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Showing content with the highest reputation on 01/27/2019 in all areas

  1. All the time although in perhaps a slightly different context. If I watch athletics on the TV I just hear “Running Free” by Iron Maiden, nor can I take paracetamol without “Painkiller” by Judas Priest blarring in my head. A stroll in the park or woods with my girlfriend just has “Walk” by Pantera on memory loop. Driving north just puts Darkthrone in my head with “A Blaze In The Northern Sky”. Hypnotist on TV? “Mass Hypnosis” by Sepultura. Lost count of how many times during meetings if someone raises that there’s not enough time to discuss something I hear Anthrax “Got The Time”. Need to replace the batteries in the xbox controller? “Battery Acid Enema” by Autopsy. Was forced to attend my nephews holy communion last year and spent the entire time in the church running through songs with the word ‘altar’ in the title. “Altars” by Altarage came up a lot, but “Altar Of Sacrifice” by Slayer as well as “Altar Of Deceit” by Triptykon kept me occupied also. Life is just shit without metal.
    2 points
  2. Opeth "Morningrise"
    2 points
  3. The roar has always been approaching. As far back as three years ago when Altarage dropped their debut full length 'Nihl', this scribe could already hear the threat of their ability, feel the menace of their presence from over hills far away and sense the nefarious intent as the raw fury howled over my skin. Sophomore effort 'Endinghent' further cemented the prowess of these blackened death metal Basque country residents. Although slightly less of an impact than the opening salvo of 'Nihl' it was obvious throughout their second offering that Altarage were refining their strategy and making the style of attack more calculated. Album number three is no longer an approach though. It's an arrival. Arguably now on a par with the bastion of death metal chaos that are Portal now, Altarage are right up there with their own stamp on the principles of this most unwelcoming and inaccessible form of extreme metal. What they did so well on 'Nihl' was shift multiple times the pace, atmosphere and direction of a track. Doing so with such effortless and frankly unexpected subtlety that I just could not be anything but astounded. At the same time they could drop a grinding slab of unrelenting, blackened fury with scant regard for pacing or measure and still have my jaw on the floor. 'The Approaching Roar' takes those foundations and adds maturity, dexterity and skilled songwriting to them to produce some complex and yet - in parts - more accessible pieces of Altarage. Last year's Portal release 'Ion,' saw the band's sound lifted out of the traditionally murky depths that familiarised their sound, in favour of a more coherent aesthetic - which worked well. Altarage are still firmly writhing in their own filth and murk here, despite the odd glimpse of a clearer stab of accessibility. The menacing flamenco promise of the acoustic intro for opening track 'Sighting' is the first flash of this but in mere seconds the full on face stripping fury that we all know is coming is right there, detaching retinas and bursting ear drums. Even just one track in, the shifting/morphing of pace is obvious and the hidden melody of the final minute is reminiscent of your mum playing Smooth FM in the another room, just audible over the chaos that envelopes you at that time. 'Knowledge' is a big, chunky riffing monster of a track that builds like an army getting into formation for some devastating attack on the enemy. 'Urn' takes a brave step at track number three on the record by building a hazy and funereal intro that sounds like a dial slowly being notched up over a couple of minutes. Eventually (of course), the gates of hell themselves are then flung open with abrasive vocals and churning instrumentation. It is at this point that I first fell the drums are a little to low in the mix sometimes, stifled of air a bit by being a part of the roaring chaos as opposed to being allowed to breath a little at times. Again the song-shifting occurs here with the final two minutes of the track being some of the most coherent Altarage to date. As you take in the ebb and flow of 'Hieroglyphic Certainty' and obscure grinding riffs and tribal percussion of 'Inhabitant' it occurs to you that this listening experience is akin to a very cleverly engineered virus, the strain of which threatens to consume your entire existence. The deftness of the structure of 'Chaworos Sephelin' with its haunting, lo-fi cello tinged atmosphere that gives way to the crashing fury of waves of pummelling riffs and percussion is a joy to behold. The final two tracks finish the album just as we started it, still full of ideas and dripping with the promise of still better things to come. Altarage might be shrouded in mystery with their secretive nature (the Members tab on their page of Encyclopaedia Metallum says "none") but the music that they deliver shows them sharing only the most potent and valuable artefacts from the darkness which they inhabit. The roar is now and always will be with you. 5/5
    2 points
  4. Shostakovich - Cello Concerto #1 ...the wife and I are out to see an orchestra in New Hampshire. Holy shit, what a challenging piece to play...
    2 points
  5. Don't miss out on Arthur Brown. Definite influence on shock rock and early heavy metal here -- "corpsepaint" and high-pitched wailing from over 50 years ago.
    2 points
  6. Mayhem - De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas Satyricon - Nemesis Divina Satyricon - The Shadowthrone Satyricon - Dark Medieval Times Darkthrone - A Blaze in the Northern Sky Yeah, I know, I'm such a Satyricon fanboy especially for their early stuff. Can't help it. No demos, no EPs, no live albums. That gets too tricky. De Mysteriis... is pretty much required imo. A Blaze in the Northern Sky, of course. I believe these five albums are essential listening and among the best music ever made.
    2 points
  7. Mortician - Chainsaw Dismemberment
    1 point
  8. Been looping these all morning: Satyricon - "Min Hyllest Til Vinterland" Paradise Lost - "Another Desire" Katatonia - "Gone"
    1 point
  9. Der Sturmer / Wehrhammer
    1 point
  10. MacabreEternal

    First 10 Songs

    Behexen - Night of the Blasphemy (Rituale Satanum - 2000 - Sinister Figure) Ornette Coleman - Peace (The Shape of Jazz to Come - 1959 - Atlantic 1317) Metal Church - [My Favourite] Nightmare (Metal Church - 1984 - Ground Zero Records) Blut Aus Nord - Rigsthula (Ultima Thulee - 1995 - Impure Creations Records) Cynic - Kindly Bent To Free Us (Kindly Bent To Free Us - 2014 - Season of Mist) Overkill - Shred - (Under The Influence - 1988 - Megaforce Records) Machine Head - Wolves - (The Blackening - 2007 - Roadrunner Records) Lurk - Tale Blade - (Fringe - 2016 - Transcending Obscurity Records) Grave Miasma - Kussa'u Tibtihu - (Exalted Emanations - 2009 - Sepulchral Voice Records) Mayhem - Pure Fucking Armageddon - (Live in Leipzig - 1993 - Obscure Plasma)
    1 point
  11. They also played Rimsky-Korsakov's "Scheherazade", but the Shostakovich piece was the highlight for me. Small local orchestra, and it wasn't perfect, but somehow I liked it better because of that. And I agree, there's something special about the dynamic range and immediacy of classical music in a live setting. NP: Light Dweller - Incandescent Crucifix ...yeah, really impressed by this. One man project. @MacabreEternal and @Will might get into it as well. Svartidaudi - Revelations Of The Red Sword
    1 point
  12. Great albums, Depraved. Five perfect releases. Those first three Satyricon albums are amazing and in many ways the height of the genre. All the more frustrating that they went elsewhere with the sound to sit into a sort of rock pocket with minimal atmospherics
    1 point
  13. 1 point
  14. Taake - Nattestid Ser Porten Vid
    1 point
  15. Jungle Rot - Fueled By Hate
    1 point
  16. Immortal "Pure Holocaust" on CD as currently only have the digital copy.
    1 point
  17. If you're interested in going in more of a grind direction, maybe try these: Daughters Discordance Axis Brutal Truth Some screamo from Puritan and Reversal Of Man: Unhuman does super clean Necrophagist-influenced modern tech with varied vocals: Some literally unhinged messy Czech-death from !T.O.O.H.!: If you can handle dark/black metal, Bethlehem's "Dictius Te Necare" has one of the more extreme vocal performances I've heard: I can't be of much service if you just want more examples of the metalcore stuff that you posted, but that style isn't too hard to come by. Hopefully some of the above will appeal.
    1 point
  18. maybe it's blasphemous list.Cause i do not mention to mayhem album's.but the show must go on.so here is my list 1. Dissection - Storm Of The Light Bane 2 Windir - Arntor 3 Gorgoroth - Pentagram 4 Marduk - Opus Nocturne 5 Darkthrone - a blaze in the northern Sky
    1 point
  19. Depraved

    First 10 Songs

    Thin Lizzy - Boys Are Back in Town Boston - Peace of Mind ZZ Top - Gimme All Your Lovin' Billy Idol - Rebel Yell Judas Priest - You've Got Another Thing Comin' Motley Crue - Kickstart My Heart Warlock - All We Are Motley Crue - Looks That Kill Suicidal Tendencies - The Feeling's Back WASP - Cries in the Night But this is my work playlist, so no extreme metal.
    1 point
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