Elend – A World In Their Screams Label: Prophecy Productions – Pro 087, Prophecy Productions – PRO 087 Format: CD, Album, Digisleeve Country: Germany Released: 07 May 2007 Style: Industrial, Contemporary
“A World In Their Screams” is the third part of the five-album “Winds” cycle that was begun in 2003 with “Winds Devouring Men” and was continued in the following year with “Sunwar The Dead”. More than 30 musicians and singers have contributed to the massive soundscapes of this album, in its most extreme moments exceeding the denseness of all their previous works. Even though “A World In Their Screams” was conceived as a very extreme album, during its three-year development – a first version had been composed around the time of the album “Sunwar The Dead” – this record aspired to ever more radical dimensions, eclipsing Elend’s whole discography in its raw violence and oppressive atmosphere.
Black Autumn – Rivers Of Dead Leaves Label: Antichristian Front Records Format: CD, Album Country: Spain Released: Dec 2008 Style: Shoegaze, Black Metal
Germany’s Black Autumn is a one-member project of M. Krall. According to Metal-Archives, the band has been in existence since 1993 and there have been a slew of releases post-2003, all of which have evaded me. This includes the debut album released last year, Ecstasy, Nightmare, Doom. Rivers Of Dead Leaves was the first taste of Black Autumn that I had and the first thing that struck me was its eclectic make-up. In essence, this album is all about abstract, sluggish, melancholic riffs that usher you into an utterly bleak and depressive world. But there is a lot more to this album than the standard depressive black metal album. The most noticeable aspect is the portions that lean towards ambient and industrial music. There are even some neat movie samples to be found on the album (Blade Runner on Ashes for example: “I’ve seen things you people wouldn’t believe. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I’ve watched c-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhäuser Gate. All those … moments will be lost in time, like tears…in rain.
Time to die.” – fits like a charm). The sheer variety of the riffs is also something to take of note. It’s not all tremolo picking all the time like some of these 2-bit bands that pass off as bruisingly depressive black metal. In fact, there are hardly any blastbeats at all to be found. Here’s where you get Godflesh-lite drum machine goodness instead – with a lot of passages harbouring some extremely cool double-bass work. The guitar tone is absolutely crushing and is somewhat reminiscent of a polished version of that found on Blut Aus Nord’s The Work Which Transforms God. A lot of the gloomy melodies found on the album tread on folkish routes bringing to mind names like Current 93 and Death In June. Don’t worry though, there’s enough firepower in them to keep things engaging and not turn into a snoozefest. Krall opts for a reserved vocal approach rather than an out and out psychotic shrill that is usually the weapon of choice in this genre. The vocals are heavily distorted and have a very cold, electronic, industrial feel to them which fittingly complement the despondent atmosphere.
The keyboards and electronics utilized are done so in a very optimum manner while still maintaining minimalistic ambitions. As mentioned, Black Autumn seemingly draw inspiration from a variety of bands, not limited to black metal and this fact ensures that you don’t lose interest midway through the album. Elements of Shoegaze, Funeral Doom, Industrial Black Metal, Dark Ambient, Folk and hell, even bits resembling the melodic eccentricities of Amoral. The songs are very consistent and the only song I didn’t like as much as the others was A Darkness Profound. The standout track of the album is A 1000 Years In The Water – magnificent music. There seems to be a whole story woven around the character of Ophelia from Shakespeare’s Hamlet. The famous painting of Ophelia by the English Sir John Everett Millais is printed on the CD even. All in all, excellent fare for a black metal fan and if you call yourself one, you should certainly pick this one up. Black Autumn is one band whom I will surely keep an ardent eye on.
Kazeria [KZ] – Credo Nostrvm Label: Twilight Records – TW 1.56 Format: CD, Album Country: Argentina Released: 2009 Style: Dark Ambient, Military, Industrial, Neofolk
KAZERIA [KZ] means “Hunt” in Spanish.
This is a solo project started and leaded by argentinean composer [S] since 2008.
“Credo Nostrvm” (“Our Creed”), has nine tracks inscribed onto a martial, neofolk, neoclassical and dark ambient combination, dealing with some themes that represents [KZ] main topics: the meaning of glory, decadence, eternity, struggle, occult and sacred symbols of forgotten times. [S] spouts out a harsh vision about reality, which could be understood as “active nihilism”. This is its way to relate to this current decaying age which, in [S] words, “must be overcome”. The Hunt has begun… If you are fan of THOROID , WAPPENWUND or TRIARII….you will love KZ.
Tracklisting: 1 Credo Nostrvm (5:58) 2 Der Fall Der Götter (7:45) 3 De Sacrvm Mysteriis (7:22) 4 Let Blood Rain (6:44) 5 Die Dämmerung Der Schwerter (7:38) 6 Inner War / Holiest War (9:06) 7 Pride Of The Ancient Ones (7:17) 8 Evrasia Rising (6:48) 9 Rotten Battlefield (14:21)