Showing posts with label voidcrawler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label voidcrawler. Show all posts

Ben Djarum shares his top picks from 2013

Tuesday, January 7, 2014


I recently received a submission from my pal Ben Djarum. As a craft beer rep and metal musician, it only seems appropriate to include his thoughts. He's a self-described Lovecraftian scholar and craft beer prophet, and his project Voidcrawler released one of the more exciting demos that I had the luck of reviewing last year. If that's not enough, he's got a blog of his own in which he details RPG campaigns and extreme music culture, often fusing the two in exciting ways. With his unique set of interests and tastes, it's an honor to feature a list of his top albums of 2013 here on Black Metal & Brews. As each of his lists were "in no particular order," I've decided to alphabetize them for convenience.

As always, we'll start with honorable mentions:
Castevet- "Obsian"
Cloud Rat- "Moksha"
Eissturm- "The Path"
Gamardah Fungus- "Night Walk With Me"
Grift- "Fyra Elegier"
Mortefoutre- "L'Execrable Symbole Defraichi"
Chelsea Wolfe- "Pain is Beauty"

And now, those worthy enough to receive serious descriptions:


Altar of Plagues- "Teethed Glory and Injury"
The late Altar of Plagues released one final disc before disbanding this past October. "Teethed Glory and Injury" could not be a better document to mark the end of the band's lifeline. They draw upon the pallets of sound that made albums like "White Tomb" and "Mammal" so essential. What this band once did in lengthy soundscapes, they now do in angular crystalline blasts of emotion. Fare thee well, Altar of Plagues.


Battle Dagorath- "Cursed Storm of Ages"
An international collaboration that has spawned two previous full-lengths. "Cursed Storm of Ages" is an absolute epic of desolate, snow-crusted landscapes, cold night skies, blood, battle, and fire that stretches over two discs. Cold ambiance, frosty blackened riffs, and Tolkien references. Essential winter metal.


Charnel House- "Black Blood"
I was shocked to learn that Charnel House is a duo hailing from Indiana. It sounds like a strange cult of nomadic doom gypsies gathering for a mid-summer funeral. Otherworldly female vocals rise like ghostly flames. The drummer pounds away like a necromantic shaman. Strange drones, whirring sounds and sparkling chimes spiral around the core assault. Were I a wealthy man, I would have bought every friend and family member a copy of this album.


Csejthe- "Reminiscence"
A powerful work of affecting ambiance and dark romanticism. It's difficult to create a work that is so profoundly emotive without it digressing into gothic cheese, but this Quebecois horde does it brilliantly through measured deliberation (there are a lot of slow, brooding passages that bring to mind falling snow), competent musicianship and deft musical storytelling.


Esben & the Witch- "Wash the Sins Not Only the Face"
Shimmery guitars, driving bass, tribal drums. It's as though the early 4AD roster were caught in a horrible rainstorm, with only a sinister gothic mansion to take refuge in. Call it silly names like "goth pop" or "post-goth" but I call it beautiful and inspired.


Fell Voices- "Regnum Saturni"
Opening with the drone of a harmonium, we transcend the old growth forest and are held aloft in the frozen void above the chaos of distant Saturn. The gauzy veil of buzzing guitars with myriad oppressive melodies within paired with the incessant drums inspires some serious cosmic trancework. Too bad the gray banality of the outside world still exists when it's all over.


Grue- "Casualty of the Psychic Wars"
An amazing mix of yearning vocals and melodies, blast beats, crusty riffs, trippy keyboards and wild aggression.There's also an emotive hardcore urgency to some of this which gives it another layer of might altogether. I guess that's their Boston hometown influence creeping in.


Nahar- "The Strange Inconvenience"
Brutal psychedelic brown acid blackened doom from France. Six songs of punishing guitars and drums with creeping arpeggios and tendrils of post-metal exploration weaving their way through the proceedings.


Njiqahdda- "Serpents in the Sky"
It's become too easy to throw coins on a grid and come up with cycles of buzzwords and descriptive labels for bands that evolve and recreate their sound. It would be lazy of me, as well as downright disrespectful, to try and apply those words to this fucking kaiju of an album. I could almost call "Serpents in the Sky" a dictionary of heavy metal. Styles shift and bend and mutate from thrashy riffing to frenzied picking arpeggios that climb up and down melody lines like tiny mind spiders. The vocals go from defiant shouting to a sneering Stiv Bators croon. Fucking majestic, huge, and monolithic.


Oranssi Pazuzu- "Valonielu"
An enthralling album. These Finnish pyschedelic doomlords continue to refine and evolve their sound. It might be more accessible, maybe a bit cleaner, but "Valonielu" is just as otherworldly as 2011's "Kosmonument." This is what is playing on the starship stereo after you've set the controls for the heart of the sun.


Patrons of the Rotting Gate- "The Rose Coil"
Irish two-man metal horde, members of Kiriath, who I have not heard, but which Metal Archives describes as technical death metal. I usually associate the word "technical" with an emphasis on guitar wankery over substance and emotional weight. Patrons of the Rotting Gate, however, have serious depth and emotion behind what they do. This is also one of the few albums in recent memory that address the themes of atheism without the typical Luciferian trappings. The lyrics are brilliant, something far too many people don't take into consideration. A crushing and magnificent debut.


Seidr- "Ginnungagap"
Like other albums mentioned here, this is a two-volume grimoire of soundworlds created by earth, fire, and cosmos. Seidr use passages of chanting, sitars, flutes, acoustic guitars, and natural ambiance to create a ritualistic trance before ascending into the crushing metallic sorcery that lay within its core. Beautiful.


Skagos- "Anarchic"
Lengthy slabs of sonic excursion through the dark primal woods and into your own subconscious. As a child, I used to have strange dreams where I was desperately looking for something along a forest path or river. Now, as an adult I realize that it was this album all along. Skagos cover an entire world of sounds here.Waves of feedback give way to gentle passages, crystalline passages of frenzied black metal open up into ethereal heights of wonder. Easily my favorite album of the year.


Throne of Katarsis- "The Three Transcendental Keys"
Three lengthy Norwegian black metal rituals, recorded live in studio to analog cassette. Weighty and majestic. Bores a hole into your mind and pours in an ocean of demoniacal wonder.


Yellow Eyes- "Hammer of Night"
Six songs that don't stray far from six minutes in length but with enough sonic intensity and structure to make for an exhilarating and otherworldly experience. A whirlwind of clattering drums and insectoid guitars, but with well-crafted dynamics, torturous cries and ambiance.

For your collective convenience (if you don't feel like clicking individual links), here is a link to a playlist of tracks from Djarum's favorite releases.

Fragile Branch update: New music from Voidcrawler, Ancst, & Frater Ximenes is Dead

Monday, September 16, 2013


Some of you may notice that this post comes not long after a recent post about a batch of releases from Fragile Branch. Even without consistent quality, a label this prolific would have my full attention, but Fragile Branch's roster remains ambitious and challenging while still having a general focus on high quality black metal and its related subgenres. With three new tapes being released between now and the end of October, it's time to take a good look and prepare ourselves for some new music.


Voidcrawler- "Demo"
This release is one of the few demo albums I've heard recently that actually sounds like a demo. It's not quite a fully realized album, but it is a solid and enjoyable collection of songs that craft a dark fantasy atmosphere full of wolves, wind, and otherworldly beasts. If the totally awesome album cover doesn't instantly sell you, I don't know if I can help you much. The songs themselves are fully formed, and the themes do seem related, but there seems to be a slight change in overall sound quality and balance between a couple of the tracks. It's not an issue so much as something that caught my attention--perhaps the physical cassette is slightly more consistent. While not quite in the vein of many bands that pay homage to Lord of the Rings, the song titles create such vivid imagery that the music tends to play into. I can imagine much of this lo-fi black metal being listened to in a cabin lit only by candles, with demons and ghouls lurking just outside. Clean lead guitar tends to subtly guide the distorted backing tracks on through snowy woodlands and endless valleys. This is a promising debut for this act and the cassette can already be preordered, with tomorrow set as the shipping date.


Ancst- "In Turmoil"
People who keep up with Black Metal & Brews are most likely familiar with Ancst from my recent review of their two-song cassette "The Humane Condition," released earlier this year on Dark Omen Records. "In Turmoil" is the first official US-based release from Ancst and is a collection of their songs from multiple other releases, including "The Humane Condition." Despite the fact that these songs are from separate releases, the urgency and experimentation in Ancst's style allows pretty much any of their tracks to flow nicely with any other. Each of the tracks here stands alone while working with the others. If you're looking for more of the chaotic black metal influenced hardcore/sludge hybrid that Ancst is so good at, this tape is a perfect way to catch a bit of everything from them. This tape will be up for preorder soon with a release date of October 22nd, so keep an eye out. Additionally, Ancst has a pretty promising split with Hiveburner available directly from the band themselves. Ancst's tracks from that split are all on "In Turmoil," but if you're interested in the other half of the split you should check it out.


Frater Ximenes is Dead- "Demo II"
Following two slightly more aggressive and fast-paced releases is this offering of terrifying dark ambient and droning black metal. While this is Frater Ximenes is Dead's second demo, it's the first I've heard from them and it makes for a promising introduction. Warped keys, distant shrieks, and a heavy haze that never quite leaves all make for an unsettling and dark release from this Italian duo. Even by the album's end, the nature sounds that are left behind strike me as the earth reclaiming its territory after some sort of man-made chaos. There's little familiar here, even when drawing parallels to similarly minded artists of the general black noise genre, and I find that to be suitable. This is arguably the strangest release I've reviewed lately, yet my morbid fascination with it grows with each listen. This is going to be released on October 22nd in an edition of 66 copies with a patch. I seriously recommend getting on this. It may not make sense at first, but it grows on the listener with repeated plays.
 

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