Sunn O))) - Life Metal review
Band: | Sunn O))) |
Album: | Life Metal |
Style: | Dark Ambient, Drone doom metal |
Release date: | April 26, 2019 |
A review by: | RaduP |
01. Between Sleipnir's Breaths
02. Troubled Air
03. Aurora
04. Novae
Death Metal is sooooo last year, now Life Metal is trending! Get on with the times, buckos!
Sorry for my horrible attempt at a pun. But I just had to.
Anyway, you're probably already familiar with drone titans Sunn O))) and you either think that they're boring hacks or you "get it". No, Life Metal won't change your mind. But assuming you're already a drone fan, you may have noticed that Sunn O))) had quite a weird last 10 years, ever since they've hit their absolute creative peak with the colossal Monoliths & Dimensions, after which it seemed like they were unable to make a record that wasn't a collaboration, some of which were great, some of which were harder to get into, but once they finally managed to released a solo record, Kannon, it was a big let down. So they've been silent for a while and now we're gonna get two Sunn O))) records. What gives?
One of the gripes a lot of people had with Kannon was how awful the production and mixing was by Sunn O))) standards, with a lot of layers being too buried in the mix. On the helm of the sound gathering here is Steve Albini, which has completely eradicated the issues, and if there's anyone to thank for how great Life Metal sounds compared to other records, it's him. Because even if Life Metal is a lot simpler and less layered than Monoliths & Dimensions, there are quite some additional ones other than the guitars which give the record some nuance. To my initial disappointment, there is no Attila Csihar here, but you'll find cellos and vocals by Hildur Guðnadóttir of múm, some bass and pipe organs, and moog by honorary third member TOS Nieuwenhuizen.
It obviously takes a lot of patience to appreciate how these layers interact with one another, as there are great lengths of time where it feels like nothing happens, which makes for some unimpressive listening if listened with the wrong mindset and at too low a volume. Sound itself is vibration and it goes away fast, you'll only hear it for a really short period of time, so I just see their music as turning the concept of limited sound on its head, prolonging each sound to ensure that we captured everything that we needed to capture from it (which is obviously why such a neat production is so helpful), which makes drone feels so meditative. In turn, that makes me even more excited for their next album due this year, which is supposed to be even more meditative.
But "Life Metal" is quite a funny name for an album and hard to take seriously, right? Honestly, as dark and mysterious as Sunn O)))'s music can be, sure there's some of that here as well, but Life Metal feels a lot more euphoric and celebratory. This is a band that has stayed together for more than two decades, have become poster boys for an entire sub genre, and probably considered a lot of the people they collaborated with as heroes, like Nurse With Wound and Scott Walker [R.I.P.]. So, if anything, they have some goddamn reason to be celebrating. And while it doesn't feel in any way cheesy or obvious, there's an overall noticeably lighter mood than what we are used to.
Also the horses that we hear right at the beginning made me think that I accidentally started Bathory's Blood Fire Death instead.
Sunn OwO)))
| Written on 22.04.2019 by Doesn't matter that much to me if you agree with me, as long as you checked the album out. |
Comments
Comments: 5
Visited by: 181 users
Auntie Sahar Drone Empress |
Cynic Metalhead Ambrish Saxena |
Ball Fondlers |
Ball Fondlers |
Starvynth i c deaf people Staff |
Hits total: 3845 | This month: 9