Sunday, December 27, 2015

Favorite Metal Albums of 2015 - Part 2

I’m actually finishing my top 5 before New Year’s Eve. Santa must have given me some inspiration for Christmas. That and it’s raining (instead of snowing) so there’s not much else to do other than stare at the tree and watch the Grinch steal Christmas again.


My top five for 2015 is decidedly heavier and a bit more doomy than the rest of my top 10. Bonus points for some nice vinyl options and Swallow The Sun’s box might get its own shelf, if only to support the weight of 5 LPs.


#5 Shape Of Despair - Monotony Fields
One of the best of the genre-defining Finnish doom bands returns after 10 long, cold years to plumb the darkest depths of the human experience. With their latest, Shape of Despair chills the bones of the listener, burying them in the sonic landscape of darkness and ice. At times suffocating and at others wildly freeing, it's wonderful to get lost, knowing that you cannot return unchanged.


#4 Myrkur - M
I think Myrkur was in my top 5 last year, too. This year's full-length release was highly anticipated and has been well-received by fans and critics alike. Amalie Bruun's 'black metal project' breathes unique life into black metal forms. In doing so, she creates a fascinating blending styles and cultures- from ethereal choral passages to bleak blast-beat ferocity - all in the blink of an eye.


#3 Paradise Lost - The Plague Within
It's always nice when you find a new band that isn't new. UK's Paradise Lost have been around for some time now. On this one, everything comes together and the band delivers a clinic in melodic death metal. With diverse songs- from slow burners to thrashy riffing to catchy clean/growl interplay - there's always a reason to come back to listen to some more.


#2 Amorphis - Under The Red Cloud
Amorphis. Ambassadors of Finnish mythology, heavy metal icons for over two decades, and the most metal microphone in music. When I say I will travel for music - this is the band that I have traveled the furthest to see (and in doing so I've been introduced to the land and people of Finland and Scandinavia). So it should be no surprise that their new album is one of my favorites this year. Under The Red Cloud contains all the epic poetry, heavy riffs, soaring vocals, death growls, and folk instrumentation needed for the perfect exemplar of Finnish death metal.


#1 Swallow The Sun - Songs From The North: Parts I, II, & III

Sometimes a single album isn't enough. Or even a double album. Swallow the Sun goes all-in on a three-disc album, with each disc dedicated to a particular aspect of death metal, attempting to match the depth and complexity of their native Finland. Songs From The North Part I is an album showcasing STS's signature sound - a blend of emotional highs and lows accompanied by slow, brooding beats with both elegant and guttural vocals. Part II is an acoustic affair, stripping the wall of sound back to its foundation. Part III is true funeral doom. With the speed and power of tectonic forces, the despair is real and reverberates through your bones. There's a lot to listen to and it will probably take a full year to make it all the way through this one. But that's ok because the rewards are as epic and vast as the scope of this record, even at the price of all your emotions and maybe your soul.

Favorite Metal Albums of 2015 - Part 1

It’s that time of year again - the annual scramble to dust off my blog and pull together a list of great music from the last twelve months. As usually, the following list is a list of my personal favorites from 2015 and only include albums that I purchased (digital, CD, and/or vinyl). This was a really great year in new metal releases and there are many records that I didn’t even get a good chance to explore (or didn’t want to cough up the money, considering I’m not independently wealthy). I did enjoy reading a lot of reviews and end-of-year lists from metal writers across the internet. And clearly I'll be busy catching up well into the new year.


Here I'll begin my favorites list with number 6-10 (in no particular order):


#10 Coal Chamber - Rivals
After 13 years, you'd wonder if a new record would make sense. It's hard to judge the right time to come back with it being dismissed as just a 'comeback.' Coal Chamber demoed their chops on tour before recording a new album. That momentum, combined with the skill and wisdom that comes from age, thunders through on every track. Coal Chamber proves that they can lock into their signature heavy, down-tuned groove and tear the house apart.


#9 Marilyn Manson - Pale Emperor
Another solid bit of swaggering, blues-inflected dysfunction from the antichrist superstar. Pale Emperor is a polished tome of solid musicianship. The art is allowed to breathe and rise with a life of its own. Manson feels dangerous again, flirting with the great fire that once made him the most feared in all the land. Also, bonus points for rhyming Mephistopheles and Los Angeles.


#8 Lamb of God - VII: Sturm Und Drang
The latest from Lamb of God debuted at #2 on the billboard chart thingy and even has a Grammy nominated song. Despite all of that, I really like it. As expected, this is a fierce riff and hook-heavy record complete for guest vocalists and a few surprises. On Overlord, for example, we hear a different side of the LOG sound and vocal approach. It's refreshing to hear a band stretch and experiment. (And yes this album was born out of tragedy - go watch the As the Palaces Burn documentary). On an unrelated note, is it me or is guest vocalist Chino Moreno’s (Deftones) singing getting harder and harder to understand?


#7 Ahab - The Boats Of The Glen Carrig
This year was good for doom, especially the slow-burning soundscapes produced by European bands like German nautik doom four-piece, Ahab. Two albums removed from their epic homage to the classic Moby Dock, the group tackle another novel about life and loss at sea. Long songs will reward careful listeners, chilling them with salty sea spray and the punishing depths of icy waters. Bonus points for an awesome album cover.


#6 Between The Buried And Me - Coma Ecliptic

With an eclectic blending of styles, textures, and structures BTBAM has produced another excellent album. Sure, it's a concept album that tells a story, but I'm more enraptured by the music itself. The vocals are as dynamic as the instrumentation, as the band continues to push boundaries. Bonus points for keeping keyboards cool.