Showing posts with label Nachtmystium. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nachtmystium. Show all posts
Thursday, October 2, 2014
Nachtmystium: The World We Left Behind ALBUM REVIEW
When not shamelessly ripping off fans and bandmates with impunity (according to former collaborator Neill Jameson and many disgruntled fans) by selling merchandise that didn’t exist or selling the rights to albums he didn’t own to make money to buy drugs, Blake Judd was more commonly known to be the “mastermind” behind Chicago black metal squad Nachtmystium. Whether he was truly the mastermind behind the long-running project has been brought into question (Jameson alluded in a lengthy article written about Blake that the majority of his music was written by others, not him.) no one can deny that the end results of many of the band’s recording endeavors have been stellar, even milestones of the black metal genre. The experimentation that started with Instinct: Decay and continued with the groundbreaking “Black Meddle” series show that someone, Blake or not, was thinking about what could be achieved within the black metal genre on a higher level. And although their previous album Silencing Machine did not expand upon the experimentation of the two Black Meddle installments, it was still a satisfyingly grim and aggressive record that had just enough electronic flourishes to distinguish itself from straight-ahead black metal. Hyped as the final Nachtmystium album, The World We Left Behind should have been a farewell as equally ambitious and exciting as anything else in their recent output. But when presented with the final product, that sadly doesn’t describe it.
Monday, August 18, 2014
Upcoming Reviews
I'm going to start writing reviews again! So here's a bunch of albums that I'll be dissecting and my initial thoughts of all of them...
- Nachtmystium - The World We Left Behind: This one disappointed me. The above song initially got me very excited about the finished product, but the band really plays it safe on this record and the result was very unexciting.
- Judas Priest - Redeemer of Souls: Same feelings as above, but to an even greater extent.
- Pallbearer - Foundations of Burden: This one comes out tomorrow. I haven't heard the whole thing yet but I was really impressed with what I've heard so far. It's looking better than the first!
- The Atlas Moth - The Old Believer: This came out a while ago but I still want to review it.
- Opeth - Pale Communion: This hasn't come out yet but I'll review it as soon as I hear it.
Labels:
heavy,
Judas Priest,
metal,
music,
Nachtmystium,
Opeth,
Pallbearer,
review,
rock,
The Atlas Moth
Monday, June 24, 2013
CLASSICS: Nachtmystium-Addicts: Black Meddle Part II ALBUM REVIEW
Up until fairly recently, American black metal was rarely
ever taken too seriously and was seen as a novelty by some, especially those
who fall under the “black metal elitist” category who won’t accept anything
that comes from anywhere else but Scandinavia. American bands that donned
corpsepaint and leather armor and imitated Norwegian low-fi production styles
were seen more as unfunny parodies of black metal and not as groups of earnest
musicians, and by looking at silly photos of Leviathan, Xasthur, and Absu that
ape early Darkthrone album covers, it’s not hard to understand why. It finally
took some bands that were brave enough to opt out of that decade-old image and take
black metal into new stylistic territories for critics and fans to start paying
attention to what the Americans were doing with great interest. By no means has
this pleased everybody; the stigmatized “hipster” tag gets placed on many of
these bands, and even veterans of American black metal like Wrest of Leviathan
have derided them for not being “satanic” (“Don’t call it black metal then.” He
said about Wolves in the Throne Room and Liturgy in an interview with Decibel.)
But the development of black metal since the Americans have taken over has been
an exciting evolution of sorts, and who knows where the genre will end up next.
Labels:
Addicts,
black,
black metal,
Meddle,
metal,
music,
Nachtmystium,
review,
rock
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