Forlorn - Opus III: Ad Caelestis Res

Posted on Friday, April 29, 2011

Pretentious Black Metal “art.” It’s fast. It has keyboards. And screechy vocals. And totally unmemorable songs that try their best to sound “epic” and important, but can’t manage it. I’ve heard it all a thousand times before, and didn’t care then, either. And what’s up with this ultra-dorky cover art?

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Forest of Impaled - Demonvoid

Posted on Sunday, April 03, 2011

Totally fuckin’ cult blackened Death Metal. A snare drum sound similar to 1980s’ German Thrash, barbed fishhook guitar riffs and keyboards intelligently blended into the melody. Forest of Impaled traces over the razor line separating Black Metal and Death Metal with the precision of a surgeon consummating the blasphemous, bloody union of the best elements from both genres. Congratulations to Pat at Red Stream for seeing the potential of this band. An audio scalpel almost unparalleled nowadays. Hail to perfection!

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Forefather - Deep Into Time

Posted on Sunday, April 03, 2011

What do you get when you mix Falkenbach, a little Dissection, a sprinkle of Emperor and a liberal helping of Celtic Folk music? The answer is Forefather, merry olde England’s latest entry in the Folk-influenced Metal category. Really, this would be called Viking Metal if it wasn’t for the glaringly obvious lack of any Viking stuff associated with this band. The band’s name is written in runes that could be associated with the Norsemen but then, most of Europe used these same runes at some point in their history so the most appropriate thing to call Forefather is Anglo-Saxon Metal with a strong Celtic leaning. Not as far as Cruachan or Primordial but there is a definite Celtic music influence in the music and lyrics of this band. During the faster segments, of which there are plenty, Forefather shows their Nordic Black Metal influences, but the inclusion of Folk melodies and clean vocals in the slower parts sets this band apart from the rest of the pack. Fans of the previously mentioned Falkenbach will enjoy this stuff, as will folks looking for something different from your everyday Darkthrone clone band.

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Fleurety - Last-Minute Lies

Posted on Saturday, April 02, 2011

Music that’s lighter than air, and even wimpier female vocals. And then the guy starts singing… I didn’t think it could get worse, but at least the chick knew enough to sing in key. This isn’t “experimental,” it’s ridiculous.

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Fleshless - Grindgod

Posted on Saturday, April 02, 2011

Even the mighty Fleshless cannot resist the intro plague, but after a few seconds of a dying heartbeat, the Death/Grind starts up, and you’re just pummeled for an hour. The sound they have achieved here is amazing. You can hear everything right down to the impressive basslines, but it’s still extremely thick and of course heavier than you could imagine. And the vocals are horrifically sick abominations, with lyrics and artwork to match, which is to say they’re awesome. So, all told, this is just about all you could ask for. But you get more anyway. In addition to an excellent Master’s Hammer cover, this CD also contains all of FleshlessGrinding demo, and for some reason, the song “Free Off Pain” from their last album. This is extremely close to perfection, and to be honest, I might just look back on this and wish I’d given it a ten. Time will tell.

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Fister - Phrenum

Posted on Saturday, April 02, 2011

This trio from the UK are pretty tight. Lots of changes and breakdowns in different directions. A bit more insane and heavy than your average Alterna-Metal band. A lot of interesting dynamics keep this fresh and original. A little silly on occasion though, making the vox the only weak point really. Kinda cool.

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Finntroll - Midnattens Widunder

Posted on Saturday, March 26, 2011

The first thing I thought of when I threw this on was that it sounded a lot like the soundtrack for an evil Disney cartoon. That assumption proved wrong after a few more minutes of listening, but a lot of this does sound like the soundtrack to a medieval fantasy type of movie but with Black Metal vocals and shit. There is a heavy Folk influence (medieval or renaissance period European Folk to be precise) which makes Finntroll sound like the band Falkenbach mixed with Otyg or In Extremo. The riffs are simplistic in the Hellhammer style with memorability the key feature. The dominant instrument, as you may imagine, is the keyboard. The rest of the instruments are kind of buried underneath somewhere. I can hear the chainsaw guitars but I can’t make out the riffs very well sometimes. I’m not sure what the songs are about as they are all written in the band’s native tongue, Finnish. Sure, there are lyrics enclosed and the band has thoughtfully included a brief explanation of the songs’ meanings (these were written in English) but due to a very shitty layout job, the vast bulk of this stuff was unreadable. Black ink over a dark background = illegible text, if you require math for this one. That little mishap got them a minor point deduction, but on the whole, this is an album for all you Folk-influenced Black Metal people out there to pick up.

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Feast Eternal - Prisons of Flesh

Posted on Wednesday, March 09, 2011

If you just don’t pay any attention to the lyrics, this is pretty solid Death Metal. But upon further inspection, you’d notice that despite their heaviness and, I’ll admit it, brutality, these guys are preachers, trying to save everyone from “evil.” I don’t understand how their “message” can possibly fit with this kind of music, but then again, I don’t really want to. So, although this isn’t bad at all musically, I doubt I’ll ever listen to it again, ‘cause I like to growl along, and I just can’t bring myself to say goofy stuff like, “The reward of Christ’s love,” without giggling.

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Entombed - Monkey Puss (Live in London)

Posted on Thursday, February 10, 2011

The press release says: “This is Entombed at their jaw-dropping best.” Not even close. I mean, you’d sure think that it would be, since it was recorded in 1992, after Clandestine came out and L.G. had rejoined the band. Since I consider Clandestine to be one of the best Death Metal albums of all time (maybe the best), I was freaking out at the idea of hearing the once-mighty L.G. try his lungs on those tunes. When I saw Entombed on this tour here in the US, it was before he had rejoined, and if I remember correctly, Alex was doing the singing. He’s a Hell of a lot better than L.G., let me assure you. I just don’t understand this at all. On Left Hand Path, L.G. was the definition of controlled brutality, but even by 1992 his voice was apparently shot. On the older songs he does slightly better, but the Clandestine stuff is really terrible. He forgets the words in quite a few places, and generally does a piss-poor, feeble, off time job, as if he wasn’t into it at all. No wonder they had to change their sound so radically; L.G. couldn’t sing Death Metal any more. Even the music seems a little off in some places, almost as if L.G. were bringing the whole band down. I hate to just pick on the guy (well, not really), but he basically ruins what I had thought would have to be a flawless live album. And what the fuck is “Monkey Puss” supposed to mean?

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