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Primordial - How It Ends review



Reviewer:
7.0

202 users:
7.83
Band: Primordial
Album: How It Ends
Style: Black metal, Celtic folk metal
Release date: September 29, 2023
A review by: Netzach


01. How It Ends
02. Ploughs To Rust, Swords To Dust
03. We Shall Not Serve
04. Traidisiúnta
05. Pilgrimage To The World's End
06. Nothing New Under The Sun
07. Call To Cernunnos
08. All Against All
09. Death Holy Death
10. Victory Has 1000 Fathers, Defeat Is An Orphan

They say you should quit while you are still at the top. For instance, quitting your job for another is usually the best way to get a raised salary. Well, if this is How It Ends, then Primordial is clearly not following this advice.

After the unfuckwithable The Gathering Wilderness and To The Nameless Dead, Primordial's trajectory looked like an ever-growing exponential curve, which admittedly lost some (but far from all) of its steam on the two following albums (Where Greater Men Have Fallen was actually the first album I ever reviewed, way back in 2015 (damn, I'm old)). In fact, the first album of theirs which I could accuse of losing steam was Exile Amongst The Ruins, which packed a bunch of very memorable tracks together with a few that mostly seemed to plod along at their own pace, mindless of what any listener might think.

Five years later, and we arrive at How It Ends, which has been marketed as "probably" the band's final studio release. This obviously sets some expectations, raises a few questions, and feels like the end of an era; some expectations about a high watermark and going out in style, a few questions about what led the band to this decision and what legacy they will leave behind, and the end of an era marked by one of those few metal bands that managed to create (at least one) album(s) that transcend(s) their own discography into the sphere of universal acclaim while remaining true to themselves, whose very name has become synonymous to quality, and who held their banner high for a respectable amount of time after the apex of their career.

Yes, there is a lot of stuff here you already knew, no matter whether you agree or disagree with me, but when it comes to a band like Primordial, it is nigh impossible not to compare any new music of theirs to their past achievements. While this might partly reflect upon the laziness of yours truly, it is actually explained better (while I dodge any responsibility) by the simple fact that Primordial has time and again shown that there are few bands to compare with apart from Primordial itself. Royalty does not mix with commoners, and this is the extent to which I regard Primordial: as metal royalty. Now, expectations are high, so how about some answers to those questions?

How It Ends does not open with a bang like “Empire Falls” nor “No Grave Deep Enough”, but with a title track that builds upon a simple chord progression and, honestly, not a lot of other progression at all. Nemtheanga’s lyrics remain as powerful as ever, but the music itself feels like a retread of much earlier Primordial albums. Like the worst offenders on Exile Amongst The Ruins, it mostly plods along, creating a soundscape fit for storytelling but leaving a lot to be desired musically. This is just the first of several signs that Primordial has been looking back at their own discography when creating How It Ends; the unplugged-yet-metal Celtic vibes of “We Shall Not Serve” calls back even further to songs like “Fuil Ársa” from the 1995 debut Imrama, and the closer “Victory Has 1000 Fathers, Defeat Is An Orphan” (which is one of the most memorable cuts on the album) brings to mind past, pre-The Gathering Wilderness classics such as “Sons Of The Morrigan”.

“Ploughs To Rust, Swords To Dust” sounds like a perfectly anthemic title, yes? It sure is anthemic, with its hooky folk-doom main motif and simple yet effective chord progression in the chorus, but there is some kind of disjoint between the two sides of this song that leaves me reaching for the nearest glue bottle (not to huff it, mind you). The instrumental “Traidisiúnta” (Traditional) is short but sweet (could be longer, and made into a full song, as far as I’m concerned), and on “All Against All” Nemtheanga asks: “Is this the Kali-Yuga you asked for? / Could this be your fall of Rome?”, before bursting out into the only occasion on the album you will hear his harsh vocals, taunting us to ask ourselves “Where is your Ragnarök?” while supposedly asking the very same of the band itself. “All Against All” is an oddball on How It Ends, sort of like “The Alchemist’s Head” from Where Greater Men Have Fallen, and takes some time getting used to, but it is well worth the effort.

However, large parts of How It Ends manage to, even five and more listens later, completely pass me by. “Nothing New Under The Sun” showcases, well, nothing new under the sun, and while half of the main riff in “Call To Cernunnos” is classic Primordial, half of it veers in progressive-yet-not-quite directions which in the end mostly serve to lessen the impact of the entire song. How It Ends, despite being five years in the making and the supposed endnote of the band’s career, brings nothing new to the table, is at its best when recreating past glories, and at its worst when recreating past mistakes. There is no denying the quality of the music, the passion of the musicians, the production values, or any of that jazz; I only wish they had picked some more glories as opposed to mistakes to recreate, because if this is How It Ends, it leaves me with a feeling just bland enough not to make my stomach churn, and that’s not a very good sign.


Rating breakdown
Performance: 9
Songwriting: 6
Originality: 8
Production: 9

Written by Netzach | 29.09.2023




Comments

Comments: 10   Visited by: 177 users
29.09.2023 - 21:42
Zap
Only had one listen so far but I feel the same way. The only thing I disagree with in this review is your remark about Exile. If anything the album before it was where they were losing steam, with Exile being a return to form.
As for this album, I sort of had a feeling it was going to disappoint, maybe because of the song titles (does anyone else find them a bit weak?).
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29.09.2023 - 21:58
Rating: 8
musclassia
Staff
Great review! I probably won't have the chance to hear this for a couple of days, but the overall impression you give of a patchy album with a mixture of strong songs and plodders is rather in keeping with my expectations based upon their last two (or arguably even 3) albums; I do find it odd that Primordial built upon solid foundations to craft the stellar The Gathering Wilderness and To The Nameless Dead, only to subsequently regress in terms of consistency and peak quality, so perhaps if this is their final album, it's not the worst thing in the world. Nevertheless, they have continued to produce strong tracks in the post-Nameless Dead part of their career, most obviously No Grave Deep Enough and To Hell Or The Hangman, and if How It Ends delivers one or two more of that calibre (the Sons Of The Morrigan comparison makes that closing song sound particularly tempting), it will be a worthy effort.
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29.09.2023 - 22:19
Rating: 7
Netzach
Planewalker
Written by musclassia on 29.09.2023 at 21:58

Great review! I probably won't have the chance to hear this for a couple of days, but the overall impression you give of a patchy album with a mixture of strong songs and plodders is rather in keeping with my expectations based upon their last two (or arguably even 3) albums; I do find it odd that Primordial built upon solid foundations to craft the stellar The Gathering Wilderness and To The Nameless Dead, only to subsequently regress in terms of consistency and peak quality, so perhaps if this is their final album, it's not the worst thing in the world. Nevertheless, they have continued to produce strong tracks in the post-Nameless Dead part of their career, most obviously No Grave Deep Enough and To Hell Or The Hangman, and if How It Ends delivers one or two more of that calibre (the Sons Of The Morrigan comparison makes that closing song sound particularly tempting), it will be a worthy effort.

You should be good then, because there are a couple of very strong tracks here (#2 and #10 especially, in my opinion), but as an album as a whole... I don't know, man.
----
My "blackened synth metal" solo project: maladomini.bandcamp.com.

Whenever I write something funny, weird, or pretentious... I learned English by playing Baldur's Gate, okay?
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29.09.2023 - 22:35
Rating: 7
Redel
Moderator
Nice read, excellently written, thank you. Makes me want to approach the album soon. Not having any expectations though after what I read so far. As for losing steam, it started on Where Greater Men for me and accelerated on Exile. I still like these albums quite a bit though. Not sure if that is going to be the case with the new release, but dont mind much either because Primordial have already done so much right in their career, seeing the overall picture, I would forgive them a misstep in the closer I guess.
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30.09.2023 - 07:49
Rating: 7
Netzach
Planewalker
Written by Redel on 29.09.2023 at 22:35

Nice read, excellently written, thank you. Makes me want to approach the album soon. Not having any expectations though after what I read so far. As for losing steam, it started on Where Greater Men for me and accelerated on Exile. I still like these albums quite a bit though. Not sure if that is going to be the case with the new release, but dont mind much either because Primordial have already done so much right in their career, seeing the overall picture, I would forgive them a misstep in the closer I guess.

Thank you. Good album, but not great. Not fit for the end of their career. But I agree with you that they have already proven themselves and there's really nothing left to prove.
----
My "blackened synth metal" solo project: maladomini.bandcamp.com.

Whenever I write something funny, weird, or pretentious... I learned English by playing Baldur's Gate, okay?
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30.09.2023 - 12:42
Rating: 8
AndyMetalFreak
A Nice Guy
Contributor
This is an excellently written review. For me though it's everything I expected it to be. It's obviously not To The Nameless Dead or The Gathering Wilderness standards (but for me those releases were always unlikely to ever be matched anyway), but it's still classic Primordial in my eyes, that being a pretty solid release, one which I really like it.

There's one thing that this band have never lacked imo, and that's their passionate songwriting. The lyrics have always been powerful, profound and poetic, and they've always had such an incredible, distinctive style of their own, using great galloping folkish riffs, excellent tribal-like rolling drumming, and strong passionate vocals. Their blend of Celtic folk and black metal has always been supurb.
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01.10.2023 - 12:54
Bad English
Tage Westerlund
Nik if you would write this review whitch part of lyrics you would quote?
----
I stand whit Ukraine and Israel. They have right to defend own citizens.

Stormtroopers of Death - "Speak English or Die"

I better die, because I never will learn speek english, so I choose dieing
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01.10.2023 - 15:48
Rating: 8
musclassia
Staff
I've listened to it now; perhaps I approached it with diminished expectations, but I was pleasantly surprised by it overall. I seem to remember us discussing it around the time you got the promo and you mentioning it felt a bit of a throwback to earlier albums, and overall I kinda get that vibe; We Shall Not Serve in particular sounds like it could have been from The Gathering Wilderness, but in general I feel the music is a bit folksier/more blackened. There's no especially strong standout track on first listen, but overall I prefer the vibe to the last two records, which on the whole I felt had a tendency to plod along too much, which largely stopped me making a firm connection with either.

Intriguingly, Exile Among The Ruins' clear highlight was its most unusual song (To Hell Or The Hangman); here, the most unusual one is All Against All, and I find myself far more ambivalent over it. I find the first half to be somewhat flat and probably the weakest passage on the record, but around the halfway mark where it goes into the droning throat-style singing and ritualistc atmo-black feel, it's arguably the best part of the album, and if this doesn't ultimately turn out to be the final Primordial album, I'd love to hear more from Primordial reminiscent of this second half of the song. Will need more listens, but I'm feeling a high 7/low 8 on first impressions, which would make it a very respectable ending to a great band's career if the omens are indicative of their future.
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03.10.2023 - 10:51
nikarg
Staff
Written by Bad English on 01.10.2023 at 12:54

Nik if you would write this review whitch part of lyrics you would quote?

The first verse of the opening track:
"Is this how it ends?
Until only one song remains
Is this how language dies?
One tongue at a time
Is this the noose?
Waiting at the gallows end
Necks will crack
To the anthem of this world"


It is, in my opinion, the best track of the album and I agree with you that it should have been the closer.
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03.10.2023 - 10:55
Bad English
Tage Westerlund
Written by nikarg on 03.10.2023 at 10:51

Written by Bad English on 01.10.2023 at 12:54

Nik if you would write this review whitch part of lyrics you would quote?

The first verse of the opening track:
"Is this how it ends?
Until only one song remains
Is this how language dies?
One tongue at a time
Is this the noose?
Waiting at the gallows end
Necks will crack
To the anthem of this world"


It is, in my opinion, the best track of the album and I agree with you that it should have been the closer.

I would add next line where also
Quote:
. It this how it ends.
No more myths to hand from word to mouth.
It this how it ends.
No protest songs, no voices in dissent.
How did you feel when they called your name.
And you stood in line for the last time.

Dranghaneda is awesome poet, love this band poetic philosophical lyrics.
----
I stand whit Ukraine and Israel. They have right to defend own citizens.

Stormtroopers of Death - "Speak English or Die"

I better die, because I never will learn speek english, so I choose dieing
Loading...

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