darker shades of metal, hymns of goth and post-punk ...all for the worship of darkness
Thursday, March 16, 2023
Liturgy : " 93696"
Monday, February 15, 2021
Black Metal History Month -The Top 66 Black Metal Bands of All Time -46-37
We are going further into this darkness with this list of the Top 66 Black Metal Bands of All Time. Before you get your bullet belt twisted with what is about to go down here. I am not writing commentary with each entry, instead I will cryptically foreshadow the reasoning for where these bands fall. I typically defaulted to Last Fm so this is ranked by most listened to by me. Since it is my blog it only makes sense I can think I am a huge fan of one band but if I never listen to them how good can they really be? There are bands that are supposed classics , and well they did make the list and this is the top 66 black metal bands out of hundreds. If they did not rank as high as you liked well go make your own fucking list or start your own fucking blog.
There will not be much in the way of Raw or Beastial black metal, because they tend so sound like shit . There are many sub-genres represented here, Atmospheric, progressive , first wave , depressive, post ...so lots of ground is going to be covered. I have also included the country so we will have a clearer picture of who is exporting the best black metal. The tracks chosen are not the best , but the 6th track from my favorite album unless my favorite album does not have six songs and then I am picking the album before that one, if that one doesn't have six songs then I keep going back until I find one that does. So here ya go
46-Urfaust
Country- Netherlands
45-Peste noire
44 -Anagnorisis
Country- America
43-Sigh
Country- Japan42 -The Great Old Ones
Country- France
41-Ulver
40- Kall
Country- Sweden39 Kamfar
Country- Norway
38-A Pregnant Light
Country- America
Sunday, December 6, 2020
the Top 10 Prog Albums of 2020
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2020/11/liturgy-origin-of-alimonies.html
This is a band I grew up listening to so they hold a special place for me. What matters to me here is this is the same band that played on their "Into the Evenflow " album, which is all that really matters to me. My problem with most prog/power metal is that it is never dark enough. That has not been the case with this band which is why I have like them for some time.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2020/02/psychotic-waltz-god-shaped-void.html
8-Solstifir- " Endless Twilight of Codependent Love"
This band has progressed. Perhaps no in the manner their former mouth breathing fan base might approve of as they are less metal and not black metal at all, in fact their is more of a Radiohead feel to these songs. Trying new things is the beauty of where they go here.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2020/10/solstafir-endless-twilight-of-co.html
7 Caligula's Horse - "Rise Radiant"
This is their 5th album so they know what they are doing and have continued to perfect their flirtation with the more 80s metal influence that has become a trope of the genre with bands like Fates Warning and Queensyrche. They Heavy enough despite the gymnastics and the melodic vocals urgent and vital to the song rather than just soaring with the sonic somersaults.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2020/05/caligulas-horse-rise-radiant.html
Not a huge change in sound, despite electronic elements being more predominant . They do not conform to a commercial sound . They continue to defines progressive. They refuse to become comfortable with a sound, there are aggressive elements yet this is less metal than the previous release. Daniel's voice sounds great, and he always serves the song. The same can be said of the wanking free instrumentation. It's complex and simple at the time.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2020/08/pain-of-salvation-panther.html
3- Molasses - "Through the Hollow"
This is in some ways a reunion of the Devils Blood , but with out Farida's brother, who would have been next to her the most crucial member of that band. There is less of a retro feel to their sound. Where the Devil's Blood jammed, these guys take you through a winding maze of grooves that are not unlike anything they have touched in their previous work. That is progressive. Yes there is incredible playing on every level but it serves the song.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2020/11/november-is-doom-molasses-through-hollow.html
2-Lykantropi- "Tales to Be Told"
On the more Jethro Tull side of the classic prog rock equation. These guys are not just killer players they are also talented song writers . This is an album I want to spend more time with , as I know it will continue to grow on me. It was a tight race between this and Molasses, who they barely edged out with hookier songs.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2020/10/lykantropi-tales-to-be-told.html
1- Igorrr- "Spirituality & Distortion"
Friday, November 6, 2020
Liturgy : "ORIGIN OF THE ALIMONIES"
Friday, December 6, 2019
the Top 10 Progressive Metal Albums of 2019
It's that time of year again, to sort through the top 10 albums of all the respective genres, then use them, to compile the top 10 albums of the year. Later in the month I am making the top 10 lists for the decade,. Let's make something clear if you clicked on this looking for Dream Theater, then you have the wrong blog,. There are no power ballads here.Progressive mean there has to be progress, change not working off a formula. Not doodling to hold you over til the guitar solo. It was hard enough this year finding ten artists in their respective genres, but I did it. As in past years I am giving a brief explanation as to why these albums stand over their peers in lower positions on the list. The very fact these bands made it on the list speaks to how great these albums are so it's not a slight that the number 8 album is above the 9th album, there is something that just gives it an edge that makes me want to listen to it more. After all we can try to look cool and pick the hippest bands for a list, but at the end of the day what makes an album the best is that it makes you want more, you look forward to listening to it again. Sure you can bitch and complain about your favorite band not being on the list. However I listen to five new albums a day so yes I heard your favorite album and was not impressed. No, I do not care what you think about it. I do hope you can find your next favorite on this list and have included links to reviews of these albums if you want to check out audio on these guys. Anyways here are the top 10 prog metal albums of 2019 .
10-Meads of Asphodel - " Running Out of Time Doing nothing"
It opens darker more industrial sound. They are almost like Sigh in the sense each song is dramatically different. There is still a darker mood over this with some more Coil like vocals. Unlike previous releases this is less pounding and the guitars sit kind of weirdly in the mix.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2019/05/the-meads-of-asphodel-running-out-of.html
9-Pensees Nocturnes- GRAND GUIGNOL ORCHESTRA"
Circus black metal, is bound to sound like Mr. Bungle. They don't prove me wrong in this theory. The French are always doing weird shit like this . They swing back and forth from operatic singing to growls of anguish. Blast beats are thrown in.the concept of what they are doing translates well in the finished product almost more prog weirdness than black metal. They are demented enough to beat out Meads of Asphodel.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2019/02/black-metal-history-month-pensees.html
8-OXXO XOOX- "Y"
The 3rd album from this Igorr lead project uses electronics that makes dipping into another brand of metal seem as easy as pressing an esc key on a sonic glitch. The fact that doom is the sound the return to despite covering a great deal of ground over the course of the song says a lot to me about what they are going for here. Darker than the first two bands sits them pretty at number 8.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2019/12/oxxo-xoox-y.html
7-Dreadnought- "Emergence"
The jazz like drumming and the lapses into dissonance provide a suited juxtaposition to the smoothly sung female vocals. Plenty of your standard prog trappings are in place, though with less of the expected guitar solos.
6-White Ward- "Love Exchange Failure
" This album grows on me with each listen. What they have created proves to be a unique experience and finds the band improving their blend of jazz and black metal. Not the first time jazz and metal meet, this time around it does so in a more atmospheric manner that stays true to both genres being melded . This is putting the progress in progressive, more so than the long and winding road Dreadnought takes you down.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2019/08/white-ward-love-exchange-failure.html
5-Liturgy-"H.A,Q.Q"
Hunter is back with something closer to the kind of experimental black metal that you want from this project, even if it comes in practice burst that might owe as much to grind core ... think the Locust here. Greg Fox left some big shoes to fill but Leo Didkovsky who also plasy with Kayo Dot measure's up. More spastic than past releases I admire these guys pushing past conventions. One of the few albums that is as far out in left field as White Ward, these guys just lock into more grooves that punch the point home.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2019/11/liturgy-haqq.html
4- Kayo Dot - "blasphemy"
Toby Driver is the main creative force behind this project . They are like a more avant garde version of Leprous. This time around we find them after they have obviously smoked a shit ton of weed. this is not the most metallic album of their career. It does have hefty undercurrents of metal. Moodier and with song that coax you in more the abrasive nature of Liturgy. https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2019/09/kayo-dot-blasphemy.html
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3- Opeth - "In Cauda Veneum"
One of the best post death metal efforts. It is not fragile prog, but dark and with a biting edge. Mikel's voice sounds better here and this is not the heaviest album on this list, but it does pack considerable punch as needed. The beat out Kayo Dot by virtue of their superior musical skills.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2019/09/opeth-in-cauda-venenum.html
2- Bask- "III"
This North Carolina band merges prog with their brand of stoner rock, with a great deal of moody melody. It's two minutes in before the heavier side starts to show. When they fully commit the results are powerful as the big riffs counter balance the soulful vocal. The coolest thing to me is the underlying current of country / Americana which helps set them apart from the other bands on this list. They wrote catchier songs than Opeth this time around.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2019/11/november-doom-bask-iii.html
1- Baroness- "Gold & Grey"
The stakes were high as this was the first album after their Grammy nominated "Purple Album" and their first with new lead guitarist Gina Gleason. Their live show sold me on these songs then it grew on me. It was pretty ambitious , but they pulled it off. Very pristine production wise and a glimpse into their more introspective side .The winding sinew of the grooving riffs earned them the number one spot.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2019/06/baroness-gold-grey.html
Tuesday, November 26, 2019
Liturgy : " H.A,Q.Q"
Hunter is back with something closer to the kind of experimental black metal that you want from this project, even if it comes in practice burst that might owe as much to grind core ... think the Locust here. Greg Fox left some big shoes to fill but Leo Didkovsky, measure's up, Leo also plays with Kayo Dot. If it was not for his greater use of double bass I might not have even checked to see if this was Greg or not. This is a much heavier album than 'the Ark Work" . I would never say this band's stuff is dark, but this is aggressive. This is not to say that there are not so odd things like flute sounds that off set this, as there are . I do not think anyone would go into a Liturgy album looking for straight up metal .
The "Exaco" piano interludes are impressive piano playing, but not likely to make it over to my iPod. Weirdness such as harps crop up on the song "Virginity" . The kind of chanted sung vocals he referred to in the past as being influenced by trap rap are really low in the mix and off set by the more dominant screaming. Their as also weird choral vocals. In short it's a lot to take in. The same could be said about the opener though it feel more familiar. The first song that connects with me as a song normally would and not just throwing tons of weirdness and pyro at me, is "Pasaqalia". The stringed elements and the metallic syncopation all lock in at all the right places. There are more symphonic elements on this album, which goes to show if you compared this to Dimmu Borgir who could also be symphonic black metal how different those sounds would be. I am not sure I would even call this one a black metal album, avant garde and progressive yes.
"God of Love" finds the harp sounds returning. The screamed vocals are feral and haphazard. Blast beats patter on the chaos. There is a cool melodic section midway into the song. it might be the most melodic moment I have heard from the band , including their bout with trap singing . They also follow this up with plenty of pounding. The title track opens with very odd synths sounds. It gets back to a similar place as the more feral moments of the previous song though there is a tighter almost math rock precision. This album certainly has some strong moments, it is also more spastic than past releases. I will round it up to a 9.
Saturday, August 18, 2018
Uniform : "The Long Walk"
This project out of New York has a lot going for them in the fact they have added Liturgy drummer Greg Fox. They opener up their new album with a great deal of sonic power and intensity. By the second song it's still pretty clear that this is going to be one of their heaviest offerings yet and Fox's drumming is only adding to that. There is more of a punk feel to "Inhuman Condition" , most of this is due to the yelled vocal. By the time we get to "Found" which opens with a mother fucking mean ass riff, it's obvious this is going to be the band's most metallic offering yet. However it's by the point that you also realize these vocals are just obnoxious as hell. If vocals are something you tune out anyway when you are head banging then this might not bother you as much. The blown out riffs get so rumbling they almost make me over look this fact as well. Almost.
Purposefully lo-fi and ringing with feedback, they relent very little on "Transubstantiation" until they drop out and it becomes ranting over the pulse of a bass frequency. When they kick back in, despite the vocal annoyance it's undeniable its powerful. Its hard to tell where punk begins and industrial strength sludge ends. "Alone In the Dark' keeps the momentum going, but the fact the vocals are little more than the same indiscriminate yelling, makes it begin to lose some of the luster. The riff to "Headless Eyes" compensates for any and all finesse that the vocals lack. The double bass on this song steamrolls everything else. This is the only way they can make things really work with the vocal handicap. When they do not have the benefit of this kind of riff , then on a song like "Anointing of the Sick", where the vocal ranting is even more tedious it becomes unnerving. Half way into this song I am thinking "God, is this over yet".
The album ends with "Peaceable Kingdom". They slow down and there just doesn't feel like there is enough direction for them to let up on the more relentless side of their sound.Despite the terrible vocals and the last song that lacks direction, I'll give this album an 8, on the merit of how well it works despite some of these factors that play against it. If you are a fan of these guy and tone deaf enough to ignore the vocals then this will blow you away. It feels like this is for punk with an appreciation metal rather than a metal album though it is heavy.
Sunday, February 18, 2018
Black Metal History Month -the Top 50 Black Metal Albums of All Time : 20 to 11
Now we are cracking the top 20 of our Top 50 Black Metal Albums of All Time list. It's interesting to notice the trends in release dates and regions these albums are coming out of as we work our way down the list. Most are ranked according to how much I have listened to these albums, with a few exceptions when it comes to certain albums that many of these releases owe their existence to. If you are a regular reader of this blog then you know blast beats alone do not fly with me. These are not just musicians who made great black metal albums , these are musicians ho made great music that happened to be called black metal. Some of these albums even came before black metal as we know it today. So here you go ...
20-Liturgy -"Aesthethica"
This band has gotten a lot of shit due to Hunter's ramblings, but the bottom line is with their 2011 album these Brooklyn hipsters took black metal somewhere very different. It's bright rather than dark. Normally this is something I would not be down for , but somehow they made it work due to the jarring sonic dissonance and how they took things like blast beats and almost gave them a jazz like spin.
19- An Autumn For Crippled Children- "Lost"
This band from the Netherlands not only does post-black metal, but they do it with a more convincing nastiness and gaze out into sprawling beauty. The eventually began to rein it in, with the vocals sometimes being the heaviest component . This 2010 album finds them at the peak of their powers and making beautiful music with feral abandon.
18-Bathory-"Hammerheart"
I don't like this project's earlier work because of the lo-fi punk like quality. Once the production improved and a bigger viking like sound came then he caught my ear. The earlier stuff if more popular with a more hipster crowd for the very reason I do not like it.This 1990 album has more actual singing on it and it came down to me trying to decide between this one and "Twilight of the Gods". What it came down to was this album is black metal , while "Twilight of the Gods" is more epic pagan metal. "Hammerheart" might not be as refined, but it is darker and meaner.
17-Enslaved -"Isa"
While their earlier work might be more traditionally black metal, this album came ten years into their career and finds them at the cross roads of who they were and what they became. The sung vocals are not as dominant here. The pagan sensibility it blended with a more post-rock or even rock n roll sense in the song writing and they had not yet gone out into total Opeth territory.
16- Tombs- "the Path of Totality"
This 2011 album finds Mike Hill and friends getting darker and more sonic. While I like all of their albums this was the first one I got into and I think it still holds up even against the more goth tinged stuff, which having grown up a poor goth child I would normally be more inclined to favor. This album is equal parts aggression and atmosphere thanks to the incredibly smart song writing and the band working as a machine.
15-Totalselfhatred- "Apocalypse in Your Heart"
I keep returning to this album time and time again. They prove black metal can have stellar guitar and doesn't have to stick to static tremolo picking. This 2011 album is a classic when it comes to depressive black metal. It doesn't wallow in it's emotion but is like depression turned inwards and becomes aggression. I keep forgetting these guys are from Finland as that is not what comes to mind when I heard them, but it does invoke alcohol fueled depression.
14-Nachtmystium - "Addicts : Black Meddle Part 2
It was hard to pick between this one and "Assassins" what made my mind up was listening to it again and here how gritty and real the anguish is as Blake Judd was obviously having a hard time with his addiction and this album is a raw honest look at that. You don't get that personal in most black metal which is why it almost feels like depressive black metal.
13- Immortal- "All Shall Fall"
This 2009 album would be the band from Norway's last. It is big and if the word epic was ever going to be used to describe something this would be the time. The guitars are just massive on this album which is why I chose this over "Sons of Northern Darkness" Blizzard Beasts"
12- Celtic Frost - To Mega Therion"
When this album came out in 1985, black metal had yet to come to fruition. Black metal as just an album by a punk fueled metal band in the growing thrash scene. This scene found Tom Warrior and friends clawing at it with a more dynamic and darkly romantic offering that is "To Mega Therion".
11-Shining- "the Eerie Cold" This band from Sweden has something in common with Celtic Frost as they both went through a cock rock phase. Here is the sound of the band in the thick of what they did best and a another example of depressive black metal going beyond crying in another failed suicide attempt set to music. The atmosphere of this album is very dark to the point of creating a beautiful oppression. It has the cold chilling feel you expect from black metal.
Thursday, July 7, 2016
Kel Valhall : " New Introductory Lectures On The System Of Transcendental Qabala"
Hunter Hunt Hendrix is putting the guitar down and stepping away from even the metal trapping that clung to the last Liturgy album "Ark Work" to release the first album from his electronic project. If you are a Liturgy fan there is two ways this will go. Either you like experimental music and appreciate Liturgy as more of an experimental project than a cvlt as fvck black metal band, if this is the case your were more than likely not really phased by their last album and can proceed into something stepping even further into left field. If you like the first couple of Liturgy albums, but feel more at home when they are blast beating and heard "the Ark Work" had "rap" on it and cringed away at the sheer mention of it. In this case you are wasting your time by even bothering to read this review and go check out the new Fistula or Nails. Ok, not that we are moving along into this album. It does take a few listens to absorb it so I'm going to dip my head into it a third time before I can really describe what I am listening to.
My first thought with "Tense Stage" was this is like a white light version of Skinny Puppy. By that I mean everything after "the Greater Wrong of the Right".As it has plenty of glitch to it. Things weave around both forwards and backward. The beats are more on the lo-fi side and... Yes, you read right in the title of this review that the album is called "New Introductory Lectures On The System Of Transcendental Qabala". I'm not sure what the sing song rap of the lyrics is really about, but I think I heard mention of Jesus. When it comes to actual songs, there are only three real ones, the second of the three being "Ontological Love" . This song takes the first five minutes to get started so some of the fat could have been trimmed for sure. At six minute mark trap styled rapping comes in and is quickly washed away by synths before the song builds back up into some more trap styled rap. Wouldn't say Brooklyn has the hardest dope traps so will not call it trap rap, as it seems likes it more of a commentary on the current state of affairs, he does chant something about the bees losing their honey. "Karios" which is Greek for the supreme moment, is more like an interlude than an actual song. "Bezel 2" is the third of the actual songs though the most disjointed and challenging of the three. The vocals are glitch riddled mumbles of metaphysics. The final minute of "Bezel 2" is just a bleeping and blipping bunch of crazy droning on. My wife asked for me to wear headphones when listening to this album, so it's not for everyone. I'll give this album an 8, which is a lower score than what Liturgy album's have traditionally gotten.
Sunday, January 24, 2016
the Top 10 Drummers of 2015
There is a ton of truth to the old saying "A band is only as good as their drummer" great vocals and guitar fall flat without a solid beat behind. This list we are looking at those who really laid down the bed rock and not just played in the pocket , but contributed to the song it self. While metal drummers are obviously the most over the top, we are also looking at other genres such as noise rock , goth and straight up rock n roll.
10 Brian Chippendale of Lightning Bolt
He might have grown up a punk drummer , but one listen to 'Fantasy Empire " and you can hear speed is only one part of his skills. He thrives in the rough and tumble chaos of their music, in fact I couldn't hear him playing in a straight up punk band as I think he would get bored.
9- Dylan Fjuoka of Chelsea Wolfe
Not to detract from his contributions in the studio as "Abyss" is given a more organic feeling when he is present, but it's live that Dylan's talent is really allowed to come alive. He brings the energy of metal to his playing , but has sharp finesse that is almost jazz like. On the doomy songs he shows restraint , and still plays around with it.
8- Ben Fox of Liturgy
Another entry whose contributions live are a better indication of his prowess than the "Ark Work" album his band released last year. Similar to the previous entry, his band was more experimental in the studio this time around which found Fox having to play around programmed sections of music. Fox not added a more organic component to their sound , but continues to prove himself as one of the best black metal drummers going , when it comes to knowing his way a blast beat , but not being limited by their conventional use.
7- Zach Richards of Irreversible
Sadly another one of Atlanta's best bands is now defunct as Irreversible released it's self title swan song . Richards is the key to what made that album great. His grooves air tight, what could have been cumbersome sludge was giving precision and grace. They touched upon math rock with their odd meters, which owe a little to Isis and Tool , but are delivered with Richards with much less pretense.
6- Jean Paul Gaster - Clutch
Here is a drummer of a much different ilk than the others on the list as Gaster is much more of a straight up rock drummer in the vein of John Bonham. On "Pyschic Warfare" the rest of the band is going off in more of a blues rock direction and Gaster gives the attack more power than even ZZ-Top on steroids. Every things boogies and punches just like the best classic hard rock album that never came out in the 70s.
5- Daniel Tracy - Deafheaven
He changed with the other members of the band to add teeth to their sound and put to rest any doubts as to if these guys are a metal band. His drumming carries more power and thunder this time around with some really impressive double bass work. He compliments all the riffs well and gives the band the kick they needed to push "New Bermuda" over the edge.
3-Frost -1349
Here is where the metal guys really begin duking it out. Frost earns his spot because of precision in his chaos. He gave "Massive Cauldron of Chaos" the rabid feel of 80s thrash at it's peak, but still gave a black metal performance. The guy filling in on 1349's tour could have made this list, but since Frost came up with the blue print he gets the spot.
2- Andrew D'Cagna Nechowhen/ Obsequiae
He contributed to two great albums this year it was on Nechowhen's that he really killed it. The songs had a dynamic range that needed a player of his caliber and he nailed it as hard if not harder than as the drummers of bands like Opeth and Mastodon who get more accolades for their playing than this album that will probably be underrated in the annuls of metal.
1-Nicko McBrain of Iron Maiden
This time the guitars and drums stole the show from the bass and vocals. He is a veteran who know what to bring to his band. As far as metal drummers go there are plenty of players who get more props because they have a bigger double bass sound or are more bombastic, but Mcbrain played on some of the albums that laid that ground work and he never dials it in, in fact his playing on "Book of Souls" holds up to his playing on "Piece of Mind".
Wednesday, December 23, 2015
the Top 10 Experimental / Prog Metal Albums of 2015
http://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2015/04/john-zorn-simulacrum.html

9-Ahab : "The Boats of the Glen Carrig"
You might remember these guys as a doom band. I certainly did when I went into this album hoping my hunger for funeral doom was going to be sated. Instead the band threw my expectations into the vast ocean of their creative aspirations. This is not to say these changes were not growth, they were just different. The album opens with something more like the kind of 70s prog rock that Opeth once gave ample nods to. The metal comes crashing in at the three minute mark. The production on this album is very lush, the low growled vocals carrying a bigger 90s Morbid Angel roar. The album ebbs and flows with the crunch dissolving into clean guitar and the vocals taking on an "Islands" era King Crimson croon.While part of me mourns for the doom band I once knew, they have created something pretty breathtaking here.
http://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2015/08/ahab-boats-of-glen-carrig-like-red-foam.html
8-Sigh: "Graveward"
Once upon a time one of my favorite black metal bands put out an album called "Scenes From Hell" and they transformed from one of my favorite black metal bands into one of my favorite prog metal bands. Their new album finds them getting some of the aggression back as they study the various aspects of death.this album is much heavier than any thing they have done since "Hangman's Hymn". So fans of the bands older work will not feel like they are listening to a Mr. Bungle album despite the weird electronics attacking a few songs. Some of the riffs on here grind into you more like death metal. I am glad they are embracing the heavier side of what they do here, I think the song writing as a whole was better on a few of the previous albums. http://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2015/04/sigh-graveward.html
7-the Black Heart Rebellion : "People, when you see the smoke, do not think it is the fields they’re burning"
Here is one of the bands on this list that is very heavy both emotionally and sonically, but eschews drenching their guitars in such thick distortion that is falls into the typical metal chugga chugga. This gives their guitars a more anxiously organic tone. After the stunning "Har Nevo" expectations were high. The vocals are more refined, having grown by leaps and bounds this time around. Dynamically the intensity level has more muscle to it . Synths play a larger role and when the drugs kick in they give things a 60s like psychedelia. They sometimes crawl of into a similar place in the shadows as "Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun". The vocals are a more dominate element here than they were for Floyd's darker early days, though on some songs manage to creep into more post-punk slither that almost touches upon death-rock. A perfect soundtrack for the days I forget to take my meds.
http://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2015/10/the-black-heart-rebellion-people-when.html

6-A Forest of Stars :" Beware the Sword You Can Not See"
At one point in time these guys presented themselves as steam punk black metal, but now this album encompasses a much more traditional prog metal sound, if you were to run it through a filter of folky black metal, which are this band's roots that they re-embrace on this album.They frequently throw so much at you all at once that sonically it feels like you are running into a wall. Female vocals play a larger role on this album, though some of their more tried and true vocal colors such as the harsher growls and maniacal ranting also makes appearances here. They fill the songs with many twists and turns , but it all flows rather elegantly. http://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2015/03/a-forest-of-stars-beware-sword-you-can.html
5-Pyramids - "A Northern Meadow"
Here is an album that received a fair amount of hype upon it's release and once I sat down to really listen to it with headphones it won me over. It glides over you like a dreamy hybrid of Cynic mixed with Enslaved. The guitarists get points for the unorthodox guitar tone they chose to play metal with.They do use sounds loosely connected with black metal, but I would not say they are a black metal band.The drummer seems to be counting these songs with fractal mathematics as the drums wander beneath the guitars. The thing I like most about this album is it's ability to give me them same jarring feeling one might get from not being able to distinguish dream from waking life.
http://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2015/03/pyramids-northern-meadow.html
4-Liturgy - the Ark Work
Hunter and the boys catch a lot shit for some of their overt hipster pre-tense, but I've remained a fan and have ignored some of Hunter's thesis papers on black metal. Ben Fox is an amazing drummer who compliments the band as they blister into songs that split the difference between Sun Ra like jazz and the black metal of old. Here is where you must be warned the band's take on rap-metal is Hunter chanting in a sing song voice intervals similar to those Bone Thugs N Harmony uses. The chanting is more of a drone than anything resembling nu-metal. The lyrics are like something from Allen Ginsberg's "Howl as interpreted by Layzie Bone. The so called Bone Thugs elements are more toned down that what the buzz on this album might have suggested upon it's release and more often than not the mood blasts you, into a shimmering sunrise rather than the grim winter's dusk most black metal travels to.
http://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2015/03/liturgy-ark-work.html
3-Dodheimsgard - "A Umbra Omega"
Rather than just write songs, These guys have constructed dark chaotic passages of an aural labyrinth. If you like post-rock but haven't given black metal much of a chance this might be the album for you. The guitar playing is consistently mouth watering as it layers the disjointed groove that some how manage to stand on their own two feet. They morph form a Current 93 like ambiance to folk metal jazz in the span of a song and that is only the tip of the frost covered mountains on this one. They might not be black metal any more, but that is only because the genre could no longer contain them.
http://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2015/03/dodheimsgard-umbra-omega.html
2- Strangeweather: "S/T"
Another album that forsakes metallic overdrive and instead employs a more organic yet dark hearted Neo-folk with an Appalachian breeze blowing through it. The members switch off vocals resulting in a wide range of moodiness to the dirge like mourning allowing each instrument and voice embraces while adding another swathe of gray to the sonic tapestry. hey have really created something unique here. The lyrics carry the indignant unease of post- punk, while they set upon a soundtrack with the elegance that is the x-factor many a wanna-be goth bands just doesn't get . This brings the emotional weight making it heavy in feeling rather than metal.When I played this for my wife just dismissed it as more of the droning drug music I like, so you have to listen to this as a whole work to really get the full effect or have to have been involved with heavy narcotic use for a period of more than five years. Do not play while operating heavy machinery. http://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2015/03/strangeweather-st.html
1- Eye of NIX : "Moros"
This is more experimental than prog, though it is progressive in the sense the songs go somewhere. That is more can be said for many so called prog bands that remain stagnant in favor of wanking on the fret board. The album starts off as a more post-rock version of Dead Can Dance. Lead singer Joy Von Spain lets it all out in an operatic soprano as things get blasty beneath her. Male growls add a grit to their shifts into crustier paces. While Mykur gave us similar dynamics earlier this year, each end of the dynamic range here is pushed a little further. Joy is dynamic range extends into the not afraid to shred her vocals chords a little with some screams. Sometimes they play by the more typical metal rules and the veer off into slow-core. They sometimes build into the type of chaos that can be found in some of Swans' freak out moments but with a more metallic command.They incorporate every element of music that love into this one album in a cohesive fashion.
http://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2015/10/eye-of-nix-moros.html