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Wednesday, June 21st, 2017

    Time Event
    6:41p
    REVIEW: Arckanum – Fenriz Kindir (2013, Season of Mist)



    There are quite a few reviews of this album in the ‘net, mostly
    thanks to the efforts of Season of Mist, who became one of the
    major distributors of sort-of-extreme music in Europe, especially
    their “underground activists” series, which (presumably) were
    designed to provide exposure to a lesser known but promising acts.
    The purpose thus declared is dubious, as SUA roster includes the
    entire discography of Drudkh and back-catalog of Ildjarn, the
    latter hardly being an activist by the time reissues hit stores
    in 2013. Still, the roster is as impressive as it could be for a
    label of this caliber, so Shamatae is in good company. Besides,
    the long history of project and its place on periphery of public
    attention suit the bill perfectly and the company’s mission in this
    case worked precisely as (presumably) declared.

    Arckanum emerged in early 90s, and by the time the first album was
    released, it had all chances to become one of the country’s staples
    in BM scene. Being produced in Abyss Studio catapulted many releases
    into “kult” status, but Shamatae apparently chose a different path.
    Two follow-up albums veered away from the hip path into a more wooded
    area, and the latter of the two, “Kampen”, received mixed responses
    because of overly shamanistic nature and botched production by
    Necropolis Records who went under soon afterwards. Was it an attempt
    at commercial suicide or desire to do a right thing instead of
    necessary one, I don’t know, but Shamatae apparently succeeded in both,
    spending next decade in musical hiatus writing books on chaos-gnosticism.

    In more recent history, Shamatae did revise his approach to making
    harsh music, but one of his earlier traits so far remains unaltered,
    as he never released two albums that sounded alike, despite some
    fleeting technical similarities here in there. Starting from "Antikosmos",
    he played with the idea of melody and its part in his sonic excursions,
    from almost Gotheborgish “ÞÞÞÞÞÞÞÞÞÞÞ” with solid upfront catchy
    tunes, to more abrasive crunch with occasional flashbacks of NWOBHM or
    even power metal on two subsequent releases until he seemed to have
    ditched the idea entirely on the present album. He even managed to
    record two tracks based on violin which sound utterly un-melodic,
    well, at least outside of Dimmu Borgir casus. From conceptual point
    of view it all makes sense. “Fenris Kindir” is dedicated to Fenrir,
    a giant wolf, son of Loki, who, among other things, ate Odin during
    Ragnarok. Honestly, do you really expect such a saga to contain anything
    resembling a tune? Instead, technically, we have fishbone stark and
    mean bass lines, occasionally reminding of Lemmy in the latter’s glory
    days (except Lemmy never sounded this vicious), with grinding guitar
    work attached to it. This borderline crossover-meets-black metal
    alternates with dark ambient/noise passages and already mentioned
    string excursions which provide breathing room, create dynamics and
    serve as a counterpoint to grimmer parts of the album which also
    feature menacing vocals of Shamatae; not singing, but rather storytelling.
    That’s what the albums actually does, it tells a story, and is being
    quite consistent and cohesive doing it. Within Arckanum’s discography,
    there is no album like it, with possible exception of misty and woody
    "Kampen", except now something really came out of these woods. It stands
    out perhaps within more or less recent developments of the scene for
    at least two reasons. First, as I already mention, it is a rare example
    of well-conceived and delivered conceptual album that has always been
    uncommon within rawer wing of black metal. Second, it serves as a perfect,
    near-textbook example of Dimmu Borgir casus in post-Ildjarn world,
    illustrating the possibility of creating sonic aesthetics built on
    entirely different principles than music as widely perceived and
    accepted, without resorting to complete deconstruction of its fabric.

    You can form your own opinion of this album here.

    Current Music: Arckanum - Fenris Kindir

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