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31 minutes ago, AlSymerz said:

The Sword - Age of Winter

Man did this one get the purists riled up when it came out. I remember getting this on a whim for under five dollars in physical format from one of the last real CD stores left (They hung on for as long as they could, but eventually folded not long after), and having never heard of them prior thinking it was pretty good. Then of course finding the absolute bile and venom being thrown their way online over everything from their singer "trying to sound like Ozzy" which was a patently absurd assertion, to them "synchronizing their headbanging" on stage. I like metalheads in general, but occasionally we can all be really susceptible to hyperbolic contrarianism. Lament for the Aurochs is still a song I listen to semi-regularly off this album. 

I like it. With a name like Double Homicide I was expecting something leaning toward the slam americanized style of brutal death metal. Not so. This would be much closed to something you might hear from Asphyx or Gorement, which is a style I like better anyway. Also that album cover is awesome.

2 hours ago, GoatmasterGeneral said:

It's a line from a little movie from the early 90's called The Sandlot, which you wouldn't have seen because it's about a bunch of young teenage kids who love baseball, and I know your Ozzy mob doesn't care about baseball, you have that silly cricket game and 9 different versions of rugby.

My Kiwi wife actually had a "You're killing me Smalls" t-shirt with that freckle-faced fat kid's picture on it which is where I heard the quote, because I'm not a real big movie guy. Apparently the main character's name was Scotty Smalls and the fat kid kept telling him "You're killing me Smalls."

😆Ha. That movie is alright for a Disny-esque sort of ode to childhood misadventures. I completely forgot Dennis Leary was in it until I happened to catch it on TV again this year. Goes to show how things change that they actually let the whole fake drowning/Wendy Peffercorn thing just play out the way it did. I get the feeling that and the "you play ball like a girl" thing wouldn't slide today. Damn. Even as a kid myself I think I preferred Stand By Me for depictions of diminishing childhood innocence perched just above the looming darkness of adulthood. It's a little less sanitized and basically covers the same thematic ground.

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22 minutes ago, Nasty_Cabbage said:

Man did this one get the purists riled up when it came out. I remember getting this on a whim for under five dollars in physical format from one of the last real CD stores left (They hung on for as long as they could, but eventually folded not long after), and having never heard of them prior thinking it was pretty good. Then of course finding the absolute bile and venom being thrown their way online over everything from their singer "trying to sound like Ozzy" which was a patently absurd assertion, to them "synchronizing their headbanging" on stage. I like metalheads in general, but occasionally we can all be really susceptible to hyperbolic contrarianism. Lament for the Aurochs is still a song I listen to semi-regularly off this album.

I was late to all that stuff. I never really heard much about the band until they did the Dark Side Of The Moon. Even now I don't know heaps about them but I do listen to them occasionally.

NP: Tyr - Eric the Red

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36 minutes ago, Nasty_Cabbage said:

depictions of diminishing childhood innocence perched just above the looming darkness of adulthood.

This kind of theme is aimed at manipulating Thatguy's emotions, and that kind of malarkey is not Thatguy approved. So I've made a point of avoiding all such movies, and suchlike books too, Orca.

These are Thatguy approved and I listened to them this morning:-

MÆRE - ...And The Universe Keeps Silent. I think I called this spare the other day. Perhaps austere is a better word.

WALK THROUGH FIRE - Till Aska. You'd have to call this austere too, but it is entirely different to the above.

NP - SLOWDIVE - Pygmalion. These guys had their day back in the 1990s apparently but I only just discovered them via a couple of new releases. This one is from 1995. Shoegazey quiet music reminiscent of Cocteau Twins but without Elizabeth Fraser's glorious voice. Very noice indeed.

 

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11 hours ago, GoatmasterGeneral said:

HBD dude. This reminds me my daughter's 34th birthday will be coming up next month. Where does the time go? Also reminds me my late wife would have been 40 in another two days. Can't imagine her being 40, funny how people are frozen in time in your mind at whatever age you last knew them at.

Never got into MDB really. I've heard some of their stuff but it never really did much for me. It's been quite awhile though, might be time to revisit those sad acts one of these days. But they've got too many god damned albums, I wouldn't know where to start. Have they released anything that's a bit heavier and more aggressive than the rest?

 

Agreed about Satanic North. Totally forgettable.

This Grave Heresy's pretty damn good though 🤘

 

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I appreciate it, my metal bro!  It was a fantastic day indeed!  I'm sorry to hear about your late wife.  That's such a true statement that resonates with me regarding the last age at which we knew someone who is no longer with us.  I had a close friend who was killed in a car accident during our freshman year of college - to me, she'll always be 18.  

Hope your daughter enjoys her 34th birthday as well!

My Dying Bride have been a constant for me over the past 17 years or so.  Their debut full-length release, "As the Flower Withers" is one where Aaron Stainthorpe only uses his death vocals, so that one might be a little closer to a sound you might enjoy more.  The music is unmistakably doom-leaning, though, so it may still be a bit too low-key - definitely worth checking out, though!

I finished listening all the way through their 2001 release, "The Dreadful Hours" today, and that one is probably one of their heaviest albums.  You might possibly find "The Light at the End of the World" (1999) somewhat enjoyable.  I understand they're not everyone's cup of tea, though.  I don't listen to a ton of doom outside of Candlemass, My Dying Bride, Solitude Aeturnus, Doom VS, and Funeral, but occasionally I'm in the mood for it, and it hits home big time!

22 hours ago, AlSymerz said:

Vista Chino - Peace

Happy Birthday James

Thank you, my friend!  It was a fantastic day!  My wife took the day off so we could spend it together, and I wouldn't change a single thing about it.  I'm a blessed man for sure.

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2 hours ago, Arioch said:

Cirith Ungol - Dark Parade (2023)

 

Fantastic choice!  To be honest, I had a difficult time getting into Cirith Ungol due to Tim Baker's vocals.  But I've since grown to love this band.  His vocals are unique for sure, but they actually add to the music, which I've grown to see.

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Mercyless - Unholy Chapters (The Merciless Years) (2023)

Demos from French Death Metal band.

 

19 minutes ago, JamesT said:

Fantastic choice!  To be honest, I had a difficult time getting into Cirith Ungol due to Tim Baker's vocals.  But I've since grown to love this band.  His vocals are unique for sure, but they actually add to the music, which I've grown to see.

I had trouble liking her voice too. But after listening to this album so many times, it doesn't bother me at all.

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22 hours ago, Thatguy said:

This kind of theme is aimed at manipulating Thatguy's emotions, and that kind of malarkey is not Thatguy approved. So I've made a point of avoiding all such movies, and suchlike books too, Orca.

 

A yes, entertainment and it's pesky habit of making people feel things. That's why I only read technical manuals about water filtration, deionization, and treatment facilities. Try and make me emote over that, you local municipalities! You just try!

I'm just throwing a little shade your way Thatguy. In truth I definitely have a mental list of movies that I know to only watch by myself. At some point we all learn to maintain our defenses in or around company.

NP: Wardra - Warden of the Stellar Crypts

▶︎ Warden Of The Stellar Crypts | Wardra | Onism Productions (bandcamp.com)

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I was expecting a little more DSO style dissonance since the promo blurb said they had moved away from purely traditional black metal. They really didn't move too far from it, and the production values are on point. Honestly not bad.

Edited by Nasty_Cabbage
Typo
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