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The Gathering - Beautiful Distortion review



Reviewer:
N/A

81 users:
7.16
Band: The Gathering
Album: Beautiful Distortion
Style: Experimental rock
Release date: April 29, 2022
A review by: RaduP


01. In Colour
02. When We Fall
03. Grounded
04. We Rise
05. Black Is Magnified
06. Weightless
07. Pulse Of Life
08. On Delay

"Beautiful distortion" is what I'd call a lot of metal, though it's usually more "distortion" than "beautiful". Beautiful Distortion is more "beautiful" than "distortion".

The Gathering are another one of those acts that revolutionized metal in the 90s only to leave that genre by the end of that decade, with the strongest parallels being with Ulver and Anathema, though it's the latter that these are at their strongest. Both acts starting out as gothic death doom acts, leaving aside the death part, and then shifting into a more atmospheric progressive post alternative rock. It's not such a complicated sound as the multitude of tags make it out to be, but both bands created this sound that was pretty hard to categorize by existent tags, while clearly taking influence from all the aforementioned genres. The Gathering are pretty special though, with 1995's Mandylion solidifying the "female-fronted gothic doom" sound that also eventually also helped birth the same trope in symphonic metal, thus also launching Anneke Van Giersbergen's stardom in the metal world. She eventually left The Gathering in 2007, only rejoining for an anniversary concert. Her shoes were pretty big to fill, but Octavia Sperati's Silje Wergeland seemed pretty up to the task.

And now we arrive at The Gathering's first album in nearly ten years. It's a pretty weird point in their career, as they're pretty much taking up from where they left of with 2012's Disclosure and its B-sides counterpart Afterwords, both of which had a relatively lukewarm reception compared to their 2000s material. Of course it's not just the loss of their original vocalist that lead to that lukewarm reception, as Silje's vocal style is a really good fit for The Gathering's sound and that's obvious here as well. And at least this time they had the courtesy of releasing the B-sides counterpart, Interference, on the same day, and to make it an EP so it doesn't get mistaken for being a self-standing album. And as far as Interference is concerned, both of the original songs on it could've easily landed on Beautiful Distortion, but it's the last track on that EP that is the most telling, a live version of How To Measure A Planet?'s title track that does make me feel that out of all classic The Gathering albums, Beautiful Distortion feels closest to that album.

There's a subtle space rock sound to Beautiful Distortion that combines with the post-rock and art rock to mirror a bit of that album's vibe. The album is not as long as it, but the songs do feel a bit stretched in a similar way, which was a gripe I had with that album as well. And even when compared with Disclosure, that album was also pretty similar in sound but a few listens in and I don't feel like Beautiful Distortion has the same show-stopping power that "Heroes For Ghosts" or "Paper Waves". It's not that the songs are bad or even boring, but a full decade having passed, The Gathering brand of atmospheric rock feels even more dated, and as a band that has had quite a bit of innovation with each album, most of Beautiful Distortion's innovations lie with how great the production sounds, especially in regards to the synth sounds. Guess what other The Gathering album was also produced by the same producer? Just so you don't think I'm exaggerating with the HTMAP? comparisons.

Maybe Beautiful Distortion is a bit dated and not as vital as some of their other albums, but it's still so recognizably a The Gathering album, complete with the upsides and downsides. So even if not everything gels seamlessly and some moments feel overly long. But The Gathering's sound is as beautiful as ever, and as much as it may feel like background music to some, it's some really beautiful background music. The mix of genres, even if it's not wild, feels eclectic after all this time. And this batch of songs? Pretty good. Sije's vocals? Pretty good. Their comeback? Welcome. The distortion? Beautiful.






Written on 05.05.2022 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: 129 users
05.05.2022 - 14:54
Bad English
Tage Westerlund
I went to wc at my work, was bored, and lustened it few minutes, then I simply thought, maybe it belongs there... Turned of and did go hack to work
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Stormtroopers of Death - "Speak English or Die"

I better die, because I never will learn speek english, so I choose dieing
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05.05.2022 - 16:06
theFIST
Had they actually made what the album name suggests i"d be interested
instead it fails at both aspects
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http://metalstormmusicianscorner.bandcamp.com
Written by Warman on 07.11.2007 at 22:39
Haha, that's like saying "compose your own Metal album and upload it here, instead of writing a review of an album". :lol:

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05.05.2022 - 18:44
Rating: 7
musclassia
Staff
I did like it, but it was definitely lacking anything with the emotional pull or sheer quality of my favourite songs from Disclosure (Heroes For Ghosts, Gemini I, I Can See Four Miles, all of which I still go back to today), so it ended up being a bit forgettable
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07.05.2022 - 11:39
Rating: 9
AnGina--
Dark Phoenix
I, as opposed to many apparently, find this to be a great album. I did feel/hear a very strong HTMAP? vibe when We Rise was released, prior to knowing Attie was producing it and it was all I needed basically. Beautiful Distortion does not bring anything innovative, but after all these years I don't even expect them to; what I do expect and I believe BD did deliver was a wonderful sonic play, well-equilibrated layering of sounds and a dense and profound atmosphere. And with every listen, I love the album more and each and every time I find bits and pieces which take me back to HTMP/ITE/Souveniers/Home era. Silje nailed it, she is just perfect for the band's sound and for me, this album paints a wide array of emotions and it's ethereal and rock-solid at the same time.
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You think darkness is your ally? You merely adopted the dark. I was born in it. Molded by it. I didn't see the light until I was a man. But it was nothing to me but blinding.
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