1. Abruptum
- De Profundis Mors Vas Cousumet. This was interesting although built from simple elements, a slow dark song staggering power chords against one another in violent escalation. Some background keyboards, wisps of sound curling around notes and chords. Raw frontal production.2. Mayhem - The Freezing Moon (taken from CBR compilation). Holy shit, it's a Mayhem track with Dead singing and Euronymous playing exactly as he's played this song on every live recording of this band I've heard. Still, this has wide production that captures bass, vocals and guitar chords very well but drops the lead guitar track into obscure lossy recording.
3. Dissection - Where Dead Angels Lie (taken from W.A.R. compilation). Classic Dissection in the style of their first album, with a competent and strict death metal band playing Iron Maiden style melodic rock in black metal tempos with an appetite for rhythmically violent vocal tracks and eclectic lead guitars. Beautiful synchronized melodies and intricate structures highlight a song that otherwise serves as rhythmic background for the delivery of a story-cadenced vocal.
1. Abruptum - De Profundis Mors Vas Cousumet
2. Mayhem - The Freezing Moon
3. Dissection - Where Dead Angels Lie
4. Emperor - Moon Over Kara-Shehr
5. Mysticum - Kingdom Comes
6. Marduk - Untrodden Paths (Wolves Pt. II)
7. Thorns - Aerie Descends
8. Mayhem - Pagan Fears
9. Dissection - Elizabeth Bathori
10. Ophthalamia - Deathcrush
11. Enslaved - Loke
12. Arcturus - Rodt og Svart
13. Mysticum - In Your Grave
14. Emperor - The Ancient Queen
15. Mortiis - Unreleased Outro
Length:
4. Emperor - Moon Over Kara-Shehr (rehearsal track). Garage background guitar distorted to ambient depths of confusion, with what sounds like sped up or machined drums underneath. I have no idea if there's any bass but the vocals sprawl and mewl as they did on the demo. The melodic foundation to the epic feel of “In the Nightside Eclipse” extends itself here to find more respite from sense in the speed thrills of overlaid melodies. The first riff of this song sawhorses between two chords while moving a second melody between them, with interweaving strum speeds contemplating the containership relationship of both speed and tone. Luckily this song diverges into several variations of this idea broken up with almost punk rhythms and grand declarative interruptions. This song comes from the “Wrath of the Tyrant” demo and bears the sound and complexity of that release, augmented with some new knowledge and some over-the-riff playing that's indiscernible on this recording. Patterns here are not evolved, and seem to be holding space and dominant rhythm while waiting for evolution, but there’s some amazing potential here.
5. Mysticum
6. Marduk - Untrodden Paths (Wolves Pt. II) (from 'Opus Nocturne'). Not much to say about this except that it's later Marduk: fast simple power chord riffs in mostly linear order with beyond blast speed drumming clattering like a beetle on speed in the mix below. Good sound, good rhythm, relatively interesting tonal composition that keeps my attention for over half the song.
7. Thorns
8. Mayhem - Pagan Fears (rehearsal track). A full band sound as these guys fall into rhythm with one another but it has lost the savagery and pure flinging anger of Euronymous’ crosscutting lead guitar. Much more competent than the old Mayhem but unused to these elements of composition and the corresponding technique. Sound is clear but fogged with acoustical distance flattened by simple recording. New vocals are trying too hard and end up extruded screams like knives slicing old metal; that is about the metaphor I would use, perhaps, some other aspect of this tune revealed by this different approach that leaves it refrigerated, sterile, distant.
9. Dissection - Elizabeth Bathori (taken from W.A.R. compilation). Operatic vaudeville comedy in this sort of predictable but fast and gratifying song, in many ways like the powerful declarations of oldstyle metal a la Judas Priest in its choice of main riff. Sort of cheesy keyboards poison parts of this with a doorbell tinkle and shine. Although the main riff is cool connecting parts of this song are rudimentary power chord standoffish stilts of compositional support, so I rate it slightly lower than the more elaborate pieces from the albums.
10. Ophthalamia
11. Enslaved - Loke (taken from 'Frost'). Enslaved provide some of the most technically aware fast black metal, building epic masterpieces from a few wiley riffs improvised from chaos. Fast percussion nails every part of these guitar shadows into a space, and in that space the harmonies expand to give that place context in a song of simple aggression, wanderlust, or power.
12. Arcturus
13. Mysticum - In Your Grave. The insane machine drumming, especially the 600 BPM highhat, direct this as a message of importance into your mind but it is really a few simple chords in a sequence of racing phrases and blasting beats interspersed with structural pieces and crusing rock n roll rhythms. This isn't a bad track, and has nailed the rhythmic components of its overall architecture but should perhaps refine riffs, add more tonal variation, and incorporate more guitar complexity. Vocals screech, bass is audible, but guitars are a wash behind the keyboards and the spiking deviations of vocal distortion.
14. Emperor - The Ancient Queen (taken from 7" EP). Classic Emperor low-fi sound and one of their simpler, earlier songs. Like some abstract death metal this reaches toward melody but mostly develops a suspenseful, entrancing, architectural sense of rhythm.
15. Mortiis