Thursday, December 31, 2020

Arthalos' Best Albums of the Year [2020]



All things considered, with the the entire world warped in the Covid-19 pandemic chaos, this was a fruitful year for metal music, but then again it always somehow is. In the end, the leading theme, by an enormous margin, was traditional speed/heavy/doom and classic hard rock. Even though bands with a retro style commemorating the late the 70s and 80s have always drawn me in, this year was a particularly veritable cornucopia of such releases, as represented by my top 20 picks, and many other good albums spilled over into my top 50. Old school won the day. Indeed, in my top 10 alone I have 6-7 releases that can instantaneously trace their lineage back to the sounds of disco and Cold War mania. The Chronus sophomore might be a slight outsider among that motley crew of releases, since they have a much more updated take on trad metal, with quite a few nods to their more infamous countrymen Ghost, but regardless, it was a stellar late entrant into my list. I think I consumed a larger and broader quantity of music this year than the 2-3 years before (although I have no way of accounting for it) though surprisingly this hasn't necessarily enlarged the variety of genres and styles that are always represented to some degree in my picks. 

If anything, this was a rather dull year for innovative, experimental, idiosyncratic metal music in general. Strange and avantgarde acts like Imperial Triumphant, Ulcerate, Old Man Gloom, Mountaineer - bands who gained considerable attention both in the mainstream and in underground circles - failed to impress me, and mostly exhibited a further marriage of metal and post-hardcore elements as the new frontier for envelope-pushing within the genre. That statement obviously excludes Eden in Reverse though, a dizzying exercise in kraut, space rock, black metal and alien shrooms. Perhaps not my favorite by the Greek mavericks - that would have been a tall order - but certainly an apt contender for the soundtrack for 2001: A Space Odyssey.

I probably browsed more RYM lists than any previous year, and hopefully I was able to at least touch upon the bulk of releases that represented their respective sub-genres. Death and black metal acts (as well as black/death hybrids) seemed to dominate extreme metal enthusiasts' lists, and this is certainly well-earned. There was an enormous quality of solid black and death, though in the end there were only a few that were particularly remarkable for me. UK veterans Anaal Nathrakh and Napalm Death continue to annihilate and terrify with their distinct, by now well-matured panoplies of brutalizing grindcore and industrialized malice, respectively. Meanwhile totally new bands like Ossaert and Serment made lasting impressions with enveloping, icy atmospheric black records. Heavy/doom is well-represented, with LuciferSpirit Adrift and Pallbearer blazing trails for a newer, more melodic generation. The Hallas record isn't strictly speaking metal, so it could go into either of my lists below, but it was not only a natural refinement of their debut, but also a fantastic journey across the cosmos with a medley of haunting, psychedelic, synth-driven soundscapes that sounded like the lovechild of Hawkwind and Gentle Giant. Finally, the Bütcher record stands out as the most outlandish of the bunch, but it's retained its delicious speed and manic intensity throughout the year, and deserves a spot on the top 5. 

When push came to shove, though, I think there was only one record that shone through and came the closest to perfection in 2020. The Sölicitör debut was just that, a sublime and unreal merger of equal parts Holy Moses, Vicious Rumors, and Exciter with a fittingly dilapidated production to boast. What an amazing record, channeling everything I love about all those bands at their respective career peaks and more, an absolute ass-kicker from start to finish. No other record this year - and, indeed, few records in the few years - made me want to strap on spikes and leather and cascade the empty streets of my city more. And it's the band's debut? Insane.

Edit 01/2021: Added Ulthar's Providence and Valdrin's Effigy of Nightmares, pushed back the Necrophobic album. 

Edit 07/22: Pushed back the High Spirits record, added the Night record. Edit 04/24: Added Protest the Hero, pushed back Kvaen.

As always, YouTube links have been embedded below.

I've also made a longer list of my favorite 50-60 metal albums of 2020, in non-hierarchical, order over at RYM.


** Top 20 Metal Albums **

Runners-up: TIE Eternal Champion (US) – Ravening Iron  | Pallbearer (US) – Forgotten Days
20. 
Hail Spirit Noir (Gr) – Eden in Reverse
19Anaal Nathrakh (UK) – Endarkenment
18. Vader (Pol) – Solitude in Madness
17. Ossaert (Nl) – Bedehuis
16. Armored Saint (US) – Punching the Sky 
15. Ulthar (US) – Providence 
14. Serment (Ca) – Chante, ô flamme de la liberté 
13. Napalm Death (UK) – Throes of Joy in the Jaws of Defeatism 
12. Valdrin (US) – Effigy of Nightmares
11. Midnight (US) – Rebirth by Blasphemy
10. Cirith Ungol (US) – Forever Black 
09. Night (Se) – High Tides - Distant Skies
08. Enslaved (No) – Utgard
07. Hällas (Swe) – Conundrum
06. Lucifer (Int) – Lucifer III
05. Chronus (Swe) – Idols
04. Bütcher (Be) – 666 Goats Carry My Chariot
03. Spirit Adrift (US)  Enlightened in Eternity
02. Protest the Hero (Ca) Palimpsest
01. Sölicitör (US) – Spectral Devastation 


For my non-metal picks, I tried to be a bit more structured this year. I think there was enough interesting material across a swath of genres for me to eke out a top 15. A lot of these albums found their ways into my ears in the last 3-4 months of 2020, and indeed they were quite refreshing to hear after dozens of static black/death metal spelunking. There's a metric ton of 80s-inspired synthpop there, which is what  I suppose my interests lie towards when I'm on the look for something moodier. The production standards on some of those records were insanely gratifying. Other artists (Dool, Ulver, Myrkur) received widespread attention in metal circles due to their associations with the scene, despite, in a lot of cases, having completely evolved from their metallic origins (I'm looking at you, Bergtatt). Never a bad thing. Besides the synthpop frenzy, an eccentric bevy of electronic, pop and rock releases round out the bulk of the list. Honorable mentions include Korine's The Night We Raise and Squarepusher's Be Up a Hello


 *Top 15 Non-metal Albums*

15. Jessie Ware (UK) – What's Your Pleasure? (pop)
14. 
Rian Treanor (UK) – File Under UK Metaplasm (electronic)
13. Myrkur (Dn) – Folkesange (neofolk) 
12. Dool (Nl) – Summerland (occult rock)
11. Riki (US) – Riki (synthpop) 
10. Ulver (Nr) – Flowers of Evil (synthpop) 
09. Everything Everything (UK) – Re-Animator (art pop)
08. Blaqk Audio (US) – Beneath the Black Palms (synthpop)
07. Black Nail Cabaret (Hu) – Gods Verging on Sanity (synthpop)
06. The Birthday Massacre (Ca) – Diamonds (synthpop)
05. Wailin Storms (US) – Rattle (doom rock)
04. Ludwig Göransson (Swe) – Tenet: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
03. Molchat Doma (By) – Monument | Монумент (post-punk/darkwave)
02. Phantogram (US) – Ceremony (electronic)
01. Assemblage 23 (US) – Mourn (electronic/industrial)


Wednesday, April 8, 2020

Arthalos' Best Albums of the Year [2012]



This was a pretty varied year, and I'm happy to say both records from bands that have achieved cult status by now and some more mainstream selections are distributed fairly equally. This was the year I started the blog, so naturally I started delving really deep into underground territory, and there are also plenty of great demos and EPs from this all across doom, death, black, sludge and traditional metal that shouldn't go unnoticed by obscurantists. The Sigh album was the first album I heard by them, a seemingly rudderless panoply of metallic oddities strewn together in one of the catchiest patchworks the band has ever made, probably my favorite by them after the flawless Imaginary Soniscape. A lot of  great retro death metal as well, and a longer list would have had even more to show in that regard. Clearly, though, the Necrovation sophomore ranks the most engrossing in that department, a blistering, almost beautiful, at times melodic ode everything you love about old school death metal, finessed to just the pitch where everything feels familiar but still pulsating and fresh. Bands like Dawnbringer, Anthem, and Pharaoh represent a solid heavy/power balustrade, a sign that while traditional heavy and power metal are not as prominent as they were in the 80s, many bands, old and new, are still keeping the style in the present. Some later additions include Carved into Stone, Kentucky and Eremita, all by artists which I came to enjoy in later years, and I'm glad to say they all pop more often in my yearly favorites once I started to weed through their discographies.


**Top 20 Metal Albums of 2012**


20 HeXen (US) – Being and Nothingness
19 Gojira (France) – L’enfant Sauvage
18 Spawn of Possession (Sweden) – Incurso
17 Panopticon (US) – Kentucky
16 Burning Shadows (US) – Gather, Darkness! 
15 Hail Spirit Noir (Greece) – Pneuma
14 Altar of Oblivion (Denmark) – Grand Gesture of Defiance
13 Horrendous (US) – The Chills
12 Hooded Menace (Finland) – Effigies of Evil
11 Prong (US) – Carved Into Stone
10 Anhedonist (US) – Netherwards
09 Ihsahn (Norway) – Eremita 
08 Pharaoh (US) – Bury the Light
07 Dawnbringer (US) – Into the Lair of the Sun God 
06 Necrovation (US) – Necrovation
05 Trial (Sweden) – The Primordial Temple
04 Tiamat (Sweden) – The Scarred People
03 Anthem (Japan) – Burning Oath
02 Enslaved (Norway) – RIITIIR
01 Sigh (Japan) – In Somniphobia

Honorable mentions

Charon (Germany) – Sulphur Seraph
Nekromantheon (Norway) – Rise, Vulcan Spectre
Chaos Inception (US) – The Abrogation
Bauda (Chile) – Euphoria… of Flesh, Men and the Great Escape
Yurei (Norway) – Night Vision
Draumar (Germany) – Gebirge (EP)
Black Table (US) – Sentinel (EP)


Saturday, January 4, 2020

Arthalos' Best Albums of the Year [2019]



In the final product, I'm happy to say most of the major genres receive some form of exposure and representation on this list. A reflection, as with most years, of the diversity and excellence that different artists can channel across different metal-isms. Death metal gets minimal representation on this list (though the Coffin Rot debut very nearly made the cut) but that doesn't mean there was a shortage of gruesome, choppy material hailing from both Europe and the States. My preferences naturally tilt towards the old school, so the Inferi record feels a bit disjointed within the mix, not least when it was considered among the 'poppiest' death metal albums of the year. Frankly, it was a great exercise in memorable melodic/technical death metal, and somehow made the double snarl/growl vocal formula work. Dreadlord, on the other hand, was easily the Dutchmen's best effort to date, a brutal, scathing panoply of riffs and morose Dissection-esque throngs of melody that cemented it as one of the best the genre had to offer this year, period.

But the broader story here is doom metal and prog. All of Crypt Sermon, Capilla Ardiente, Spirit Adrift and Green Lung delivered bouts of crushing, hazy, epic excellence that should hold a candle to some of the genre's forebears of the 80s and 90s. There were also a handful of solid releases that didn't make the cut to the top but which nonetheless fueled several hours' worth of headbanging back at the pad. Some of my favorite artists on earth like Arch/Matheos and Opeth made career apexes, and the Scandinavian express a la Borknagar and Soilwork was not too shabby either, displaying forth a committed continuation into their renewed artistic paths.

Besides these, there was a swarm of black metal records that proved Guillermo del Toro's aphorism that evil always gestates; but never disappears. While albums like Ilmestysket remained as unfazed monuments to the winter solitude bands like Darkthrone have been conjuring up since time immemorial, Par le sang versé, for instance, uprooted the traditional aesthetics of the genre and embedded it into a seemingly archaic palette, woven together through an impeccable assemblage of melodious tremolos. It was pretty gratifying to be reassured that black metal in 2019 is still the genre stylistically the most mercurial while quality-wise the most consistent.

My last 5 or so picks are somewhat interchangeable, since they were all absorbing, if not wholly bordering on perfection. More generally, however, although there were quite a few enjoyable (and sometimes surprising) releases, the lion's share of extreme metal that reached my ears tended to be rather dull and generic. This is not a novel trend, and it's perhaps a product of the metric shit ton of records that found their way to my iPod. For a more comprehensive list with individual commentaries on each album, please refer to the RYM list I curate annually. I've downsized my list to 50 choices this year to lock on the quality. Compulsive listening remains the key criteria.

YouTube links to the albums embedded below.

Update (January 2021): Added Bethlehem, Vargrav and Mo'ynoq, pushed back the Vulture, Tanith and Gardghastr records. 


**Top 20 Metal Albums **


20. Inferi [US] - End of an Era | Rebirth
08. Deathspell Omega [France] - The Furnaces of Palinganesia 
07. Idle Hands [US] - Mana
06. Soilwork [Sweden] - Verkligheten 
05. Borknagar [Norway] - True North
04. Spirit Adrift [US] - Divided by Darkness
03. Arch/Matheos [US] - Winter Ethereal
02. Crypt Sermon [US] - Ruins of Fading Light
01. Opeth [Sweden] - In Caudia Venenum



Non-metal albums


I had a pretty limited exposure to non-metal releases from 2019, since most of time was spent spelunking in metallic excess. So if I were to write up a list of non-metal stuff I enjoyed, in no particular order, it would be fairly concise...

Blanck Mass [UK] - Animated Violence Mild (Electronic)
Boy Harsher [US] - Careful (Synthpop)
Brutus [Belgium] - Nest (Post-Hardcore)
Chelsea Wolfe [US] - Birth of Violence (Neofolk)
Demon Head  [Denmark] - Hellfire Ocean Void (Goth Rock)
Diplodocus [Finland] - Slow & Heavy (Dungeon Synth)
Mega Drive [US]- 199XAD (Synthwave)
Moth Tower [Denmark] - Clavitasian Threshold (Dungeon Synth)
Power Glove [Australia] - Playback (Synthwave)
Ringo Sheena [Japan] - Sandukoshi (J-Pop/Art Pop)
The Black Wizards [Portugal] - Reflections (Stoner/Blues Rock)
TR/ST [Canada] - The Destroyer I (Synthpop)