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Showing posts with label Live Fast Die Records. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Live Fast Die Records. Show all posts

Tuesday, 16 January 2018

REVIEW: No Funeral, "Mankind Is Carrion, Fit For Nothing" [EP]

By; Charlie Butler

Album Type: Full Length
Date Released: 30/12/2017
Label: Live Fast Die Recordings




“Mankind Is Carrion, Fit For Nothing” sees No Funeral go straight for the jugular with an unrelenting onslaught of volume and bile.  This EP is another great offering from this excellent band


“Mankind Is Carrion, Fit For Nothing” CS//DD track listing:

1). Carrion
2). Hyperalgesia
3). My War (Black FlagCover)

The Review:

Fearsome Minneapolis sludge dealers No Funeralmake a welcome return with new EP “Mankind Is Carrion, Fit For Nothing”. Their split LP with Livid was a highlight of 2017 and this new release finds them administering three further doses of sweet misery.

“Carrion” and “Hyperalgesia” find the band in deadly form conveying their hatred of humanity via nasty, primal doom. On previous releases the band have sometimes utilised moments of quiet in amongst the carnage to create an air of menace. “Mankind Is Carrion, Fit For Nothing” sees No Funeral go straight for the jugular with an unrelenting onslaught of volume and bile aided by a red raw production by Dinis deCarvalho.

Carrion” is a punishing experience, eight minutes of slow-motion torment consisting of bleak riffs and the bands harrowing dual vocal attack. A brief burst of crusty sludge raises the tempo above a crawl before crashing back into the abyss once more. “Hyperalgesia” continues the drudgery culminating in a series of dark samples, an effective No Funeral trademark.

The EP is rounded off with a gloriously torturous cover of Black Flag’sMy War”. No Funeral take the miserable dirge of side 2 of the “My War” LP and apply it to the high octane punk of the title track to create a harrowing doom masterpiece.

“Mankind Is Carrion, Fit For Nothing” is another great offering from this excellent band. Hopefully a full-length slab of filth will see the light of day before the end of 2018.

“Mankind Is Carrion, Fit For Nothing” is available here




Band info: bandcamp|| facebook

Monday, 4 December 2017

ALBUM REVIEW: Circadian Ritual - "Befallen"

By: Ernesto Aguilar

Album Type: Full length
Date Released:22/12/2017
Label: Live Fast Die Recordings



When all is said and done, "Befallen" is certain to stake Circadian Ritual as a band to watch, and an exemplary representative of the peaking Minneapolis doom scene.

“Befallen” CS//DD track listing

1. Solomon's Temple
2. Befallen
3. Elysian Desire
4. Pyramids of Form and Matter
5. The Heirophant

The Review:

Just like that, Minneapolisis turning into a hotbed for doom metal bands. Boson, Ulkum and Circadian Ritual are among those leading the charge right now. In the case of Circadian Ritual, the quartet released its self-titled debut last year and concludes 2017 with "Befallen," Fans of the group's debut may remember those languid tracks – the four selections were all 10 distorted minutes or longer – and vocals by Jake Quittschreiber that cast a deep, rumbling shadow over already blackened, dirge like events. As you might guess, Circadian Ritual made a big impression with its premiere.

With their sophomore offering "Befallen," fans get to experience a leap for the group, which features more music, tighter orchestration (three of the five songs are under 10 minutes this time) and new layers to its delivery. On "Solomon's Temple," the band gives a melodic chord series before Quittschreiber pours on the harshness. Guitarist Rick Parsons and bassist Jim Clark lather upon the vocal a molasses of mutilated noise, here and throughout the campaign. Later, "Elysian Desire" sees bassist Ben Shaffer with some of his monstrously distorted playing that proves positively brain damaging.

"Befallen" offers a few surprises as well.  The title track features guest vocals by Jori Apedaile, the principal of atmospheric black metal/blackgaze act Eneferens, also hailing from Minnesota. This song's promise is realized, too. Almost on cue after that, "Pyramids of Form and Matter" strikes a perfect balance of atmospheric doom and hints of black metal. This is easily one of the most engrossing songs on the album, with the whole band taking their effort to another level. Burly, slow rhythms, prowling guitars and a vocal that is menacing while not overpowering the rest of the composition, makes this track especially good. Similarly, that title cut churns, building to a typhoon of a climax, with effects and instruments building haltingly. The bell here is a nice touch as well.

As the longest song, "The Heirophant" at 12 minutes is a risky move. While Circadian Ritual has made long cuts in past outings, virtually everything on "Befallen" is abridged to one degree or another. In many ways, going trim makes Circadian Ritual's music even more interesting. Where "The Heirophant" goes well is in its organization. The band makes crests with purpose, and takes full advantage of Quittschreiber's fierce verbiage by accompanying it with a depressive stupor of noise. The band takes a turn about four minutes in, blending melancholic chords that scatter as colossal riffs take center stage. All said and done, "Befallen" is certain to stake Circadian Ritual as a band to watch, and an exemplary representative of the peaking Minneapolis scene.

"Befallen" is available to pre order/buy here



Band info: bandcamp|| facebook

Sunday, 26 November 2017

ALBUM REVIEW: Ulkum - "Ulkum"

By: Ernesto Aguilar

Album Type: Full length
Date Released:08/11/2017
Label: Live Fast Die Records


Songs like II" has an intelligent build up on the way to a pulsing tone that creates the sort of dread that the best doom can conjure.  Should you love that description, this album will be the red meat you're waiting for.
 
“Ulkum”CS//DD track listing

1. Rehearsal I
2. Rehearsal II
3. Rehearsal III
4. Clothed in the Ashes of Fallen Brethren
5. Breathe Darkness, Swallow Light         
6. Children of Ulkum

The Review:

How many funeral doom bands can you think of that make their primary business live performances? Certainly a few, but the majority seem to be studio acts. That is because this particular subgenre is so much about atmosphere that it is rare to really be able to strike that mood in a bar, or with restless attendees, even ones who are into it.

In the case of Minneapolisfour-piece Ulkum, its trial by fire has been largely on the performance circuit. Its debut album, "First Prophecy" from October, was a live performance on community radio station KFAI. Before that debut, Ulkumreleased a demo, "Demonstration," in January of this year. Now back with its eponymous full length, which features its three tracks from the demo and three fresh editions of songs from the live album, fans finally get a sense of what the group can truly do.

Ulkum is composed of some of the region's experienced musicians, including bassist Jesse Geirr Conaway of the black metal band Drona; drummer Jonathon Andrew Roll, formerly of black/death metal outfit Autumnal Winds and black metal group Feral Light; lead guitarist Aaron Lott of progressive metal crew Chaos Frame and melodic death metal act Pestifere; and vocalist Joshua Ans of death metal performers Fallen Empire. Given its lineage, Ulkum'sform of doom has had prominent black metal and death metal influences, as well as a lo-fi aesthetic that audiences caught on that original demo. Should you love that description, this album will be the red meat you're waiting for.

If you caught the group's initial release, the first three cuts will be your reminder of Ulkum'ssound. Those cuts, titled "I" to "III," are tighter versions of the "Demonstration" sessions that are still raw, decidedly on the low-end and muddy. It may have been challenging to figure out if that was purposeful, or just a casualty of austere recording, but there are plenty of dark glimmers to nevertheless appreciate. In particular, "II" has an intelligent build up on the way to a pulsing tone that creates the sort of dread that the best doom can conjure. If you are familiar with the previous songs, these renditions are particularly strong, and perhaps even better, than the originals.

The second half of "Ulkum" covers the cuts from "First Prophecy." The tracks released from that October performance gave listeners glimpses of growth from the band. There is perceptibly more mature compositions between a song like "I" and "Clothed in the Ashes of Fallen Brethren." On this album, the versions of "First Prophecy" songs feel almost identical, beyond a few touches. This is a positive thing. In fact, if you owned or streamed "Demonstration," this is a good chance to own the most quality versions of those cuts, plus the even better versions of tracks from "First Prophecy."

"Ulkum" is available here




Band info: bandcamp || facebook

Friday, 22 September 2017

REVIEW: No Funeral & Livid - "No Funeral / Livid" (Split)

By: Charlie Butler

Album Type: Split LP
Date Released: 15/08/2017
Label: Live Fast Die Records


The combination of these two bands on one mammoth slab of wax is a marriage made in hell. No Funeral and Livid are definitely acts to check out now if you like it slow, heavy and desolate.

“No Funeral / Livid” Split LP//DD track listing:

1). No Funeral - Infection
2). No Funeral – Disease Brought By Depression
3). Livid – False Hope

The Review:

This split LP brings together two Minneapolis doom heavyweights united in snail-paced drudgery. No Funeral and Livid both deal in punishing, immersive doom delivered in contrasting styles.

No Funeral immediately establishes an air of quiet foreboding with the cold, bare introduction of “Infection”. Clean guitars are quickly drowned under a torrent of filthy sludge as the band rumble into a lumbering evil riff. There are slight increases in tempo as the track progresses but a grisly doom crawl is maintained throughout, somewhere between Iron Monkey’sbelligerent spite and Unearthly Trance’s bleakest moments. The mood of hopelessness is heightened by the nasty dual vocals, particularly the harsh howls of despair near the start of second track “Disease Brought By Depression”. Here the band dive deeper into the well of misery, building to a harrowing climax where a vocal sample detailing the effects of heroin withdrawal skips and repeats as the track unravels into chaos.

Livid’s side of this split is a single 19 minute epic titled “False Hope”. The oppressive atmosphere of No Funeral’s offering remains but the sludge has been dialled back in favour of spacious dark psychedelia in the vein of Yob or early Pallbearer. There is a stark contrast on the vocal front too but Cole’s Benson’s clean, reverb-assisted delivery instils a similar level of dread via a different mechanism. Over the first half of the track the band wring maximum impact from a gloomy chord sequence before letting a huge riff unfurl out of the dirge and develop over the second half.

The combination of these two bands on one mammoth slab of wax is a marriage made in hell. No Funeral and Livid are definitely acts to check out now if you like it slow, heavy and desolate.

“No Funeral / Livid”is available here



Band info: No Funeral || Livid

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