BLACK METAL DAILY’S LISTCRUSH 2022: THE GOS EDITION

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Well, fuck. Here we are again.

2022 has been a weird year for me. When I scan my mind for a definitive favorite, an unquestionable AOTY, nothing really stands out as readily obvious enough to take the crown (at least for now, I’ll probably have it figured out by May 2023!). But at the same time black metal has seen such a wide variety of fantastic releases in 2022… enough so that in order to wrap it up I basically just had to sit down and start writing, and really only AFTER I did that was I able to start getting it sorted to the extent that I did. So here’s that narrative, my journey through black metal 2022, although not in chronological order. Things to keep in mind:

[+ I spent more time with these albums]

[++ I spent the most time with these albums]

[*mentions as criticism are in asterisks*]

[AOTY contenders are in BOLD]

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IMMEDIATE STAND-OUT ALBUMS & EPS

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Most Difficult To Pinpoint Why It’s So Fucking Good, But It Is: ++ SAIDAN (US) – Onryō II: Her Spirit Eternal

Most Unrecognized On The Top Shelf: ++ ETERNAL HELCARAXE (Irl) – Drown In Ash

Most Earworming: ++ MOONLIGHT SORCERY (Fin) – Piercing Through the Frozen Eternity (ep)

Most What The Fuck Another EP Already?!: MOONLIGHT SORCERY (Fin) – Nightwind: The Conquerer from the Stars (ep)

Most Chiptune: + SKRELLE (US) – Skrelle (ep)

Most Instantly Awesome: ++ SPECTRAL VOID (Fra) – Doomsday (ep)

Most Exclusive Physical: STARER (US) – Remorse Defines Me (ep) [Clear square 8″ lathe cut record from Gorbie Lathe Cuts. Hand numbered edition of 15.]

Most Short But Sweet: ANGELBLAST (Swe/Can) – Throne of Ashes (ep)

Most Album Released By Circle (Order) ov the Black Arts!!!: STRICHT (Aus) – Stricht (ep)

Most Band Name Which Fits The Music: ROSENKREUZGESELLSCHAFT (Twn) – Rosenkreuzgestllschaft (ep)

When considering 2022, the (black metal) albums which tend to come to mind first are SAIDAN’s irresistibly ensnaring and euphoric Onryō II: Her Spirit Eternal and ETERNAL HELCARAXE’s hopelessly catchy, subtly epic and incredibly beautiful Drown In Ash, plus a few others. But my mind immediately considers others and I can’t settle. Then my thought springs to what I have been playing the most and appreciating the longest in 2022. I think that the answer there would have to be MOONLIGHT SORCERY’s mind-blowing symphonic ep Piercing Through the Frozen Eternity, which was shortly followed by a second ep in November called Nightwind: The Conquerer from the Stars. Man, there were a few great eps this year. SKRELLE’s self titled is fucking awesome. SPECTRAL VOID’s Doomsday is fucking awesome too. Also STARER’s Remorse Defines Me, and ANGELBLAST’s Throne of Ashes. Also I was really fucking amped for Order ov the Black Arts’ creative wing/label Circle ov the Black Arts to release the hypnagogic, abberant, self-titled STRICHT ep. Finally, ROSENKREUZGESELLSCHAFT snuck in at the last minute with a wild little self titled flash of well-orchestrated atonality. Though brief, these releases do well to represent a recurring theme to a lot of what I appreciated this year: classic melody, blasting speed, symphonics, and a little bit of avant-garde dissonance.

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MODERN CLASSICS

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Most Swedish: + KVAEN (Swe) – The Great Below

Most Swedish But Not From Sweden: + FÄUST (Fra) – Death From Beyond

Most Interludes: ++ STORMRULER (US) – Sacred Rites & Black Magic

Most Half Swedish: IN APHELION (Swe/NL) –  Moribund

Most Emperory: +GEISTLICHT (Ger) – Fading Light

Most Second-Wave Nostalgia: CRYPTOSPITAL (Blr) – The Epitome of Dystopia

Most Better Than I Thought It Would Be: ++ WATAIN (Swe) – The Agony & Ecstacy of Watain

Most Satisfying Return To Form: +BELPHEGOR (Aut) – The Devils

*Most Disappointing But Not Surprising Meh: BEHEMOTH – Opvs Contra Natvram*

Alright, lets talk about that classic melodic black metal, which I mostly associate with a traditional Swedish sound (ie old DISSECTION, SACRAMENTUM, WATAIN, NAGLFAR, DARK FUNERAL, NECROPHOBIC, VALKYRJA, etc.) and which seems to be experiencing resurgence this year with albums like KVAEN’s The Great Below (a rapid follow up to 2021’s The Funeral Pyre), FÄUST’s Death From Beyond, and STORMRULER’s Sacred Rites & Black Magic (a rapid follow up from 2021’s Under the Burning Eclipse). Those were my favorites in this particular vein, but I also enjoyed IN APHELION’s Moribund. GEISTLICHT bore a different sort of classicism with their second album of the year Fading Light, closer to 90’s Norwegian symphonic pillars like old EMPEROR, DIMMU BORGIR, and WINDIR, and thus might also be thought of as 2022’s answer to STORMKEEP. CRYPTOSPITAL returned in short order with The Epitome of Dystopia and their brand of moving raw nostalgia. And of course we can’t forget that WATAIN itself dropped a new album The Agony & Ecstasy of Watain which, while still not reaching the heights of their apex (Sworn to the Dark and Lawless Darkness), still managed to put out their best offering since then. A similar thing can be said for blackdeath titans BELPHEGOR, whose album The Devils is better than at least the previous 5 releases. The same cannot be said for BEHEMOTH. 

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BLASTERS & DISSONANT / AVANT-GARDE

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Most Damn Fastest: ++BLACK SHADOW – Last Stage of Transformation

Most Misleading Album Art: VODOEM – Seasons of Silence

Most Relentless: + MISANTHROPÆ (US) – Untitled

Most I Was Forced To Concede: + DEATHSPELL OMEGA (Fra) – The Long Defeat

Most Lovecrafty: BLUT AUS NORD (Fra) – Disharmonium – Undreamable Abysses

Most Like A Black Metal Ulcerate, Probably Because JSM Is Drumming: ++ VERBERIS (Ger) – Adumbration of the Veiled Logos

Most …Transformational: ANTECANTAMENTUM – Saturnine December

From BELPHEGOR, segway right in to mentioning a few releases which just fucking annihilate in terms of the aggression, driven primarily by percussion. BLACK SHADOW’s Last Stage of Transformation, for instance. Holyfuck. If anyone hasn’t heard that yet, get on it and at least get through that first solo in the first half of the first track to see just how it wants to burn your soul. Same with the avant-garde industrialesque barrage from VODOEM’s Seasons of Silence, sounding something like one might hear from the likes of REVERORUM IB MALACHT or ENTROPY CREATED CONSCIOUSNESS. The drums are programmed, but I don’t care, that shit annihilates. Even more so with MISANTHRPÆ’s self-titled and more dissonant offering of tireless blasting. Speaking of dissonance, DEATHSPELL OMEGA’s fantastic The Long Defeat won me over more than anything that they have put out since at least Paracletus and perhaps even back to Si Monvmentvm. It also won me over against BLUT AUS NORD’s predictably good Disharmonium – Undreamable Abysses, and usually it’s the other way around. Inthis camp we also find VERBERIS’ Adumbration of the Veiled Logos which essentially sounds like a more blackened version of death metal enigma UCLERATE  (no wonder since both projects have the same drummer) and the decidedly lighter, but incredibly complex, progressive avant-garde wall of sound which is ANTECANTAMENTUM’s Saturnine December.

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MORE BLASTING!

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Most Obligatory Mentions: NORDJEVEL (Nor) – Gnavhòl    -&-   NOCTEM (Esp) – Credo Certe Ne Cras

Most Headlining at Legion ov the Black Arts Fest!: BLACK FUCKING CANCER (US) – Procreate Inverse

Most Auditory Eternal Blizzard: + BEKËTH NEXËHMÜ (Swe) – De Dunklas Sorgeakt

Most Listenable Swartadauþuz: GREVE (Swe) – Föllo af Svavel, Lifvets Dimridå

Most At War With Heaven: ++ TROLLDOM (Swe) –  I Nattens Sken (Genom Hemligheternas Dunkel)

Most Like An Owl’s Flight Through A Black Winter Night: + TROLLDOM (Swe) – Av Gudars Ätt…

Most Agonizingly, Fiercely Cathartic: NEAN (Fra) – The Ominous Catharsis

But I digress. About that blasting… There are always the obligatory mentions like NORDJEVEL  with Dominator behind the kit on Gnavhòl, and NOCTEM’s  deathened black battery Credo Certe Ne Cras. And then there’s the 1349-but-heavier-esque BLACK FUCKING CANCER (one of the headliners for our Legions ov the Order fest in July) release Procreate Inverse. Those aside, how can we not mention Swartadauþuz? Dude released NINE albums across seven projects this year, of which I am just starting to scrape the surface. For now I have been most impressed with BEKËTH NEXËHMÜ’s massive, dense, and frigid De Dunklas Sorgeakt, GREVE’s more melodic and accessible Föllo af Svavel, Lifvets Dimridå. But my favorites are TROLLDOM’s duel album drop: the infernal I Nattens Sken (Genom Hemligheternas Dunkel), an AOTY contender with full-on, raging astral symphonic black metal and basically zero restraint within those parameters and with relentless, almost mechanically captivating progressions -and- Av Gudars Ätt…, majestic in a much more “natural” and worldly sense, with drawn out and grandiose movements which focus on atmosphere, emotive variance, and epic soaring. It is entirely worth mentioning that any who may be a fan of that somewhat noisy but epic wall-of-sound approach of Swartadauþuz (particularly BEKËTH NEXËHMÜ) should definitely click on The Ominous Catharsis by NEAN.

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COSMIC

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Most Like Slowly Drifting Towards A Black Hole: NUMEN NOCTIS (Aus) – Sanctus Simulacrum

Most Rave Worthy: DÉHÀ (Bel) – Decadanse

Most Like Visiting Space Inside A Cool Spaceship: + VORGA (Ger) – Striving Toward Oblivion

Most Sloooooowwwww But Good: LUNE (Aut) – Hymns to the Lunar Realm

Most Lost Amidst A Vibrant Galaxy: JOURNEY INTO DARKNESS (US) – Infinite Universe, Infinite Death

Most Absolutely Beautiful: FORELUNAR (Irn) – Beloved and a Thousand Seraphim

It seems like a few of the mentions above start to edge near cosmic in sound, so might as well go further and mention the few specifically cosmic acts which caught my attention. NUMEN NOCTIS launched me into empyrean realms late this year, channeling the likes of DARKSPACE and BORGE with sophomore album Sanctus Simulacrum. One of DÉHÀ’s (many) releases this year, Decadance, had a similar sound although distinctly more industrialized, while VORGA’ Striving Toward Oblivion was one of the first things that I heard this year, providing a more traditional melodic cosmic orbit. LUNE’s incredibly grandiose and expansive Hymns to the Lunar Realm, complete with overt symphonics (including brass) and choirs, could only be described as blackened atmospheric funeral doom, whilst JOURNEY INTO DARKNESS graced us with Infinite Universe, Infinite Death, a modern deathened symphonic black metal goliath of galactic proportions. FORELUNAR (my last addition to this list) is technically regional (album is dedicated to women killed in Iran) but the sound is transcendent, celestial, lush, with almost a heavenly drone in its beautiful orchestrated melody, supported by ecclesiastical choirs.

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REGIONAL

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Most Cowboy: ++ DARK WATCHER (US) – Frontier (comp)

Most Native American: + VITAL SPIRIT (Can) – Still As The Night, Cold As The Wind

Most Frogs Excellently Used In An Intro: ++ SWAMPBORN (Rus) – Beyond Ratio

Most Siberian Hypothermia: GRIMA (Rus) – Frostbitten

Most Hopelessly Melodic Hooks: + MORGREIM (Pol) – XXII

A handful of releases I enjoyed immensely were quite the opposite of cosmic, regional tomes with specific endemic auditory themes. DARK WATCHER is at the top of my list with Frontier, and I’m cheating a bit here because this ‘debut’ album is really a compilation of previous eps Hymns to a Godless Land and Dark Watcher, but I don’t care because the band’s blatant use of spaghetti western black metal flavor is enough to make WAYFARER blush, and I fucking love it. The slightly deathier VITAL SPIRIT similarly infused Western Americana into their fantastic debut Still As The Night, Cold As The Wind, an ode to Native American decimation and violence. SWAMPBORN came out of nowhere with a fucking AWESOME debut Beyond Ratio, channeling some sort of Slavic ranine marshland gypsy vibes with an incredible array of instrumentation including keys, brass, cello, and accordion. And GRIMA returned once again with Frostbitten, a predictably enjoyable fifth stab at black Siberian folk atmospherics. MORGREIM’s album XXII, while more difficult to pin down a specific local sound, features over the top epic naturalistic melodies (sort of like a blacker, less layered Polish WINTERSUN), submerged screams, and lots of clean female vocals which are pretty good but sound a bit like an anime soundtrack, if one can handle that. 

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OTHER SUPERIOR ALBUMS

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Most Powerful Slow Burn: ++ PANZERFAUST (Can) – Suns of Perdition Chapter III: The Astral Drain

Most Mysterious: ++ SKARE (UK? Fra? Aus?) – Skare

Most Ancient Demonic Bloodlust: +SUMERIAN TOMBS (Ger) – Sumerian Tombs

Most Well-Rounded: VANANIDR – Beneath the Mold

Most Portuguese But Better Than Gaerea: ++ ANZV (Prt) – Gallas

*Most Sticky Fingers: GAEREA – Mirage

Most Wrenching Vocals: WOODS OF DESOLATION (Aus) – The Falling Tide

Most Grand Finale: + MOURNING BY MORNING (US) – A Step Away From Light; A Step Into Abyss

Most Unsurprisingly Fantastic: + MISÞYRMING (Isl) – Með hamri

Most …National: + HATE FOREST (Ukr) – Innermost

Alright, so where the hell does that leave us? PANZERFAUST, for one. Suns of Perdition Chapter III: The Astral Drain came out this year to wrap up the trilogy, and it is momentous. It is getting overlooked, but there’s a reason (and a remedy). The singles were misleading due to most of the tracks being slower, but there’s enough aggression to balance things out IF the tracks were rearranged and the fairly pointless short interludes were omitted: the order 3 > 9 > 8 > 5 > 7 > 1 is a fully satisfying listen, providing two calm-towards-aggressive waves with the instrumental in the middle and the long epic capstone to conclude. It might also be noted that track 7 is perhaps the best track they have ever written. SKARE’s self-titled debut is a bit of a mystery drop (bandcamp says origin is “France, world”, Encyclopedia Metallum says “Australia”), but an attentive listen convinces me that this is none other than another project from UK prodigy O.W.G.A., the man behind AULD RIDGE and ALBIONIC HERMETICISM, and the Hermetic Order of Ytene label. SKARE is similar in sound to both of those projects albeit slightly more melodic and atmospheric, and I have been absolutely obsessed with all three projects for the last 18 months. SUMERIAN TOMBS returned from the vampiric coffin with a tremendous self-titled tome of contemporary heavy warmth, epic density, and traditional savage and brazen demonic orthodoxy, while VANANIDR’s Beneath the Mold offered up a modern cohesive mix of classic melody, off-kilter savagery, and brooding calculation. 

ANZV dropped debut Gallas hot on the heels of a couple of singles and immediately established themselves for me as absolutely the the most prominent band from Portugal (and one of the most prominent albums worldwide) this year with their ritualistic deathened black metal, far above the likes of their moody, “cathartic”, thieving brethren. If you want catharsis, I recommend WOODS OF DESOLATION’s hotly anticipated opus The Falling Tide. Pioneers of post-black melancholic melodicism, this album is no different and features a vocal delivery which is particularly unhealthy and wrenching but avoids that annoying wailing sound that a lot of DSBM bands seem to employ. MOURNING BY MORNING took me by surprise with a fantastic symphonic black metal offering A Step Away From Light; A Step Into Abyss, which features just a little bit of ‘core heaviness. Finally, a few late releases that could potentially evolve to take AOTY (but at the time of writing this I just have not listened to either of them enough yet). First, MISÞYRMING’s Með hamri, which brings unquestionable and orthodox fury similar in sound to labelmate FUNERAL MIST but with moments which are perhaps even more epic. Upon a cursory listen, I like it more than 2015’s  Söngvar elds og óreiðu, but not as much as 2019’s Algleymi. Lastly, HATE FOREST’s Innermost. I have never really engaged with HATE FOREST up until this point, however Innermost turned the tide with it’s militant blasting, largely gutteral vocal style (with some variety), and engaging melody (which, according to reliable sources is a bit of an evolution with this album and is probably largely the reason that it is sitting so well with me). 

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“BLACKENED”

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Most Seems Like It Came Out In 2021, I Have Played It So Much: ++ HATH (US) – All That Was Promised

Most Gratifying Anticipation: ++ AN ABSTRACT ILLUSION (Swe) – Woe

*Most Surprisingly Disappointing: SAOR (Sct) – Origins*

*Most Okay But Disappointing Compared To The Last Album: DISILLUSION (Ger) – Ayam*

Most Ambitious Debut LP: + TÓMARÚM (US) – Ash in Realms of Stone Icons

Most Warm Weather Jam: INEXORUM (US) – Equinox Vigil

Most Mind Fucking Blown In The First Ten Seconds: + FREEDOM OF FEAR (Aus) – Carpathia

Most Difficult To Describe: WAKE – Thought Form Descent

Okay, let’s delve into the margins of black metal and check some of that stuff on the “blackened” periphery. HATH and their form of irresistably catchy, modern, barely-blackened death metal fucking brought it at the beginning of the year with All That Was Promised (I have a feeling that one has a LOT of staying power). But AN ABSTRACT ILLUSION was perhaps my most anticipated release of the year besides SAOR and DISSILLION, and unlike those latter, Woe did not disappoint with their absolutely next level combination of progressive metal, melodic/semi-technical death metal and black metal, shifting seamlessly between elements of technicality, heaviness, darkness, brutality, suffering, and fragility whilst all wrapped up in epic melody to create a complete masterpiece. Same with TÓMARÚM’s debut full length Ash in Realms of Stone Icons, which features many of the same elements mentioned above but with black metal consisting of the foundation instead of progressive death metal, an incredibly ambitious work of maturity, complexity, and depth. INEXORUM flexed their optimistic wind-in-your-hair brand of blackened melodic death metal with Equinox Vigil, while FREEDOM OF FEAR seamlessly melded a greater diversity of upbeat elements of death, thrash, black, and even a touch of power metal with their new album Carpathia. WAKE made some waves with Thought Form Descent and their somewhat difficult-to-pin-down, bristling combination of progressive black metal and melodic grind.

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DEATH METAL & OTHERS

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Most Randomly Made Me Obsessed: ++ JADE (Ger/Esp) – The Pacification of Death

Most How TMDC Should Be Sounding – BEYOND MORTAL DREAMS (Aus) – Abomination of the Flames

Most How Gojira Should Be Sounding – NEUROTIC MACHINERY (Cze) – A Loathsome Aberration

Most How Behemoth Should Be Sounding – SIRRUSH (Ita) – Molon Labe

Most Shameworthy Pleasure: ++ LORNA SHORE (US) – Pain Remains

Most Trancelike Experience: ++ HEILUNG (Den/Nor/Ger) – Drif

I got struck with a gnarly recent obsession that has been JADE’s more melodic The Pacification of Death. BEYOND MORTAL DREAMS’ Abomination of the Flames did a damn good job of picking up where THE MONOLITH DEATHCULT has been lacking, NEUROTIC MACHINERY showed me what GOJIRA could have sounded like with A Loathsome Aberration and SIRRUSH’s Molon Labe may hit the spot for those pining for BEHEMOTH’s Demigod era. And then there’s LORNA SHORE’s Pain Remains. Fuck off, okay? I like it. It’s like DIMMU BORGIR took so many steroids that it bro’ed out into deathcore. Reminds me of FLESHGOD APOCALYPSE in some ways, although it has the drawback of it’s foundation being deathcore and not brutal death metal. Still though, butween fucking stellar blasting and outlandish orchestration, the engaging guitar hooks, and entertaining vocals, it is enough for me to be willing to tolerate the breakdowns. Special shout out though to the tribal ritualindustrial darkfolk act HEILUNG who dropped new album Drif. True to form, it contains a few tracks on it which are absolutely stunning (tracks 1-3: “Asja”, “Anoana”, and “Tenet”). I was fortunate enough to catch the subsequent tour date in San Francisco and it was one of the best live shows I have seen in years.

Well, that’s it for 2022… until February when I discover too late all those which “got away”. Sincere hails to anyone still reading. Hails to Black Metal Daily and Order ov the Black Arts. Hails to all the great artists and labels out there. Hails to Black Metal!!! Bring on the next round!

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BLACK METAL DAILY’S LISTCRUSH 2022 WILL CONTINUE.

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Return to Glorious Darkness – A Dual Review of ‘The Agony & Ecstasy of Watain’ by WATAIN

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Thus, the mighty and often polarizing WATAIN return with their seventh full-length assault on all that is holy: The Agony & Ecstasy of Watain. No matter your opinion of the band it remains an irrefutable fact that for better or worse their impact upon black metal has been immense, with each album release an event in itself. Seven albums in, do the Swedes maintain the blazing essence of black purity, or has their flame begun to flicker and wane? GOS (Order ov the Black Arts) and DEX took a deep dive into the stygian depths to find out.

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GOS: Man, I have such conflicting thoughts about WATAIN. On the one hand, I can truly say that Sworn to the Dark and Lawless Darkness are two of my favorite black metal albums of all time. I can also say that a live blood-soaked WATAIN ritual provided me with the most intensely spiritual experience that I have ever had while not on a hallucinogen (which is really saying something). Yet, I was generally lukewarm on The Wild Hunt, and even less so on Trident Wolf Eclipse. It leaves me with a bit of trepidation about new material.

DEX: Oh, I hear you. I’ve caught them each of the three times they’ve made the trip down under, and the first time I saw them, they reduced a massive biker bloke who was at least a head taller than me to a blubbering wreck – they finished their set, and when the lights came on as the closing notes rang out he turned to me and grabbed my arm, tears streaming down his face like he’d seen the beautiful and terrifying visage of Lucifer himself in all his profane glory, then staggered off into the darkness. They have that effect on people, I guess. As for their discography, I also agree: Lawless Darkness is a modern classic of Swedish melodicism, just shy of a masterpiece, but it’s certainly been diminishing returns since then.

Before we dig in, I’d like to touch on the album title. The Agony & Ecstasy of Watain, whilst at first appearing a slightly bombastic moniker, seems to be a play on the title of the legendary Italian artist Michelangelo‘s 1961 biographical novel or 1965 film in which his struggles painting the roof of the Sistine Chapel are portrayed, amongst other things – therefore, I may be wrong and The Agony & Ecstasy of Watain is a VERY bombastic and overblown title. Perhaps they regard this album as their masterpiece, representative of the trials and transcendence they’ve endured/achieved along the way? 

GOS: Perhaps? Although I think they must know at this point that they are never going to top Lawless Darkness as the epitome of their output. I think that I recall Erik even saying as much himself, which is why they have gone such a different direction with everything since then. Perhaps it is a reference to that struggle particularly? Hard telling, but I do know they are catching some shit for the title on good ol’ social media. I personally don’t get fussed about such things, but… Anyway, maybe the album title will make more sense as we dive into the black flame!

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1. ECSTASIES IN NIGHT INFINITE

GOS: This seems to be starting off solidly! Proper straightforward, driving, rabid intensity, not unlike a few of singles like ‘Nuclear Alchemy’ and ‘De Profundus’, but I think I like this better than either of those. Unmistakably WATAIN, even though they have some almost psychedelic effects happening with both the guitar and the vocals briefly in the second half. Noting that the riffing seems pretty sporadic and rapidly-shifting, less immediately cohesive compared to the more epic / melodic Sworn and Lawless fare. Also I’m hearing at least three different Metallica riffs scattered around. I’m not awed, but I enjoyed that track.

DEX: Definitely reminds of ‘Nuclear Alchemy’, especially how it quite literally explodes into existence – and yeah, I’m enjoying this far more as well. Not least of all because the production is immediately more to my taste than the comparatively weaker (to me) Trident Wolf Eclipse. The cold and clear savagery has been ratcheted up a notch to give their material the power it needs and everything just hits that much harder. Classic WATAIN melody, ripping solos, a bit of that less-cohesive diabolical approach you mentioned… a solid as fuck opener. The signs are good so far!

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2. THE HOWLING

GOS: The Howling seems to embrace a bit more predictable melody, but still not the uber-epic style from Sworn or Lawless, more like the modern in-your-face element of Trident mixed with more subtle deathish melodies of Casus Luciferi or something. At any rate, still sits along with the first track and seems equally very good but not really mind blowing. This reinforces a comment someone made a while back that WATAIN might be the AC/DC of black metal. Amusing because I once read an interview with Morgan from MARDUK in which he openly stated that his intent was to not push boundaries but instead focus on consistency and be the MOTORHEAD of black metal. I’m not sure that WATAIN are intending this but for better or worse, I think the AC/DC of black metal holds if these last two tracks are an indication. Not bad, not bad at all.

DEX: Somewhere, Abbath might be weeping and grinding his teeth in jealousy at that AC/DC comparison – but it isn’t far off (and he’s got more of a hard-on for Motörhead anyway). This is definitely and unmistakably WATAIN. Despite the obvious influences they’ve worn on their sleeves since day one, this far into their career they’re basically referencing themselves; which isn’t a bad thing, as so far this album feels almost like a coming home. A refocusing and diving back into their core energy, attempting to take everything that they are and condense it into the best version of themselves that they can. Maybe the self-referential title actually works.

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3. SERIMOSA

GOS: Hmmm. This is slower, more paced and plodding, but not slow or unique enough to be a ballad like ‘They Rode On’ or even ‘The Wild Hunt’…. I’m just gonna admit that I’m somewhat bored with this one. ………. Jeezus, DO SOMETHING. There is really nothing happening here which stands out and the track seems like filler. 

DEX: I actually quite like this one, but for a different reason than you might be expecting. The track itself is good enough with some nice progressions and that atmosphere of seething power (especially after the break, with that synth), but it’s certainly not a “banger”. Where it does succeed for me is the fact that it seems WATAIN could be painting in broad strokes on this album. It works perfectly in context of the tracks before, is almost exactly what I wanted to hear at this point and leaves me excited to hear what they’ll build into next. Are they writing in a more purely holistic form this time around when compared to the weird dynamics of Trident Wolf Eclipse? As the old adage goes… let’s find out!

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4. BLACK CUNT

GOS: Is this a new track? It has the same mid-pace. Oh it is, ‘Black Cunt’. Well, that’s a fun title! … quick, check the album art and lyrics! Haha. 

DEX: Man… that’d be a VERY fun song title down here in Australia. Shitloads of people would not take too kindly to that, I can tell you right now!

GOS: At least this one has that overtly ‘rock’ bit and a solo to spice things up a little, but the scovilles are still pretty fucking low. I *can* deal with this, but I’m not sure that I want to. Is this the ‘Agony’ part? Heh, hoping that the ‘Ecstasy’ is a bit more… ecstatic. 

DEX: Yeah, I’m a huge sucker for a mean riff like that. That section kills. As for the track itself, it IS a nice build in energy from the previous… like they’re mid ritual, summoning up and stirring sorceries so the air crackles and shimmers with dark power. Hah, I was just about to say “shimmers with dark necromancy” and Erik just said “to the pipe of the necromancer” or something. Ace.

GOS: I’m glad you are digging these last two tracks more than I am. Gives me pause and incentive to go back and listen to them with a fresh ear. Not to paint myself as a follower, but I can’t count the number of times my cohort NAPH has asked me if I have checked something out yet, and in response to my “meh”, he’s like “doooooood shut the fuck up and LISTEN TO THIS!”. It doesn’t always resonate, but a good amount of the time I end up hearing something new upon a revisit, and once in a while I’m completely blown away. SCHAMMASCH would be a fucking monumental case in point, but I digress. Very good fortune to have friends with good taste!

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5. LEPER’S GRACE

DEX: Here we are, starting to let loose a little now. Opening with a sort of hammer blast (I’m a woeful drummer, shoot me if I’m wrong) signals intent, and yep, we’re back to the hard shit. I fucking love that “pre-chorus” type bit at 1:40, and the lyrics are great as well, check them out. This is an ugly, mean and spiteful track, bristling with hate. Dig it.

GOS: Yeah this one starts off a little more explosively, much like the first track. Since you mentioned the drumming specifically, it somewhat reminds me of the sort of staggering thud of a Harley Davidson engine from about 0:35 to 1:00 and again 1:10 to 1:30 or so. Also liking that wild guitar riff at around 1:40 if that’s what you were referring to. This one is definitely a rocker, and I appreciate that sort of unabashed groove at around 2:50, then going back again to that HD engine momentum. These guys are bikers too. Coincidence? My own projection? Yeah lyrics are a nice solid middle finger in the face of modern social norms, trends, and morals. Good shit.

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6. NOT SUN NOR MAN NOR GOD

GOS: Is that a fucking piano? I don’t mind it, but I’m surprised. I think that the short guitar lead compliments it well, sort of too bad that it didn’t persist as a continued, intensifying element throughout the track. 

DEX: The lead is great… but I’m not a particular fan of the way this little interlude ends, something just a little off about those last few piano notes. Aside from that, a good piece that once again works well with the flow of the album.

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7. BEFORE THE CATACLYSM

GOS: Ohhh, this is starting out in epic fashion! Ok, here we fucking go! Niiiiiiice! This is more like it. LOVE that charging, ballistic percussion and the guitar riffing is total, full-on melodic Swedish fire! THIS is what I love the most about WATAIN! I like how the middle of this slows down to almost ‘Waters of Ain’ grandiosity about two thirds of the way through the track, but I do hope that it picks back up again to round it out, that first aggressive movement was top-tier. This is the first thing I’ve heard from this album that really has that Lawless Darkness spirit. 

DEX: Definitely does hearken back to the Lawless energy… fucking hell, this is a quality song. The second half in particular is stirring stuff, even if it does stretch a little too far and then cut off abruptly at the death. To your Swedish fire comment, for those playing at home who have somehow miraculously never become familiar with the work of WATAIN, it’s worth mentioning at this point that they do still have a lot of Dissection in their DNA, shining through to varying degrees on this and almost all previous tracks… and they likely always will, given they’ve been compared to them since day one and show no signs of completely changing their sound. 

GOS: That was great! Strange ending though, I thought it was going to wrap it up, then it picks back up for a few more words and then it just seems to stop.  

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8. WE REMAIN

GOS: Huh, this is interesting. Started off almost sounding like ‘Stellarvore’, but I’d bet the farm right now, without looking at the linear notes, that these female vocals, *YES, FEMALE VOCALS* are Farida Lemouchi of the late occult rock band THE DEVIL’S BLOOD band, the namesake of which was indeed taken from a WATAIN song on Casus Luciferi. This track develops into something which reminds me a lot of the track ‘The Wild Hunt’, which happens to be my favorite track on that album, so that’s cool. Different, but cool. Pretty fucking dark and spacy, with that psychedelic lead towards the end. Really enjoying it a lot. Wouldn’t be terribly surprised if it ends up being the unique highlight of the album, much like ‘The Wild Hunt’ and ‘They Rode On’ were for The Wild Hunt.

DEX: You’re spot on, and she sounds fucking great – she’s a perfect match for their sound. A surprising and very welcome inclusion, this absolutely nails the vibe! So many bands fall on the wrong side of boring when they do a slow burn like this – or maybe it’s just me becoming bored with this sort of thing – but not so here at all. I really commend WATAIN on how well they’re doing the occult atmosphere here, this album is fucking ace so far.

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9. FUNERAL WINTER

GOS: Man, this one is starting off solid too. That fucking riff! Seems to go on a bit longer and be a bit more complex than their usual stuff, and it rolled over into some sweet blasting. Goddammit, FUCK YES. This is one of those songs, which, every time it does something different at points which could easily lapse into something arbitrary, it just keeps getting better and better, ratcheting up with every transition. I’m so glad that this track is kicking so much ass!  

DEX: Hah, I’m glad that you’re glad! These riffs are really reminding me of something I can’t quite put my finger on… either way, they’re fucking ace. It’s full-on black metal annihilation mode and I appreciate that. Even that little atmospheric break is classic as hell, and I dig the neat tie-up at the conclusion. There’s not really anything I don’t like about this one, huge win.

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10. SEPTENTRION

GOS: I’m good with this easy, almost melancholic pace. Seems… apropos for a concluding track I suppose. The lead guitar is strange here, it’s like it is going at about a fourth of the normal speed. Ah here we go, picking up about a third of the way through the track. This sounds more typical, although I didn’t mind what it was doing before. A bit of a combination of both sounds with the outro, drums are at basically a steady canter with the epic lead on top. Good first impression, and I think this track is one that is going to grow on me.

DEX: If Abbath was grinding his teeth earlier, now he’s probably slinging a noose over his rafters at the fact WATAIN‘s ‘Septentrion’ absolutely fucking wipes the floor with his. Kidding, of course (he’s probably drunk on the phone to his lawyers instead), but it is strange that two tracks were released by the mainstream big boys of black metal with the same odd title in such a short window of time. 

GOS: Burn! If you could see my face I have a completely clueless expression with my left eyebrow slightly raised, because I have zero idea of what is going on with Abbath or his album. *shrug* 

DEX: You are a wise man… I suggest you continue having zero idea of what’s going on with Abbath or his latest. This track alone kills anything off that – a fine, epic conclusion to an album that’s far more than I expected (but I’ll say more about that shortly). As you say, definitely the correct vibe to end on.

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CONCLUSION

DEX: So, what are your thoughts overall? I’m somewhat surprised but not at all ashamed to say I fucking LOVED it. Coming back to the album title, I think they might actually have been trying to say more about their intentions than I initially realized: much like Michelangelo‘s Sistine Chapel roof, each separate element is good, but when you step back and appreciate it as a whole it is breathtaking. If you pay attention to even just the last three tracks, the energy each one generates is completely complementary to the others in sequence, like they’re necessary to be situated next to one another – it’s like they’re not making an album, but casting a spell in ten eloquent movements… or, skillfully painting small parts in incredible detail of what will then end up an epic masterpiece. And it needs to be appreciated as a whole to witness its full glory. A very different feeling to Trident Wolf Eclipse, I’m happy they seem to have reacted to that and felt the need to show exactly what they can fucking do.

Is it the best thing they’ve ever done? Time will tell, but it’s definitely the best they’ve done since Lawless Darkness by far, for me. I’ll be spending a great deal more time with this record, which is the first time I’ve said that about WATAIN in a few years.

GOS: I fear that, for me, nothing that they ever do will stand above the impossible echelons of Sworn to the Dark and Lawless Darkness. Those albums… …without getting too far into it, those albums had (and have) an effect on me on what can best be described as a spiritual level, partially because of the music itself and how it influenced my perspective of black metal, but also due to some experiences that I had seeing them live during those touring cycles – and I don’t think that this or any future release will ever be able to achieve that due to circumstance alone, regardless of how they sound. That being said, this album is definitely the best thing to come from WATAIN since those pillars, and it pretty thoroughly wipes the ritual ground with The Wild Hunt and, to a greater extent, Trident Wolf Eclipse

Yet, even as I write that, and also as I mull over the tracks and which I like more than others, somehow my preferences seem somewhat arbitrary. I view this band with such respect that when I encounter albums or songs that don’t resonate much, I have a distinct feeling, not of WATAIN failing to measure up, but of me not being able to fully receive what it is that they are projecting; that their sheer authenticity makes them seem to some extent, beyond inconsequential reproach. Ultimately, WATAIN only answers to itself. I’m grateful to say that The Agony & Ecstasy of Watain is resonating with me (or, I should say: I am resonating with it) more than anything else from them in the last 10 years. Great album.

The Agony & Ecstasy of Watain is available now via Nuclear Blast.

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