Monday, April 28, 2014

Giant Squid to release new album - 'Minoans'

           Californian progressive act Giant Squid present one of the most interesting and unorthodox takes on maritime metal the genre has ever seen. While acts like the Ocean and Ahab wax poetic on the wonder and torture of the open water (respectively), Giant Squid's slow, methodical, post-metal dabbed delivery evokes a scientific, inquisitive look at the sea that, combined with their erudite song names and lyrics, makes for quite the unique experience.

          It's been nearly four years since their last record The Icthyologist was released, and the band have finally broken their silence today with a new record 'Minoans', slated to be released this October!


         Well there you have it! Links to the Kickstarter will be up as soon as they appear.

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Summer Slaughter 2014 Lineup Announced

    Well, as usual, Lambgoat was right earlier this year when they announced Morbid Angel would be headlining Summer Slaughter, because...


     Wow! I don't listen to very much death metal but this looks to be stacked for anyone that does! Compared to last year that erred on the proggier side of things (Dillinger Escape Plan, Periphery, and Animals as Leaders headlined, with support from the Ocean), it looks like this year's Summer Slaughter will be quite different.

     There is an awful lot of deathcore, though, isn't there? I have nothing against Fallujah or Thy Art is Murder but it is surprising to see them on the same bill as Morbid Angel and Goatwhore.

       Anyway, dates aren't out yet but I will post them when they are released!


The Great Old Ones - Tekeli-Li REVIEW



          France has always been a haven for envelope-pushing black metal acts. From the primitive, lo-fi wrath of Les Légions Noires, to Neige's ten thousand side projects, French black metal is a genre that plays by its own rules, often earning the approval of critics despite a determinedly 'untrve' sound. Take, for instance, Anorexia Nervosa - a symphonic act that nevertheless has the respect of the same people who scorned Dimmu Borgir. Alcest's haunting melodies and heartfelt shoegaze should have earned nothing but derision from purists, and while some turned their backs Alcest remains one of the most beloved bands to come out of the old hexagon this side of Gojira.
         The Great Old Ones' ingenuity, thus, is nothing shocking. The Lovecraft-inspired quintet from Bordeaux, who are currently signed to the excellent Les Acteurs de l'Ombre, don't have much in the way of history. In 2012 the band released Al-Azif, their debut album, which drew influence equally from the evilness of Inquisition and the not-so-evilness of blackgaze acts like An Autumn for Crippled Children. It was, and remains, a profoundly unique record - hard to compare and harder to grasp, despite the familiarity of the subject matter.
          But it's now 2014 and the band's newest record Tekeli-li is just now seeing the light of day after months of anticipation. Tekeli-li answers the question I was worrying about when it came to The Great Old Ones - would they fall for the sophomore slump after putting out one of the most intriguing black metal records of 2012?
          The answer is, unquestionably, 'no'. Tekeli-li is at once a continuation of The Great Old Ones' style and a further exploration of the limits of post-black interspersed with psychedelic phantasmagoria in the style of A Forest of Stars or Nachtmystium. The story is a retelling of one of Lovecraft's most well-known novellas At the Mountains of Madness, which concerns itself with an expedition in Antarctica coming across the tomb of an ancient, unspeakable evil. To the Great Old Ones' credit, they manage to lyrically capture the essence of Lovecraft's writings, with the nefarious opener 'Je ne suis pas fou' featuring vocalist Jeff Grimal introducing the story of Tekeli-li and constantly reaffirming that he's not insane. The delivery of these lines, and, indeed, of the whole album's lyrics, is absolutely superb. Even though the vocals lapse into metallic savagery as soon as the second song 'Antarctica' kicks in, their eloquence perfectly captures what makes Lovecraft's writing so memorable - the band mimic ol' H.P's voice incredibly well, and for a retelling of one of his novels this is invaluable, almost making Tekeli-li seem like his own demented ravings released almost a century after Lovecraft's times.
         The Great Old Ones are a band all about atmosphere, and Al-Azif's foggy production heightened the sense of cosmic mystery and awe. While the murky production makes a return on Tekeli-li, the new record sees the band reveling more and more in the sheer atmosphere of their music, with eerie tremolos on 'Antarctica' setting the mood for the rest of the album before a ferocious blast beat comes in to annihilate, recalling Year of  No Light's apocalyptic post-metal landscapes.
         Tekeli-li is not a short album. Besides the brief intro, the shortest song clocks in at 7 and a half minutes, and the longest at nearly eighteen. Compared with Al-Azif, a far more shorter, roughly 45 minute affair, Tekeli-li thus takes a much grander, patient approach, boldly foraying into almost doom-like tempos before returning to the vanguard with a rallying blast beat, or yielding to a droning, tense break on 'the Ascent'.
           The band bring back the spoken word on 'Awakening', and it fits excellently with the ominous atmosphere and sense of insanity that falls like an anvil immediately after Grimal's orations are finished. 'Awakening' itself represents the album's turning point, where The Great Old Ones go from territory Al-Azif blazed to something else completely new. Throughout Tekeli-li's last three songs the band pull so many incredible twists and turns that it's difficult to begin to imagine their creativity. Things go from soulful and awestruck to brutal and frenzied in the span of seconds, all the while maintaining the air of gnawing, spectacular horror that made Lovecraft's writing so unforgettable, and there's even a blast beat giving way to an acoustic break.
          Translating stories into sound is not an easy feat - concept albums take a certain mode of thinking to execute successfully, but when done well they shine. With Tekeli-li, The Great Old Ones boldly strut into unexplored post-black territory - away from the influence and boundaries put in place by Weakling or Altar of Plagues, and continue to wander through the surreal crags that their music evokes so perfectly. You can purchase the album at the band's bandcamp here. Do yourself a favor and check these guys out - it's not something anyone sane would deny themselves.


         

Thursday, April 17, 2014

Vanna announce new album, release date, and track listing


        Vanna, the Boston hardcore act with a checkered history of ups-and-downs, lineup changes, have completely unexpectedly announced their fifth full-length Void. The record is set to be released on June 17th through Pure Noise Records. Void will follow last March's The Few and the Far Between, which I consider to be their best release to date.
         While it might seem nitpicky, though, I don't like the album art. It looks...I dunno, kind of like something anyone could have whipped up in Photoshop in five minutes. Are they trying to do a Sunbather type cover? Who knows. What  I'm confident in, however, is that this record is going to rock as much as its past two predecessors. In preparation for its release, the band will be playing Warped Tour in its entirety.

          The album's tracklist is as follows:
1. VOID

2. Toxic Pretender

3. Holy Hell

4. Digging

5. Yuth Decay

6. Personal Cross

7. Humaphobia

8. Piss Up A Rope

9. Pornocopia

10. All American’t

11. Bienvenue

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Converge debut new video for 'Precipice' and 'All We Love We Leave Behind'

     Converge frontman Jacob Bannon is an oddball. That much has been known since the band's first few records bore surreal, eerie artwork of his own creation. Bannon's affinity for art and music has led him into a variety of other endeavors, including his own record label, Deathwish, and lots of independent art on the side.
     
       Bannon wrote All You Love  You Leave  Behind, Converge's most recent record, about the death of his beloved dog, who Bannon felt was constantly neglected because of touring and other necessities, and the music video the band released echoes that powerful sense of loss. According to Pitchfork, Bannon has also released a new shirt, the proceeds of which will go to a Massachusetts animal shelter. You can find the shirt here and stream the video below:




Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Young and In the Way premiere new single - 'Be My Blood'

         Black metal fused with the sweltering misanthropy of crust punk is not a rarity. Both genres' affinity for dissonance, hard-baked exteriors, and unflinching adherence to the underground means cross-pollination was inevitable. But a crossover act that recently caught my attention was North Carolina's Young and In the Way. The relatively new group of upstarts, who formed as a quintessential powerviolence/hardcore band and slowly morphed into their current incarnation, have several records and EPs to their name, with their newest full-length, entitled When Life Comes to Death, due out in May.

        To that end the band have premiered a new single from the album entitled 'Be My Blood', and as usual it's a perfect example of crust-y black metal. You can stream it below:


Tuesday, April 8, 2014

News! NEWS!

       Today everything decided to just come together, apparently, because there's an absolute plethora of upcoming material that's going to make this summer totally amazing!

        To begin, Opeth have released the title and release date of their new album - Pale Communion, which will be released via Roadrunner on June 17th. There's been a lot of hype for this album, given the controversial turn of events 2011 saw with Heritage, but everyone short of Mikey A. himself has assured the public that Pale Communion will be a bonafide metal record, including the wonderful Steven Wilson:


            Secondly, let's move to Norway, where Mayhem have premiered the second single off their upcoming record Esoteric Warfare, entitled 'VI.Sec'. So is this the sixth track of the album? Who knows. Regardless, Attila sounds particularly terrifying and it's just as chilling as you'd expect. To add more spookiness, the song was released yesterday - the exact 20 year anniversary of Per Ohlin's death. Spoooooky. Stream it through Lambgoat here. Esoteric Warfare will be released on June 10th via Season of Mist.


          Thirdly, Cormorant are back! Cormorant are a band I'd always forgotten about, but they're back with a new album due out today, and it sounds seriously great. If I ever get around to finishing my Monolord reivew this will be next on my list - after La Dispute, of course. Stream it at their bandcamp here.



             Lastly, Huata, the French fuzzmasters who put out a masterpiece of a split with Bitcho last year, have hinted at a new record, their first since 2011's Atavist of Mann. The new record is slated to be called 'Lux Initiatrix Terrae', and as of now nothing is known about it as Huata have only mentioned it in one facebook message about T-shirts.


           As finals start to really get into gear,  I'm going to be a lot more strapped for time. I will do what I can but there may be a shortage of posts until around April 18th or 19th.





             

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Heaven Shall Burn win the 'funniest April Fools prank award' this year

         It's April 1st. That means you're either pranking someone, or about to get pranked. In keeping with the spirit of this sacred holiday, many bands have taken to fooling their fans in one way or another. After the Burial excitedly claimed they would be opening for Metallica on a Stadium tour:


and I'm moderately ashamed to say that I fell for it and got excited to see them at Fenway Park. But Heaven Shall Burn posted potentially the funniest joke, with the German metalcore act excitedly proclaiming that several artists were going to be releasing a Heaven Shall Burn tribute album free of 'political and social preaching'.

For immediate Press-Release: HEAVEN SHALL BURN reveal first details about "Feuersturm" HSB-Tribute EP:
"It was about time for a HSB tribute record, so many fans asked for it since ages! For this one we wanted to work without any compromise. We´re sure our fans appreciate a little break from political and social preaching as much as we did within this project! We´re really glad all the bands we contacted about that Tribute record were enthusiastic and flattered to be part of it!"
Expect crushing cover songs from bands such as:
NOKTURNAL MORTUM - The Weapon they fear
ABYSSIC HATE - The lie you bleed for
ABSURD - Straßenkampf
HATE FOREST - Voice of the Voiceless
GRAVELAND - Armia
SATANIC WARMASTER - Hunters will be hunted
BURZUM - Destroy Fascism

All profits of this project will be donated to the NSBM FOR AFRICA FOUNDATION.
PRE-Order through www.aryangaypriderecs.com

 For those not in the know, all of the bands listed are or have been aligned with the NSBM movement within black metal, which is marked by particularly...strong-willed right-wing ideologies. Having Burzum cover 'Destroy Fascism', thus, is funny for multiple reasons. To top it off, here's the cover for 'Feuersturm', which is, of course, a parody of Burzum's Filosofem.


      While we're on the topic of pranks, it feels like as good a time as any that Idiot in Remission, as of tomorrow, will become a Blood on the Dance Floor-themed blog. All posts not about Dahvie Vanity will be deleted.