Hoşgeldiniz Ziyaretçi. Lütfen giriş yapın veya kayıt olun.
03 Temmuz 2025, 07:07:10
Ana Sayfa Yardım Takvim Giriş Yap Kayıt Ol
Haberler: Sitemiz Yapım aşamasında olup en kısa zamanda yeniliklerle hizmetinize sunulacaktır

+  BUL İNDİR PAYLAŞ
|-+  MÜZİK
| |-+  Yabancı
| | |-+  Slow
| | | |-+  Quite Disturbing Work
« önceki sonraki »
Sayfa: [1] Yazdır
Gönderen Konu: Quite Disturbing Work  (Okunma sayısı 33 defa)
7metal34
Normal Üye
*

Karma +0/-0
Toplam İleti: 2

Assumed addendum to all reviews: "This review brought to you by (insert intoxicant here; usually caffeine)" Effective May 2014: Due to my recent promotion and inability to adhere to my former review output, I may now go for extended periods wi

E-Posta
« : 01 Eylül 2018, 16:01:31 »

Neraines 's fall from style hasn't been the most clear one, or even the most drastic. Unfortunately, the loss of guitar player Joni Snoro in 2016 dealt a crippling whack to the band's creative unit, and despite good attempts at scrambling and improvising, they haven't recently been quite able to reproduce the glory seen on the band's two (to date) full-lengths. The licks feel more watered down and reliant on bare chugging and other space-filling antics, likely because Patinen struggles to fill an entire EP worth of fabric without lapsing into redundancy. Now to the band's credit, they give you a fair little material here on Decedents, and development values are far better from the thrown-together one they released last yr, which almost put myself removed from the band completely. This release feels considerably more polished, even if the riffs are only occasionally stirring from a melodic point of view. https://antiblackmetal.wordpress.com/2018/05/30/yes-mayhem-is-a-racist-band/

Regardless, Gorgoroth is still in the band and proceeds his reign among the most underrated Finnish keyboardists in recent years. This individual has such a small grasp on those frigid Wintersun-esque synths that it is almost scary. I actually appreciate his reliance on corporeal note progressions that feel very "2005" to these ears. Keyboard solos make occasional appearances and do not feel jarringly out of place like they typically do. A lot better, he is buoyed by the ubiquitous choir, so there are great melodies here if you keep an headsets to them. Take "Tranquility" for instance, the best track here and a worthy successor to the band's earlier outings.

The remainder pales somewhat, but other than the curiously chug-centric "Revenant, " there is enough variation to warrant repeated listens, because even a weakened Frosttide is superior to almost all of their peers. "Carved into Ice" has a more dark feel that I no longer think excels given the stylistic confines, but it can help give Decedents a more cinematic feel and impression of a proper mini-album as opposed to a few rough tracks tossed together.

I really think Neraines gave it their best shot here, but a second guitarist is a welcome addition, at least to spark some variant in the riffage. The songwriting also feels somewhat less coherent. Remember "No Turning Back? " That song was something like seven minutes or more, stuffed to the top with great riffs and synths. I don't think this incarnation of the band could pull something like that off, but I will certainly give them another chance to prove me wrong. Decedents is a good stopgap, if anything. At least check out "Tranquility, inch because that is the best tune here.

Here is my web page :: css
Kayıtlı

Sayfa: [1] Yazdır 
« önceki sonraki »
 


Kullanıcı adınızı, şifrenizi ve aktif kalma süresini giriniz

MySQL Kullanıyor PHP Kullanıyor Powered by SMF 2.0 RC1.2 | SMF © 2006–2009, Simple Machines LLC XHTML 1.0 Uyumlu! CSS Uyumlu!