Originally published on www.heroesofnoise.com
If I were to say that I
could write an unbiased and objective review of THE AMENTA's
first album in eight years, I would be lying through gritted teeth.
I've been a fan of their particular brand of industrialised extreme
metal for sixteen years, which for this reviewer is almost exactly
half a lifetime. I've seen them live five times, I've hung out with
members of the band and I've screamed the lyrics to songs like
Erebus, Vermin and Junky more times than I could ever hope to count.
However, rather than gushing about the new kind of beast that
Revelator is I will attempt to give as objective a review as I
can...which is, to say, probably not at all objective.
Unlike their prior
trilogy of albums where noise-scapes and outright musical extremity
created a very tight, uniform atmosphere, Revelator
organically creates huge sonic spaces through superb song writing -
then subsequently fills them with a less dissonant and more coherent
form of noise. Not only is there a tighter focus on melody and groove
in the riffs, vocalist Cain Cressall has elevated himself above
almost every other extreme metal vocalist - combining his sharp
shrieks and powerful screams with haunting passages of clean singing
that perfectly serve the more organic nature of the songwriting on
Revelator. Bassist Dan Quinlan is given more prominence in the
mix, fuelling new layers of rhythm and depth that confer extra weight
to the always-excellent skinwork from Dave Haley.
Above all, Revelator
sounds like an AMENTA album while still being a wholly
innovative artistic venture. Even when the pounding drums and the
pummeling riffs subside and give way to acoustic passages (the outro
of An Epoch Elipsis) and songs (Silent Twin), it is still without a
shadow of a doubt The Amenta creating those sounds. It truly seems
like every potential is fulfilled here, every boundary pushed and
every element given room to grow and form anew.
On tracks like
Psoriastasis and “Overpast it becomes apparent that the song
structures traditionally employed on previous albums by The Amenta
have been subverted and in parts replaced with this familiar yet
wholly experimental new sound. On Overpast that moment comes halfway
through the song when the riffs become equally as percussive as the
drumming. There's a comparison to be made between that passage and
Mick Gordon's work on the Doom Eternal soundtrack, though that
comparison is almost purely coincidental.
Lyrically, Revelator
makes a bold step away from the luridly antisocial commentary present
on previous albums, and towards a more ambiguous message. Cunning
wordplay is front and centre in each song, never muddying the
listener's own interpretation of the lyrics while simultaneously
driving home profound-if-pessimistic truths about the present day.
While Revelator was written over the past eight years it feels
particularly apposite to 2020 and early 2021, where rioting crowds
clambered and we witnessed the seemingly final successions of certain
untied states. The ambiguity in the delivery of these words makes
them timeless in a way that other bands commenting on the perils of
modern times simply cannot achieve.
The truly stand-out
track of the album is unquestionably Twined Towers” an eight-minute
epic infused with an unsettling atmosphere and an unpredictably
emotional kind of energy. It's almost difficult to write about Twined
Towers because of how much of a linchpin it is to the album –
perfectly placed in the middle of four songs on either side, it
fluctuates between full-on sonic attack and a haunting, mid-tempo
extreme metal ballad as if individually highlighting the distinctive
ends of the spectrum of sound showcased as a cohesive whole across
the other eight tracks.
Parse Over, the album's
closing tune, takes a truly surprising turn a minute in – the
guitars start to smoulder and brood, incorporating elements of doom
metal while Cain employs his cleanest vocals yet to whisper and soar
over the darkness. The furious attack begins again, and again it
gives way to the slow, methodical pounding that drives Revelator
to its' conclusion.
In fulfilling so much
of their potential as a band and as artists, The Amenta have
done what few metal bands have done – fundamentally reinvent
themselves while staying true to the core of their music. The timing
of the release of the three singles (Sere Money, An Epoch Ellipsis
and Parasight Lost) with two accompanying music videos and a truly
unique social media marketing campaign raised the hype for Revelator
to incredible levels, and for good reason – the album delivers on
its promises so completely that it puts other records to shame. This
is undoubtedly The Amenta's Magnum Opus, and a bold challenge
to every other extreme metal band to explore new sonic territories
and continue to grow as artists. What lies in the future of the band
remains to be seen, but there is clearly still ground to break and
experiments in metal and noise to undertake.