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Nechochwen - Heart Of Akamon



8 | 46 votes |
Release date: 4 September 2015
Style: Neofolk, Black metal

Owners:

28 have it
4 want it


01. The Serpent Tradition
02. The Impending Winter
03. Lost On The Trail Of The Setting Sun [feat. Tanner]
04. October 6, 1813
05. Traversing The Shades Of Death
06. ?kimota
07. Skyhook
08. Ki?elamakong

Guest review by
Marcus
Rating:
8.0
Far too often folk elements injected into metal act as a gimmick, tying the listener to cultures and ages long since dead with instruments and passages that are, at best, skin-deep. Enter Nechochwen, champion of the American Indian in music and spirit. For whatever unknown reason, the history and existence of America's indigenous peoples have been largely ignored in metal, with few exceptions like Panopticon, Yaotl Mictlan or the bands of the Black Twilight Circle.
Nechochwen's discography, to this point, can be considered a sort of saga tracing the experience of Native Americans with the coming of Europeans. Algonkian Mythos is devoid of any metal elements, focusing solely on acoustic and folk instruments - an American era before Europeans arrived. Azimuths To The Otherworld began a crude, chaotic blend of the Old (acoustic folk) and New (black metal) Worlds - a warring clash of cultures alien to one another. Heart Of Akamon represents a more perfect union, a natural joinder between elements - peace at the expense of the native.
Following the trend set in Azimuths? the folk and acoustic elements are diminished. While they are no longer at the forefront of the music, neither are they forgotten or used merely as a parlor trick for attention or to stand out. Folk instruments like flutes and rattles are used as naturally as guitars and drums; folk sections flow so smoothly throughout the album it is as if they were meant to mix with metal. Although a boon, the genre mixture is also damaging. Nechochwen perform and compose their best when using acoustic and folk instruments; the music is far more interesting, diverse and memorable. The problem is that the metal passages and influences take away from the folk - they build beautiful acoustic atmospheres that are substantially weakened when black metal is introduced. Nechochwen must improve at metal before one of their albums will be truly great.
Heart Of Akamon, in many ways, sounds like a death knell for the Native American. The songs are somber, particularly when compared to Algonkian Mythos, the lyrics cry for the death of Tecumseh, and the songs lament the scattering and fading of the great tribes. But all is not lost. The album's closer Kiselamakong, while evoking a sense of loss, preaches hope, remembrance and that there is a future in which the lost peoples of America will find themselves honored and their ways reborn. Tecumseh may be dead, the great tribes now scattered, but the Heart Of Akamon lives on.

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published 06.12.2015 | Comments (0)

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Comments: 5   Visited by: 125 users
15.09.2015 - 19:35
Marcus
Doit Like Bernie
NICE, had no idea they released a new album. Their last two were excellent, anyone give this a listen yet?
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16.09.2015 - 19:38
Rating: 8
Netzach
Planewalker
Written by Marcus on 15.09.2015 at 19:35

NICE, had no idea they released a new album. Their last two were excellent, anyone give this a listen yet?

First time listener to this band here. Only listened to this one album yet but it's really good. A lot of parts remind me of Agalloch and Primordial but theirs is definitely a quite unique style. Early favorites are "October..." and "Kiselamakong" but overall it's a really consistent record. First track is awesome too but I found myself liking the folk parts better than the black metal. Drums sound a bit weirdly mixed sometimes but that could just be my headphones, I don't notice it on speakers.

How does this compare to earlier albums? Definitely interested in hearing more but cannot find the earlier ones my streaming service. Did they change label or something?
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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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16.09.2015 - 23:05
Marcus
Doit Like Bernie
Written by Netzach on 16.09.2015 at 19:38

First time listener to this band here. Only listened to this one album yet but it's really good. A lot of parts remind me of Agalloch and Primordial but theirs is definitely a quite unique style. Early favorites are "October..." and "Kiselamakong" but overall it's a really consistent record. First track is awesome too but I found myself liking the folk parts better than the black metal. Drums sound a bit weirdly mixed sometimes but that could just be my headphones, I don't notice it on speakers.

How does this compare to earlier albums? Definitely interested in hearing more but cannot find the earlier ones my streaming service. Did they change label or something?

Apparently I'm super impatient, I ended up buying the album a few hours after asking. I definitely agree about the black metal parts, they tend to be a lot weaker then the neo-folk, but some of the time it blends really naturally. If you like the pure folk more, check out their first album, "Algonkian Mythos." It's pure instrumental acoustic and quite good. I haven't listened to "Azimuths to the Otherworld" much (their albums are hardish to find) but it's much more similar to this - a joining of folk and black metal. If memory serves, "Azimuths..." is a bit rawer and the blend is a lot rougher, I think it's the weakest of the three.

Hell no clue if they changed label, their older stuff may even have been self-released, not sure. But you can find them all on their site, http://nechochwen.com.

You might be interested in bands like Fauna, Yaotl Mictlan (both edge more to the black metal side), or even Uaral (acoustic + doom).
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23.12.2015 - 01:33
Rating: 10
solstafjr
My #3 of 2015. The acoustic passages on this album are simply stunning.
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16.09.2016 - 13:38
Rating: 9
qnick90
Yeah pretty bad production and black metal parts sounds a little bit generic, but still - the folk parts are sooo good
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