Forgotten Tomb confirm album title and release details


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Italian blackened doom merchants Forgotten Tomb have confirmed full details of their new opus magnificus.

Released on Agonia Records, the bands eighth album has been adorned with the title Hurt Yourself And The Ones You Love and will be released on April 17th (UK/Europe) and April 21st (US/Rest of World).

Produced by Terje Refsnes (Carpathian Forest, Gehenna), the album is described by Ferdinando “Herr Morbid” Marchisio as “a mix of melancholy, groove and pure malignancy”.

Tracklisting:

1- Soulless Upheaval
2- King Of The Undesirables
3- Bad Dreams Come True
4- Hurt Yourself And The Ones You Love
5- Mislead The Snakes
6- Dread The Sundown
7- Swallow The Void

The band have also previewed the new album cover:

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Forgotten Tomb on Facebook


Keeper / Sea Bastard – 12″ split


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Sea Bastard, Brighton’s kings of monstrous doom, have made a huge impression in 2014 with their sophomore full-length Scabrous (Mosh Tuneage / Dry Cough), and here they set out to reinforce their place in the murky backwaters of the psyche with the more than able assistance of Californian duo Keeper.

There’s a track each on this nefarious ‘split’, issued by Dry Cough in Europe and soon by Medusa Crush in the US and both are of the nastiest, most monumental evil imaginable, running to 35 minutes in total. Keeper’s contribution, ‘777’, is a mere bagatelle at fourteen minutes, but is the kind of blackened doom immediately evoking comparison with Indian and Lord Mantis, Penny Keats‘ hateful scream coating claustrophobic atmospheres and rhythms veering from sparing and slow to an oppressive swell. The pace of the verse structure is torturous, dictated by tolling riffs and Keats’ resonant percussion, really allowing the harrowing horror to wind freely around the gut. It’s gloriously uncomfortable and twitch-inducing, with the squalling lead feedback of the last few moments utterly nerve-shredding.

The ‘Bastard’s twenty-minute stroll through the swamps, ‘Astral Rebirth’, is a lumbering, jurassic behemoth stalking its prey. The intake of breath prior to Ian ‘Monty’ Montgomery‘s vocal commencement is as effective and portentous as the ensuing delivery, a murderously deep and slow growl which suits Oli Irongiant’s funereal riffs, Steve Patton’s bass prowl and George Leaver‘s fearful, summoning drums. The central riff section is about as downturned as it’s possible to get, with a wailing lead undercurrent, and when that voice kicks back in to introduce a tribal quickening it is both brutal and terrifying – that lead showing brief periods of frenetic explosion which add to the slow, chopping destruction in the latter stages.

There’s a controlled brutality here, heavier yet just as ominous, this is from a dark place which no soul should inhabit but thank God for us listeners they do. Nod majestically at the front, ye worshippers, this is a mighty, frightening split highlighting the best aspects of two bands whose diseased outlook is matched by their deliberate, tolling power.

8.5/10

Keeper on Facebook

Sea Bastard on Facebook

PAUL QUINN


Taake – Stridens Hus


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They’ve left it a bit late to try and muscle in on everyone’s end of year lists, but Norwegian Black Metal outfit Taake’s new album might just cause a few people to have a rethink. Stridens Hus [‘Battle House’] (Dark Embrace) is Taake’s sixth album since 1999 – which are always released at three year intervals – and it’s a corker.

The one man project from Hoest has fashioned a mix of traditional nasty black metal with an aura of accessibility. The production values are good – raw, but not unlistenable, while the music itself features a variety of different textures that need multiple listens to really appreciate.

Opener ‘Gamle Norig’ combines Hoest’s evil, rasping vocals with riffs parts reminiscent of Still Life-era Opeth (Peaceville). The song peaks and troughs, swinging from abrasive to almost melodic guitar work. The six-minute ‘Orm’ starts as a fairly standard Black ‘n’ Roll number before belting out some solos that wouldn’t sound of place on 70s prog album and then morphs into an epic blackened doom monster featuring monk-like chanting. It’s exciting, heavy and enjoyable.

What makes Stridens Hus so listenable is the variety on offer. Taake have a whole host of ideas crammed into each song, where so many others would only have one or two. The seven minute ‘Det fins ens Prins’ combines blasting drum beats with chanting, spoken word, quiet interludes and epic passages. There’s flourishes of thrash moments that recall Volcano-era Satyricon, and a few that bring to mind Dark Medieval Times (both Moonfog)

Plenty of focus on the music – long guitar-focus parts; the instrumental ‘En Sang til Sand om Ildebrann’ could almost pass for classic melo-death before leading straight into the pure filth of ‘Kongsgaard bestaar’; which combines the soul-shrivelling blast beasts and rasping screams at the start with a host of melodic guitar solos the end. There are times when how a song starts is completely at odds with how it finishes, but it just adds to the journey.

In an overcrowded and samey scene, Taake are one of the few bands to stand out. Stridens Hus is an excellent album – combining the traditional themes and sounds of Black metal and mixing them up with elements to create something familiar yet refreshing.

8.0/10

Taake on Facebook

DAN SWINHOE