Sulphur Aeon - The Scythe Of Cosmic Chaos review
Band: | Sulphur Aeon |
Album: | The Scythe Of Cosmic Chaos |
Style: | Death metal |
Release date: | December 21, 2018 |
A review by: | RaduP |
01. Cult Of Starry Wisdom
02. Yuggothian Spell
03. The Summoning Of Nyarlathotep
04. Veneration Of The Lunar Orb
05. Sinister Sea Sabbath
06. The Oneironaut - Haunting Visions Within The Starlit Chambers Of Seven Gates
07. Lungs Into Gills
08. Thou Shalt Not Speak His Name (The Scythe Of Cosmic Chaos)
Speaking of last-minute surprises, Lovecraftian death metallers Sulphur Aeon decided to give us their offering ten days before the year ended, giving us just enough time to reconsider our end-of-year lists.
There have been a lot of death metal bands to emerge this decade and there have also been a lot of bands that use Lovecraftian themes, yet somehow Sulphur Aeon managed to do both so well. The stars were right and Swallowed By The Ocean's Tide and Gateway To The Antisphere plunged them to the world through the sky, making The Scythe Of Cosmic Chaos pretty much their first anticipated album past their breakthrough in the midst of black seas of infinity, and with standards set so high, could the stars be wrong?
Sulphur Aeon's music has always been interesting beyond merely the Lovecraftian themes, mostly due to their blend of black and melodic influences within death metal, and while The Scythe Of Cosmic Chaos has a bit more of the latter, this does not soften their sound. Instead it feels more focused and fun to listen to. Sulphur Aeon still craft some colossal riffs that are such eldritch contradictions of all matter, force, and cosmic order. The addition of previously live-only members A. and S. brings more fullness and a more band-oriented sound that was lacking a bit on previous records.
One element that is being used more than on previous records as well is the presence of clean vocals on almost all tracks. These are obviously in the minority still, but their contrast to the raspy growls does bring a bit more of an esoteric feel to the already dissonant riffs. I would definitely like to see them use them more in the future, since they are so well-integrated here. The whole record manages to find a balance between more straightforward death with more melodic twin-guitar riffs and solos and growls and more esoteric chants and dissonant riffs and nauseating atmospheres, so much so that it feels like there is a bit to enjoy for any type of death metal fan without ever feeling out of focus or unsure that the sea and the ground are horizontal.
It's quite clear that Sulphur Aeon has no intention of just rehashing, but of slowly developing their sound. The Scythe Of Cosmic Chaos may sound less oppressive (as far as the production goes), but the lifted veil only brings more riffs and intricate structures of great architects went mad.
Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn.
| Written on 09.01.2019 by Doesn't matter that much to me if you agree with me, as long as you checked the album out. |
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