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Friday, January 13th, 2017

    Time Event
    10:31p
    REVIEW: Grift – “Syner” (2015, Nordvis)




    Had I run across this album a decade ago, it would now
    definitely qualify for an entry in the Geezer’s Chest
    series
    . However, being a quite recent release from this
    project from Sweden, it only triggers a rant and some
    unfocused rambling about things vaguely associated with
    the genre of depressive black metal which this album
    poses as.

    My interest in numerous strains of black metal in my
    college days was, among other things, propelled by
    firsthand experience of rather crappy Midwestern winters.
    In a typical one, there was not enough snow to get
    indulged in outdoor activities but enough to cause nuisance
    on roads, and it was a bit too cold to enjoy overall.
    Occasionally, the sight would briefly turn epic at sunset
    and dusk when a large field near a park was covered in
    white studded with sparse dark figures and framed with
    seemingly disordered mass of one and two story buildings
    for rent. I took a strange pleasure in cold emptiness and
    desolation of the scene, but it was missing a soundtrack,
    something that would make the sensory experience complete.
    Having ploughed through many BM releases, I realized that
    it was the sense of detachment and the abstract nature
    of music that would provide the key ingredient. Influences
    of Scandinavian folk would work to a certain extent, as
    its sounds can be quite abstract to an outsider’s ear. The
    problem, however, with the majority of folk metal bands,
    is that they put too much stress on the iconic folk structure
    often dragging the music from the introvert void to a
    renaissance fair.

    For the role, Grift’s “Syner” might seem an unlikely pick.
    Its significant part hardly qualifies as black metal in a
    traditional sense. While most of the elements are definitely
    here, from composition structure to occasional blast beats,
    there is probably an equal amount of post-rock influences.
    The two closest references that come to my mind is early,
    pre-“Swan Road” Drudkh, and “Journey’s End”-era Primordial,
    although Grift is not even as aggressive as Drudkh, and
    somewhat lacks heroics of Primordial. Their approach is
    more rooted in basic rock paradigm, whose texture is used
    as a backdrop for black metal excursions making them stand
    out more effectively. Not least, the singing of Erik Gardefors,
    resonating howling rasp with a subtle sense of melody,
    hovering against the serene, almost psychedelic sonic backdrop,
    rather than being buried in it, evokes that sense of detachment
    that is rather rare in the today’s scene.

    Although the scene definitions place Grift into “depressive
    black metal” category, the term “atmospheric” would be the
    most appropriate and illustrative, as “Syner” doesn’t put
    forward any explicit set of emotions but rather builds a sonic
    structure for listener to reflect upon. This perhaps is
    how Burzum’s Gebrechlichkeit would have sounded if its
    aesthetics was somehow transplanted into post-rock, neo-
    psychedelic, or even space- rock soil and was given a chance
    to develop into full-fledged songs.

    You can form your own opinion about this album here

    Current Music: Drudkh / Grift - Зраджені Сонцем / Hägringar

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