Antichrist
Best song: …there’s a best song? okay, Gorgoroth
Worst song: Possessed By Satan
Overall grade: 1
[Author’s note: Because everything conspires
against this site, my excuse of the week is illness. Also, an apology for what
I reviewed here. It was a request. I hope never to be asked to review anything
else by the band. >.>]
Gorgoroth are a Norwegian black metal band named
after an evil place in Lord of the Rings, which I’ve seen once and don’t
entirely remember. They’ve released about nine albums and use, variously,
English, Norwegian and Latin words for their song titles. Lots of black metal
fans hold the band’s first three albums (of which this is the second) as a
defining example of the genre, and truthfully, this album is outstanding in
many ways. For example, if it was supposed to be a way of making sure you never
got any visitors, it would be excellent. Similarly, it might be good at scaring
people into doing whatever you want. It would probably even do nicely as an
insect repellent. However, as an album of music, to be listened to, enjoyed and
analysed, it falls short in several key ways.
The first problem is, let’s be honest, with the word ‘music’.
I imagine ‘Antichrist’ would be highly enjoyable for anyone who really, really
can’t stand music. When I listen to it, I feel the need to have the sound
turned right down low for fear of being overwhelmed by feelings of despair that
anybody could actually make this.
Really, this is more of an EP than an album, since there are
only five tracks that are longer than 20 seconds, and the total length is
twenty-five minutes. Even if this album did have a strong concept or musical
flow, we’re not really given enough time to get into it here. The first twenty
seconds are entitled the Norwegian equivalent of ‘A Rank Smell of Christian
Blood’, which is probably simultaneously the worst and most offensive song
title I’ve ever heard, and this quality is second only to the song itself,
which consists solely of distorted animal noises, and is quite plainly the
shortest overlong track in existence.
Track two is entitled ‘Mountain Troll’s Revenge’, which
could easily be setting us up for an entertainingly cheesy slice of fantasy rock,
but it’s not to be. Actually, the riff that’s played at the beginning isn’t all
that heavy at all and could almost be catchy, but it’s repeated and sped up to
death until you’re so sick of it that even the vocals become preferable. And
the vocals would very rarely be preferable, considering they contain no actual
melody, and are rasped so much that it’s impossible to make out the lyrics.
The third track (named after the band themselves) actually
does have some sort of melody that I can just about hear in the background, but
all the weird distortion noises in the front completely drown it out, so you’re
always stretching for it and never reaching it, which is highly unsatisfying.
As time goes on, the melody comes more into play, and there’s a folk influence
hiding in there, which probably makes it the most tolerable of the songs here. ‘Possessed
By Satan’ is the worst, though. Allegedly, it has a different vocalist to the
previous two, but I wouldn’t have noticed without being told; they sound like
generic unclean vocals to me, of the kind that can work well in moderation but
that are seriously overused here. It’s serious filler, indistinguishable from
the dullest parts of any other song, and has no redeeming features that I can
see.
I imagine that if this band were to make a good song, it
would be an instrumental, but there’s just not enough variety in ‘Heavens Fall’
to make it so. Extreme heaviness works best, in my opinion, when it’s got
something to contrast with, to be heavier
than. When it’s all the same, there’s no benchmark and no progression, and
the track doesn’t seem to vary its emotions, just staying dark and militaristic
and crushing the whole time.
Final track ‘Sorrow’ is slowed down and sounds like a
funeral march, like they got really tired after all the fast stuff, the
chanting in the background helping with that mood. Much like the last song,
there’s a deliberate, controlled beat keeping it together, and, well, often not
much else. I don’t know if the drums and guitar actually recorded this whole
piece or if they just recorded two bars and copy and pasted them a hundred times. The worst part
is that the guitar player actually seems to have talent. He just doesn’t make
the most of it.
There’s also a bonus track! It’s about ten seconds of
running water. It’s a grand artistic statement. No, I’m just kidding, it really
is nothing but running water.
“Music”, “tunes”, and other air quoted things aside, I guess
one of Gorgoroth’s defining characteristics is their subject matter. Now, I
respect freedom of speech and therefore, if a band wants to write exclusively
about medieval Satanism, they can, even if I personally don’t agree with it at
all. However, Gorgoroth do this thing where they refuse to release their song
lyrics to the public, and I suspect it has something to do with them not
actually being that good. I mean, they’re hardly the first band to make the
whole devil-worshipping thing their trademark, and to keep it in any way
creative there has to be a certain amount of lyrical talent. I can’t say for
sure, but from what I can hear and what I can infer, I’d guess that there is
none.
All in all, I couldn’t ever recommend this album to anyone,
even if I didn’t like them. The moments of vague pleasantness are so few and
far between that they’re probably accidental and what I most enjoy about
listening to it is counting the seconds until it ends.
The thing is, black metal is not the type of music I listen
to. Some people like it, though. I can understand the face that some people
enjoy music that is incredibly heavy, raw and dark, and puts power and
intensity above melody – that’s just personal preferences. I can even
understand that to some people, the subject matter of the album is interesting.
What I can’t get over is the sheer repetitiveness of everything here. Every
musical idea contained within could be squashed into the length of a standard
single and I wouldn’t feel like I was being deprived of anything: heavy cannot
be a substitute for interesting.
No comments:
Post a Comment