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Esoctrilihum - Consecration Of The Spiritüs Flesh review



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Band: Esoctrilihum
Album: Consecration Of The Spiritüs Flesh
Style: Black metal
Release date: June 17, 2022
A review by: RaduP


01. Spiritüs Flesh
02. Thertrh
03. Shohih
04. Tharseîdhon
05. Scaricide
06. Sydtg
07. Aath

Seven albums in less than seven years should start feeling a bit stale by now, especially with how long their runtimes were. But Esoctrilihum knows not to make the exact same album twice. Consecration Of The Spiritüs is not just the shortest one, but the most violent one too.

I don't remember exactly at which point in Esoctrilihum's short career I actually found out about them, but at that point they already had a couple of albums under their belt and had already made it clear that it would be a very prolific project. That only became more and more reinforced with passing time, as there has been no year since 2017 that wasn't graced by at least one Esoctrilihum album. And that's not even counting the two EPs they also dropped. And thankfully, none of the releases felt like the band was on autopilot and was settling too comfortably on an established sound, even though their runtimes ranged between 50 and 80 minutes. It was 2020's Eternity Of Shaog that really won me over as more than just a great prolific band, and its colder counterpart from last year, Dy'th Requiem For The Serpent Telepath felt like an even colder version of that quasi-symphonic sound. Imagine my surprise when Consecration Of The Spiritüs Flesh follows up the longest album with the shortest, and the most expansive ones with the most direct one.

I would like the reader to take "the most direct one" with a grain of salt, since I haven't exactly had time to revisit all of Esoctrilihum's early albums to verify, but just the fact that I get the feeling that this is the band at its most direct should be a pretty good indication that some gears have been shifted. Since I already mentioned that these are the two most obvious differences that set Consecration aside from its predecessors, these two combined make it a pretty intense listening experience, with all of it condensed into a 40 minute beast. The atmospheric and melodic and symphonic aspects of the previous records are pushed back to the point of near complete elimination, instead sounding more twisted and violent.

Now that that's settled, I have to admit that I'm not as won over by this one's approach as I was with previous albums', but I appreciate Asthâghul switching things up. The drumming here is probably my least favorite aspect, as the blasting feels a bit too constant, and mechanical in a way that doesn't feel like it would add to the music by giving it an industrial feel, instead feeling more like it makes the record drag more than it should for being the shortest of the bunch. Contrasted with that are the vocals, which are at their most unique here, twisted and maddening, where the growls and the shrieks move between eerie and ritualistic to laughter in the face of madness. The riffing is also less melodic, sometimes falling to the same gripes as the drumming, but still providing plenty of great moments, especially in combination with the piano on "Sydtg".

Time will tell if this will end up as my least favorite Esoctrilihum, or if the sinister pummeling approach will pay off in the long run, but if there's one really great thing that Consecration Of The Spiritüs Flesh provides, it is the possibility of even better self-editing in future Esoctrilihum releases.






Written on 22.06.2022 by Doesn't matter that much to me if you agree with me, as long as you checked the album out.


Comments

Comments: 4   Visited by: 87 users
22.06.2022 - 19:14
Cynic Metalhead
Ambrish Saxena
Good review.

Convince me to make up my dirty brain to take this up. Goes in my checklist.
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23.06.2022 - 00:23
nikarg
Staff
I agree with what you point out. I only listened to this once when it appeared in the promo pool and its harsh sound and monotonous pummelling was almost unbearable. Like you, I also appreciate Asthâghul switching things up, but this is too stripped down for my liking, especially compared to the previous two.
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23.06.2022 - 04:49
Rating: 10
sgtrobo
Interesting. I absolutely loved it. Pulverizing. as much death metal as it is black metal, probably more.
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23.06.2022 - 17:08
Desha
delicious dish
It's definitely way more abrasive than I remember the last few albums being, but it still sounds very much like Esoctrilihum. Which brings me to a point I'd disagree with you on: I think the albums really do kind of seem very similar and often blend together for me. Even this one here isn't *too* different from say The Telluric Ashes Of The Ö Vrth Immemorial Gods (try saying that 3 times fast... or just once...), though I would agree it's the most different I've heard since my first one (which was Telluric Ashes ...)

Listening to Esoctrilihum for me is always nice, but I really can't sit through an entire album without getting a tiny bit bored cause it's all very same-y and there's nothing that super sticks out. And the same thing goes for the differences in between albums. Of course they're still different, but we're not talking "band reinvents themselves" levels of differences, it's just kinda the same thing with a 10% different approach each time.

It's perfectly serviceable 7-8/10 music for me, which makes me really not want to check it out much. It just needs that extra spark, I don't know
----
You are the hammer, I am the nail
building a house in the fire on the hill
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