1OzRwm3c09pJCFFnEu27R2
spotify:album:1OzRwm3c09pJCFFnEu27R2

http://www.angrymetalguy.com/killing-joke-pylon-review/

Many older bands, once established, will eventually coast by just on their name alone. Sure, they’ll cut a new album every few years, but it never lives up to their influential works of yesteryear. It’s often an excuse to go out on the road, play nothing but the classics, and bring home the money while also hocking wares that have nothing to do with the band’s original intent. England’s Killing Joke, however, are a unique beast. Almost 40 years into their storied career, they’ve influenced groups as disparate as LCD Soundsystem, My Bloody Valentine, Nine Inch Nails, and Metallica just by utilizing any and all genres suitable to deliver their brand of poetic vitriol. Now, completing the triptych that started with 2010’s Absolute Dissent and continued with 2012’s MMXII, we have Pylon to analyze and mull over. I will say right now that you would be forgiven if you thought the band would finally sound like they are running out of steam and would finally be outed as bitter, cranky old men baring unnecessary resentment. You would also be proven absolutely dead-wrong within a matter of seconds.

You probably scrolled to the bottom of the page, saw the score, and are wondering if it’s really that good. If you enjoyed the anger brought forth in Absolute Dissent but felt a little let down by MMXII, then Pylon will wipe the floor with you. “Autonomous Zone” continues the long tradition of relentlessly angry openers, recalling 1990’s Extremities, Dirt & Various Repressed Emotions in terms of sheer urgency and a bit of danceability, thanks to the solid, driving drumming of Paul Ferguson, Geordie Walker’s recognizable distorted open-chord mayhem, and Jaz Coleman’s prophesying. Speaking of Coleman, his voice continues to hold up quite well, and he sounds just as focused and commanding as he did in his earlier days, mixing both honey and venom in potent amounts. Quite the ear-catching opener.

Speaking of venom, there is absolutely no shortage of it to be found on Pylon. This album is thankfully free of anything that could be considered a ballad. Instead the purpose is to engage, inform, and enrage. While there isn’t a bad song on here, some are going to rise higher than others, but all are potent ragers. “Euphoria” comes closest to the band’s gothic period, sounding both dance-worthy and fist-clenching. “Delete” reaches back to the second (and grossly underrated) self-titled album from 2003, with Pig Youth’s bass sounding particularly grimy and thick. “New Jerusalem” tricks you with a happy drum beat while Coleman calls out a pet peeve of mine: corporate media poisoning our airwaves with useless bullshit while serious and heinous crimes go unabated and ignored (“Charmed, no attention span/No empathy for the common man”). Hi, Facebook!

Produced by the band and Tom Dalgety, Pylon may be lacking in dynamics, but it still sounds great. Youth’s bass is chunky and driving, Walker’s signature tone remains powerfully intact, and the drums sound especially beastly (seriously, that breakdown just after the first chorus in “New Jerusalem” is thundering and rage-inducing). But what makes this album such an incredible success is just how fluid Killing Joke are when it comes to jumping styles to convey particular messages instead of trapping themselves in one mode. It’s this exact reason why Killing Joke are still so vibrant, so seething, and so utterly convincing in their delivery. You can’t fake sincerity.

Here I was, just hoping that Killing Joke would bring us all an album of decent songs, as they’ve been on an absolute tear since the original line-up regrouped in 2008. Instead, they released an emphatic statement of intent, proclaiming that complacency, ignorance, and lack of empathy will not be tolerated on their watch. Pylon is one for the ages, and I hope and pray that when I’m in my fifties, I’m just as focused, driven, and passionately scathing in my views of the world. Timely, yet timeless.

Trump's Gaz Coombesover (Cosmic Slop), Monday, 14 December 2015 14:03 (eight years ago) link

thread needs alex

Trump's Gaz Coombesover (Cosmic Slop), Monday, 14 December 2015 14:14 (eight years ago) link

Arcturian is a fun album, they were always oddball enough that the fact that they seem to have ignored everything that's happened in metal in the last decade isn't really a drawback. It has everything you want in an Arcturus album ('cept for Garm maybe) including strange production choices

ultros ultros-ghali, Monday, 14 December 2015 14:26 (eight years ago) link

I love the sound of the Killing Joke album, but the lyrics are very OTN (nose, not money).

ArchCarrier, Monday, 14 December 2015 14:43 (eight years ago) link

76 Kult of the Wizard - The White Wizard 197 Points, 5 Votes, One #1
http://i.imgur.com/HpFqesa.jpg

https://kultofthewizard.bandcamp.com/album/the-white-wizard

http://www.sputnikmusic.com/review/67349/Kult-Of-The-Wizard-The-White-Wizard/

Review Summary: Solid stoner-doom with an excellent female singer.

Kult Of The Wizard are band coming from Minneapolis, Minnesota. They have released three EPs, all showcasing the band’s style of doom and stoner metal. The third of these releases, entitled The White Wizard, marks a major progression for the group. While the band’s first two EPs had been entirely instrumental, and been generally lauded as excellent collections of raw and sludgy stoner jams, with The White Wizard the group had chosen to incorporate vocals into their sound. As it turns out, the old adage about not fixing something which isn’t broken did not apply in this instance. With the addition of a singer, Kult Of The Wizard has taken a significant step forward, and the resulting release can be recommended for all fans of this type of music.

The White Wizard consists of five songs. The first, “Tusk Of Mammoth”, is an excellent introduction to the band’s new sound, being a bit more polished than previous releases. Over turgid riffs, the female vocalist Mahle Roth sings in a soulful manner. This works quite well, and in a distinctive manner, setting a solid tone for the entire EP. “Olde Fashioned Black Magik”, meanwhile, is a brief and straightforward track more in tune with retro-metal. The White Wizard’s centerpiece, “Plasma Pool”, is likely to divide the opinions of listeners. An ambient track consisting of vocal samples and background noise, some might dislike it, considering it takes up nearly four minutes of a relatively-short release. However, it does produce an eerie vibe which is accentuated in other parts of the EP. “Black Moon” is the release’s longest song, and arguably the best. The lyrical subject matter dealing with Satan and impending death might be a bit generic, but it sounds fantastic with Roth’s ethereal vocals and the reliably strong riffs. Finally, the EP’s closer might well be surprising: a cover of Heart’s “Devil Delight”. The result is certainly a highlight though; Kult Of The Wizard does the original justice while adding their own doomy aesthetic to the tune quite successfully.

The White Wizard is certainly a positive step for Kult Of The Wizard. The band seems to have found a workable and solid sound, that of spacey and somewhat menacing doom combined with heavy blues elements epitomized by their great new singer’s vocal style. Hopefully, the group will soon create their first full-length album and manage to capture more widespread exposure. For now, though, The White Wizard is a rock-solid release which should be worth several listens for fans of these genres.

Trump's Gaz Coombesover (Cosmic Slop), Monday, 14 December 2015 14:44 (eight years ago) link

Woohoo! I made the metal poll. :)

EZ Snappin, Monday, 14 December 2015 14:47 (eight years ago) link

ilm's very own

Mordy, Monday, 14 December 2015 14:49 (eight years ago) link

liked the opening track and the exotic noises

roughest.contoured.silks (imago), Monday, 14 December 2015 15:16 (eight years ago) link

The exotic noise is all I had anything to do with, but the rest of the album is my cup of tea. I love her voice.

EZ Snappin, Monday, 14 December 2015 15:21 (eight years ago) link

Of the more song-y tracks, I found the opener to be a clear standout, but it really was something

I like how they are explicitly a tribute band as well, shows honesty

roughest.contoured.silks (imago), Monday, 14 December 2015 15:30 (eight years ago) link

Tribute band?

EZ Snappin, Monday, 14 December 2015 16:04 (eight years ago) link

Aw, clue's in the nane and the font, surely

They take EW's musuc in some cool directions just as EW did to Sabbath, it is a fine lineage to claim

roughest.contoured.silks (imago), Monday, 14 December 2015 16:12 (eight years ago) link

Sorry if I'm barking up the wrong tree here

roughest.contoured.silks (imago), Monday, 14 December 2015 16:12 (eight years ago) link


75 Dispirit - Separation 198 Points, 6 Votes

http://i.imgur.com/znoU9Sj.jpg

https://dispirit.bandcamp.com/album/separation

John Gossard Guitars, Vocals (2000-present)
See also: ex-Asunder, ex-The Gault, ex-Weakling,

http://www.sputnikmusic.com/review/68595/Dispirit-Separation/

Review Summary: Dispirit's latest demo serves as a reminder not only of what the band is, but what they could rightly become in time.

Dispirit is the current outlet for legendary US metal figure John Gossard, most known for his work in the black metal band Weakling about fifteen years ago. While his most famous project has been defunct for years, Gossard and crew, in a way, continue Weakling’s legacy with their own brand of doom-and-reverb-laden darkness. But outside of sharing one key songwriter the two bands have virtually little in common; where Weakling’s music was fairly clean and clear (for black metal), Dispirit’s is as raw as black metal gets, using plenty of reverb (natural and synthetic, by my estimation) and low-quality recording techniques to create a suffocating, blurring cacophony of blackened doom metal.

And the sound on Disirit’s third demo is pretty bad. It sounds like the band recorded a jam session in a basement with a tape recorder placed clear on the other end of the room. Given that all of their demos include this same lo-fi recording style (and were recorded live, probably all at Oboroten), I’m pretty sure by now that this has absolutely been their intention from the start. But, while listening to their newest demo, Separation, one might begin to feel a slight pang of aggravation because, while the the two lengthy tracks here are excellent examples of the super raw, suffocating blackened mayhem that all “kvlt” fans should adore, it begins to become fairly obvious that these types of tracks could sound absolutely wonderful if recorded more properly in with less purposefully crude setup.

At this point, I think it’s mostly this insistence on the super crude sound that holds Dispirit back; while cultivating a reverb-filled, suffocating, and absolutely evil atmosphere on everything they’ve done so far, Dispirit’s potential feels never fully realized because of the crudeness of their recordings. Sure, the “reverb bouncing off the walls that almost makes me feel claustrophobic” effect their music has makes it seem powerful, mysterious, and a little bit off-putting, but the shroud of fog their music always comes wrapped in also has the effect of covering up some of the finer parts of their writing. While both Dispirit and Weakling make/made heavy use of melodic guitar leads overtop blackened riffs, Dispirit’s seem to often end up either blurred into or on top of the rhythm sections during their more cacophonous moments, either taking away a potential melodic edge to the music or robbing the rhythm section of some of its intended fury. And that really goes for the rest of the music as well--whether it be during the eleven-minute post-rock-esque doom build-up in “Funeral Frost” or the all-out blasting of “Odylic Void,” every element of the band’s sound tends to get blurred together to the point where particular details end up lost or barely audible. For fans of super lo-fi raw “kvlt” black metal this may very well serve as a selling point rather than a turnoff, but for fans of Gossard’s previous work the lack of clarity marks a clear flaw in the band’s presentation.

And that’s what makes demos like this so aggravating to listen to; you can feel how good this would be if it were actually part of a “proper” full-length and not just another demo tape--if the atmosphere and clarity between instruments were touched up and perfected just that little extra bit through less crude recording setups--whatever those might be. Dispirit may never have intended their material to compete with Dead As Dreams, but demos like Separation make the listener feel like maybe, just maybe, the band could give Gossard’s previous work a run for its money if they were ever to get something proper down on tape.

Despite the quality of the recording, though, Separation is still a fairly enjoyable raw atmospheric black metal/doom demo that fans of the lo-fi style should definitely find more than a little enthralling; it’s suffocating, it’s evil, and Gossard’s echo-y screech-howl vocals are some of the most interestingly atmospheric (and terrifying) I’ve heard in the genre in quite some time. The raw atmosphere captured here is so palpable it almost automatically conjures images of a band almost completely obscured by fog as they play in some barely-lit cave deep in the bowels of the earth.

I suppose Dispirit’s rawness creates an interesting divide in their potential appeal; on the one hand, those looking for raw cacophonies of swirling darkness should end up more than a little satisfied, while on the other those looking for the true successor to Dead As Dreams may be a little peeved by the band’s perceived wasting of their potential greatness. Whatever your poison, though, Separation is still serves as an excellent example of raw atmospheric black metal, whether or not it lives up to one's expectations of a “true” Weakling successor. And, given the band’s repeated joking of a proper full-length seeing release in the next 5-10 years, I suppose “Weakling-lite” will for now just have to suffice for all of us.

Trump's Gaz Coombesover (Cosmic Slop), Monday, 14 December 2015 16:28 (eight years ago) link

sadly I never got the tape of this presumably sold out but i got the d/l from bandcamp some months back. I do have the 1st demo tape tho

Trump's Gaz Coombesover (Cosmic Slop), Monday, 14 December 2015 16:43 (eight years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.