Sunday, May 8, 2016

3 Heavy Ones


Tau Cross- Tau Cross


Debut album from a supergroup last year.  Found on a number of year-end top lists, but perhaps still a bit more under the radar than it deserves.  Their sound finds a lot of common ground with Primordial, featuring that same epic, sweeping, black-tinged metal.  The track below is my favorite because it showcases The Baron’s powerful clean vocals, but the majority of the album features his raggedy growls atop some heavy riffage.



Hail of Bullets- …Of Frost and War


Another supergroup! Vocals are from Martin Van Durunen, whom most death metal fans will instantly recognize.  That strained howl of his can be an acquired taste, but here it matches the music and subject matter well.  The album revolves around the Eastern front during World War II, and van Durunen’s frantic vocals conjure the wild, unhinged nature of combat. 
The song below features guest vocals from no less than Dan Swano, and the track is an all-timer.  This was one of the first death metal albums I really liked (which might just speak to my youth, but regardless), and you may find it to be a good starting place if most of the current well-regarded death metal bands like Sulphur Aeon are too dense to get into. 



Atlantean Kodex- The White Goddess


Well-blended heavy metal from Germany, drawing influence from both power metal and traditional doom.  Combining the best of both genres, the album hits considerably harder than most power metal, but keeps the pace up and courses with an energy not often found in trad doom.
This seems to be a concept album, but if there is a distinct narrative, I can’t make it out.  Although not necessarily cohesive, the lyrics are stirring, covering well-worn themes of the rise and fall of empires, and the clash of ideologies and religions, but with a deft touch and a dog-eared thesaurus at hand.   
With pure heavy metal feeling pretty stale over the past few years, there’s no reason this album should be so underappreciated.


Friday, May 6, 2016

Entries from the Top 100: Les Discrets- "Song for Mountains"

Les Discrets- “Song for Mountains”
From the album Septembre et ses dernières pensées
Location: 40ish

An excellent track from Les Discrets' also-excellent 2010 debut.  Operating in the same scene that produced Alcest, Amesouers and Lantlôs, this band fit rather nicely to that same gazey, semi-metal sound that has been the biggest development in modern black metal, for good or ill.  Les Discrets is headed by the multi-talented Fursy Tessier, who also provided the fantastic cover art for the album. 
Less “metal” than many other bands in this loose collective (for the other end of the spectrum, Glaciation and Old Silver Key may appeal as well), Les Discrets make more frequent use of acoustic guitar, and keep the shrieked vocals to an absolute minimum.  The result is a calmer, more contemplative feel to the album.
Despite its English title, “Song for Mountains,” like the rest of the album, is sung entirely in French.  I find that it is a great example of the benefits of allowing a singer to perform is his or her native language, as the comfort and ease with the language and its sounds allows to words to seamlessly complement the music.  My French was never particularly great and has only rusted in the years since college, but with a little outside help the translation proves to be as beautiful as expected.

A great track for walking on a cool spring night, but be sure there are enough trees around.