Yesterday’s round-up was a big one. So is this one — and it’s still not big enough to cover everything worth mentioning that I saw and heard yesterday. But it will have to do. Here we go…
ALBEZ DUZ
Albez Duz are a two-man German band whose name apparently consists of two words in a Germanic language used 800 years ago, with “Albez” meaning “swan” and “Duz” meaning “noisiness”, or “rush”. It is the side project of Impurus (aka Eugen H.), the drummer of the long-running German band Dies Ater.
At the time of their 2009 self-titled debut album, which drew comparisons to the early work of Paradise Lost, Tiamat, and My Dying Bride, the band’s vocalist was Lars Kaeding. Kaeding died in 2011, and was replaced early this year by Alfonso Brito Lopez (aka “Grifonso“). With this new line-up, Albez Duz have recorded a new album, The Coming of Mictlan, which will be released by Germany’s Iron Bonehead label later this year. Its fascinating cover is above.
Yesterday Iron Bonehead began streaming a song from the new album named “Mictlan”, and it’s very impressive.
The opening of the song is a slow, craggy monolith of doom riffs and striking vocals, which range from high, clean psychedelic wails to cavernously deep growls. The song eventually picks up the pace in a crash of grinding guitars, with chugging chords and a searing solo in the foreground, and echoing chants in the background. There’s a third section as well, one that becomes even more otherworldly in its occult ambience yet more beautiful in its somber, heartbreaking melody.
Part classic doom, part death/doom, part gothic metal in the Type O Negative vein, the song is a very strong teaser for The Coming of Mictlan. And man, Grifonso has a helluva voice.
https://www.facebook.com/albezduz
MORTALS
Earlier this month we had the pleasure of premiering a full album stream of Cursed to See the Future, the fantastic new album by Brooklyn’s Mortals, which is now out on Relapse Records. Yesterday Metal Injection premiered an official music video for the album’s first track, “View From A Tower”, which is one of my favorites on a consistently strong album.
It was directed by Jason Ferraro and Nadya Wasylko and much of it was filmed inside The Acheron in Brooklyn. It’s well-done and intriguing to watch and it includes a walk-on role by the doomed Michael Dimmitt from Mutilation Rites. The music… kills.
http://mortals.bandcamp.com
https://www.facebook.com/mortalstheband
THRÄNENKIND
Germany’s Thränenkind, who I last wrote about when they were on the verge of releasing their 2013 debut album The Elk, are back with a new two-song 7″ EP on Lifeforce Records entitled Hope(less). It was released on July 18 and is now also available on iTunes. What I saw yesterday was an official video for one of the two tracks on Hope(less) — a song called “April”.
I’m really digging “April”, even though spring is not in the air of the music. It’s a dark, bruising, mid-paced blend of scarring, hardcore vocals and post-metal instrumental melodies, with a rippling tremolo lead that’s like an electric current flashing through the weight of all this sorrow. Gripping stuff.
https://www.facebook.com/Thraenenkind
http://thraenenkind.bandcamp.com/album/hope-less
KHTHONIIK CERVIIKS
Here we have one more German band and one more album coming from Iron Bonehead, which happens to feature an eminently recognizable piece of artwork by the late great Zdzisław Beksiński. This time the band is a three-piece named Khthoniik Cerviiks, and no, I don’t know how to pronounce that. The album’s name is Heptaedrone, and I don’t know how to pronounce that either. But it doesn’t matter, because the music I’ve heard so far is really, really good. The label is putting this band in the same class as Bölzer and Cult of Fire — “thinking man’s savagery” — and that’s not hyperbole (I do know how to pronounce that).
Yesterday CVLT Nation premiered “The Grand Sidereal Swindle”, which follows by about two weeks the streaming premiere of an earlier track, “Magmatiik Moil”. I’m going to be writing about this album in detail at a later date, so for now all I’ll say is LISTEN!
Heptaedrone will be released on August 15. I haven’t located a Facebook page for the band.
P.S. Upon further reflection, I’m guessing that the band’s name is a variant spelling of the words “chthonic” and “cervix”, especially after learning that “chthonic” (which means subterranean) is from the Greek word khthon, a word for “earth”. Per The Font of All Human Knowledge, khthon “typically refers to the interior of the soil, rather than the living surface of the land (as Gaia or Ge does) or the land as territory (as khora (χώρα) does). It evokes at once abundance and the grave.”
HIDEOUS DIVINITY
The last time we wrote about Rome’s Hideous Divinity was when our guest Ted O’Neill (guitarist of Oblivion) reviewed the band’s last album, Obeisance Rising, in October 2012. That was a killer of a death metal juggernaut, and we’ve been eagerly awaiting the band’s next full-length, Cobra Verde, which will be released this fall by Unique Leader Records. I understand that the release date, cover art, and track list will be revealed next week, but for now we have a sneak peak at the music courtesy of a video the band posted yesterday. It shows Hideous Divinity drummer Giulio Galati recording drums at Stefano Morabito’s 16th Cellar Studio in Rome.
Fasten your seatbelts. The oxygen masks will be dropping from the ceiling momentarily.
https://www.facebook.com/hideousdivinity
Khthoniik Cerviiks to sound like Bolzer? Well I have yet to be steered wrong by Iron Bonehead so I will have to give it the time of day. I will however have to wait for that pronunciation or else I can’t tell somebody about it unless it is in print. I will have to write it on a piece of paper like it is some great secret for the time being.
Still not positive about how to pronounce it, but here’s my guess: I’m guessing that these are variant spellings of “chthonic” and “cervix”. From Wikipedia about the first word: “Chthonic (/ˈθɒnɪk/ or /ˈkθɒnɪk/, from Greek χθόνιος khthonios, “in, under, or beneath the earth”, from χθών khthōn “earth”), apart from its literal translation meaning ‘subterranean’, its historical or interpretive definition designates, or pertains to, deities or spirits of the underworld, especially in relation to Greek religion. The Greek word khthon is one of several for “earth”; it typically refers to the interior of the soil, rather than the living surface of the land (as Gaia or Ge does) or the land as territory (as khora (χώρα) does). It evokes at once abundance and the grave.”
Thanks for the hint to Albez Duz.
They are streaming both of their albums on bandcamp:
http://albez-duz.bandcamp.com/
Awesome find! Thank you!
Dammit, I still need to listen to that Mortals record.
Khthoniik Cerviiks sounds pretty cool
It’s ugly, in a beautiful kind of ugly way. 🙂