Fleshgod Apocalypse - Labyrinth review
Band: | Fleshgod Apocalypse |
Album: | Labyrinth |
Style: | Symphonic death metal |
Release date: | August 16, 2013 |
A review by: | Windrider |
01. Kingborn
02. Minotaur (The Wrath Of Poseidon)
03. Elegy
04. Towards The Sun
05. Warpledge
06. Pathfinder
07. The Fall Of Asterion
08. Prologue
09. Epilogue
10. Under Black Sails
11. Labyrinth
Imagine you're and old and deaf man. You once listened to music a lot, even composed it sometimes. On a hot summer night your dreams become weirder than ever, full of new unseen fantasies but cruel nevertheless. Was it a nightmare or a vision? And most of all... what is this shit all about? Well, mainly my thoughts on the new Fleshgod Apocalypse album seen from Beethoven's point of view, 200 years ago. Labyrinth indeed is not easily divided into its brutal and symphonic parts, it all makes it up to the one thing it has become. And that is already the first fact making it a better album than their previous record, Agony. The whole concept grew and the individual parts fit better together.
I must say I didn't like Agony in first place, it was just too mixed up with everything. But now I got to know what it should have been, what the band's original idea was. The new album isn't an easy listening either but after some time one gets into it. At first glance the weakest part surely was the Italian side of the music, e.g. the high pitched clean vocals appearing from time to time. I got used to it, though, the first time ever those kind of vocals actually grew on me. So, what can the listener expect with this one? The answer is balls. Fleshgod Apocalypse definitely need some balls for writing and playing their music and it also takes some to like it. Symphonic people becoming brutal, brutal people becoming symphonic, it's not an easy process.
Considering the metal side of Labyrinth, all performances must be applauded, especially the drummer giving a big middle finger to machine precision, however the hell he is able to do that with only two arms and two legs. Vocals appear in three different styles, which are the growled death metal ones, already discussed high pitched, and the classical female ones from a professional singer. Together with the other instruments it makes a great melting pot. Adding then the orchestrations raises it to a music which is already too-much-of-everything but still yearns for more. Listening from the beginning the average metalhead will be longing for "Prologue" somewhere in between the fifth and seventh song. But shortly after that interlude one is eager to continue on former paths. Finally the awesome track "Under Black Sails" gives the satisfaction to end the session with a good feeling.
Still some words on orchestral implementation? Well, it is always a difficult thing and very few bands have perfected the technique of adding a whole orchestra while getting a good mastering afterwards so the guitars won't perish. And somehow all of them used synthetic instruments, just as Fleshgod Apocalypse have done here. Their version isn't the best out there but comes quite close though, just a bit more gain to the guitars next time please. Favourite songs? No, the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.
Rating breakdown
Performance: | 9 |
Songwriting: | 9 |
Originality: | 8 |
Production: | 8 |
Written by Windrider | 05.08.2013
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