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Mystikk Og Mørke

Norway Country of Origin: Norway

Mystikk Og Mørke
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Type: EP
Release Date: September 22nd, 2023
Genre: Death, Doom, Electronic, Industrial, Orchestral, Progressive, Sludge
2. Abyssal Hade
3. Path To Ruin
1. Steinens Mørke Søvn
2. Dans I Den Visnende Skogen
3. Sorgens Hymne
4. Kongen Begravd I Fjellet
5. Jord Røtter Blod
6. Nattestormer
1. Lex Vermitronis
2. Ectoprocta Krystos
3. Set Ancylostoma
1. Carpathian Forest
4. Diabolus Hookworm
2. The Pale Mist Hovers Towards The Nightly Shores
5. Priapulan Draconis
3. The Eclipse / The Raven
6. Gnathostomulid Papavermo
4. When Thousand Moons Have Circled
7. Vermus Kryst
5. Journey Through The Cold Moors Of Svarttjern
8. Vermoid Arachnoid
9. Jumbomegadrile
10. Vermageddon


Review by Alex on December 12, 2019.

Heavily influenced by Profanatica and Archgoat; Goatblood, propelled by the German duo of Reverend Slayer and Satanic Death Vulva, release their third full length bestial attack under the guide of Dunkelheit Produktionen. They've been around for a while now, since 2013 to be exact and I remember hearing their second album Veneration of Armageddon in 2016 that while good, was to an extent overlooked by a scene already swamped in savage excrementia from both pioneering and freshly cut bands.

If you're more than just familiar with the genre this kind of thing can get tiring, but for someone tip-toeing the border between extreme and commercial metal, its fair enough to understand they would be attracted regardless of how unchanging the methodology may be. The music here is as I would expect, primal drumming, great guttural vocals and riffs to fill the plate of the average black/death listener. Those are all great to have in the arsenal, but 45 minutes is much too long for something this abrasive and structurally unmodified. 30 minutes would have been ideal for Apparition of Doomsday given there's not much occurring within the department of variety. I take because it’s been 3 years since the last full-length record, Goatblood saw it necessary to take this step in their catalog, and tack on 15 more minutes of material as a bonus perhaps.

From 'Goat Order' through 'Flood of Roaches' you'll get bestial, dark and untamed recordings put together proficiently; the rage velocity is high, and the songs make compelling impact, enough to produce headbanging for quite a while. The variation here isn't much but there is by way of doom metal transitions and sudden mid-tempo blasting. The first 9 tracks are the best of the total album, but the latter songs fall a bit short in memorability, they rarely try in offering anything different as they follow the standard path of war metal basics.

However then former side of Apparition of Doomsday carried the load of the work given 'Goat Order', 'Beach of the Dead', 'Exclusion Prevails', 'Flood of Roaches' and 'Ram of Nazareth' are such killer tracks. The thing is Goatblood don't dwell too much on technical this or variety that, they could not give a fuck-less, rather they insist a continuous hostility supplementing new levels of intensity, hence I think it's here they truly make their weaponized talents known. Yes, the guitars could have been used more to encourage replayability than what is already existent, but nothing can be taken away from Goatblood as far as erecting that war metal sound we all hold dear. The samples prelude to 'Beach of the Dead', 'Flood of Roaches', 'Ram of Nazareth' and so forth add a minatory sense to the tunes, that in conjunction with the production helps the impact of the recordings on Apparitions of Doomsday.

What I perceive as excess others may take as necessity to their thirst for such material. Fair enough, but if you're serious about standing out in this already overcrowded war metal territory, you'll need to go a bit further than the archetypal approach. Nonetheless, Apparition of Doomsday is a passionate offering of foulest visions in musical form untouched and unbent by subordination.

Rating: 8 out of 10

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Review by Arek on December 21, 2021.

Scald is a Northern Irish band that I learned about thanks to my correspondence with Maciek. I will not hide that I am a longtime fan of his work from the times of Sirrah and TMT, and the work of qip resulted in a closer acquaintance. Coming back to the Regius I, which is the culprit of this review, Scald at the turn of 2020 and 2021 is the result of Maciek's ideas initiated by cooperation with Scald, but with a note of qip creativity. The album consists of 10 quite panoramic pieces leading the listener through the world created from the tightly twisted visions of the creators. I do not dare to explicitly indicate the musical genre Scald is currently in. It is definitely heavily based on metal, rock, industrial and death / doom progression.

Communing with the new face of Scald gives me great pleasure. It is like a feast with the works of Rudolf Giger, Beksiński or their film representations. However, it is extremely difficult to describe the nature of this album in words. It is very dependent on the listener's psyche and the vision it will evoke. Maciek has a great ability to create picture-making music, and his growls force rot even into the most beautifully flowering meadows. This is also the case here, when we hear seemingly gentle melodies, his voice and the dirty-dark mood of the album do not give hope for something divine. Musically, the album is firmly set south of heaven. Maybe we will not feel hell fires here, but their stench and what can crawl out of there, yes. The new face of Scald, although strongly rooted in the death / doom, so often sneaks into various other regions that putting a label on this album as well as this sub-genre would be a lie. Apart from Maciek's growls, we will hear various vocalizations of Pet. In addition to dense slow sections, we will encounter almost grind cannonades. In addition to typical metal guitars, we will hear electronic samples straight from rock and pop-electronic worlds. So, are you ready for this ambiguous musical play? For the timid or Orthodox - I do not recommend it. I recommend it to everyone else though, because this slightly stinking journey may turn out to be completely different than the one I experienced.

Looped in a multiplied adventure with over an hour's repertoire of Regius I must say that although I devote myself with great pleasure to this dark musical fairy tale, I am aware that the path taken by Scald will not bring them crowds of fans. However, looking at the whole story of this band, it was probably never their goal. I appreciate them for that. Despite the lack of mass applause, they still find the strength to resurrect and present their sick visions of this worm-infested world to their listeners. I do not want to press Regius I onto anyone like a marketing peddler, but if you want to travel through the dark corners of this sick and twisted post-apocalyptic world - I invite you. I myself will be waiting for the next installments of this trilogy.

Rating: 9.2 out of 10

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