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Spectral Thorns of Misfortune

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Release date: 2006 Label: Skull Productions Format: Cassette Catalog ID: SKULL00011 
Band members
Tarannis Everything
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  1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=emj-y8v3YJ8
If you, reader, are familiar with the Pela Gloria compilation, you might consider skipping Portugal’s Black Metal scene entirely. Why? Not only is the conception behind this release rather obscure, but the offered ‘art’ smells rather like rehearsal room than anything serious. Not all offered band on this split-album suck, but the overall quality is on an astounding low level and might shed a devastating glimpse on the ‘local’ scene; would it be representative in any way. Luckily there are also some talented Black Metal bands in Portugal and one of them is Acceptus Noctifer. Their first demo already woke some interest in the underground, but as I do not know it, I am simply unable to draw the line between them. Accordingly will this review only shed light on this demo and how the writer perceives it; yet there might be some chances that with some further knowledge on the progression and history of this band, a re-writing or small changes might be added in the future. What makes the art of Acceptus Noctifer enjoyable is the style in which they interpret Black Metal. The combination of fast played riffs, lead-guitar elements and catchiness are surely aspects worthy to be emphasized. It is somehow astounding in which way and how easy it can be to perform such an extreme from of music. A song possesses a great amount of atmosphere and offers a great variety of riffs and arrangements, which the band plays as if they still have dozens and dozens at their disposal. Also does the band avoid following the Darkthrone respectively Burzum scheme, but tries rather to create something unique and out of the common; a clearly reference to this is the Arabic ‘intro’ to the Ashes of Ancient Babylon track. By listening to the demo it creates in the mind the feeling of a band who knows what they want and how the song shall progress and evolve. Dullness or plainness, two aspects a lot of bands have to deal with, appear only on a small scale. It is appropriate to describe the music of Acceptus Noctifer as a raw style of Black Metal, which consists of two guitars and a bass, whose part was mixed in the background, but is still recognizable. Even though the production is merely adequate, the drums are a little bit too much in the foreground and so are the guitars, the harsh sound of the strings fits quite well to the music; there is of course the resemblance to early Darkthrone and it is hardly possible to avoid it. The coldness which is transported through the guitars has a positive effect on the music and a clean and polished sound would take away a good deal of the atmosphere. Furthermore would an increase of complexity in the motives and how the songs have been written would lead to an evolution away from the current situation of the bands towards something utterly new. The riffs are not simple or minimalist, but the impression is gained through the amount of tremolo-pricking used by one of the guitars. Most of the music is on upper midtempo with some short switches towards slower regions. Somehow it is also aggressive and has a lot of power in it. As the music consists of a great deal of variation of motives and ideas, the band is able to keep the atmosphere on a high level and the only calm moments on this demo are the intros which open several songs respectively the song Interlude; which is not metal at all but some strange sort of ambient. This demo is quite good and it is hardly possible to grow tired of listening to it. How large is the gap in quality between some young bands, which throw out release after release, and this one is immense. Catchy riffs, well written and arranged songs are offered on Spectral Thorns of Misfortune. The perhaps only real ‘flaw’ is the lack of a drummer. Would the band be able to replace the monotonous pondering of the drums with something better and more oriented on the riffs and motives, this release would really be great. This release is highly recommended. 
Short:

Performance: (raw) black metal with nice guitar leads and arrangements
Production: quite raw and slightly unbalanced; drums too much in the foreground.
Song-writing: pretty good, a lot of variation in the guitar motives.
Positive: catchy songs, atmosphere, no real weak spot.
Negative: the drums; sometimes just a little bit too repetitive in the motives.
Booklet: a really nice cover drawing, hardly any information, no lyrics
Length: about 30 minutes
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Into the Realms of Misantropic Illness and Mighty Lusitanian War Lords

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Release date: 2003 Label: Blitzkrieg Label/Distro Type: Split Format: Cassette Limitation: 200 copies Catalog ID: BLK003
Pro covers & Pro cassette. Hand-numbered.
Band members
Arawn Nisroth Guitars
Tarannis Vocals, Guitars (acoustic), Bass
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Rehearsal Tape 2002

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Acceptus Noctifer
Country of origin: Portugal
Location: Oporto
Formed in: 2002
Genre: Black Metal
Lyrical themes: Misanthropy
Release date: December 25th, 2002 Label: Profanum Records Format: Cassette Limitation: 100 copies Catalog ID: PFNDR TP003
2nd edition limited to 100 copies.
Band members
Arawn Nisroth Guitars
Tarannis Everything
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Accept Death

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Accept Death
Country of origin: United States
Location: Mentor, Ohio
Formed in: 2005
Genre: Sludge Metal
Lyrical themes: Suffering, Death, Hate
Release date: July 10th, 2006 Label: Retribute Records Format: CD Catalog ID: RET 029
12" Vinyl Limited Edition: Hydro-Phonic Records (USA) Cat. # HPR-230. Released in 2010. The Standard Edition on black vinyl limited to 150 copies features a fold-over style cover with a silver foil stamped logo on black wax. The Deluxe Edition on red vinyl limited to 50 copies, includes a CD of the 5 additional early tracks recently unearthed. These tracks have never been released in any format or download. Also look for Turntable Toy No.3 Hypnotic Disc with this deluxe release. The Deluxe Edition cover logo is stamped in Crimson Foil as well. Recorded at Conquistador Studios, April 2006.
Band members
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fot. Corey Bing Drums. Born 1974 in Litchfield, Ohio. When he was 15/16, he used to play in a cover band (Misfits, Metallica, Black Sabbath, etc.) with friends from high school.
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fot. Matthew J. Rositano Bass, Guitars, Vocals. 
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fot. Scott Stearns Guitars. Aliases: Wizard, Wizardfool, Piss Wizard. Scott has also been a member of Die Hard (pre-Integrity, hardcore band from Cleveland, Ohio). He is also a talented painter and graphic designer. Founder of Goat Skull Records. 
Guest/Session
Steve Makita Vocals (Track 5)
Miscellaneous staff
Cole Martinez Recording
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  1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6hEnfZixG58
  2. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zrl6COzhN-g
  3. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D1Pb1hRYoao
  4. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o4SgJe4zZ98
  5. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tDeXTvAQEZ0
  6. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y2EBwQXK7PU
  7. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8XWo6nIaeh8
  8. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sLUOyiQvB_I
  9. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cmD30vjNZHE
Apparently there's a new philosophical/ideological stream in town that I've never heard of, claiming that nothing you say counts unless repeated several times. Driven by this logic, the key/former members of Fistula formed this side-project, with a new moniker yet not even a slight change in style, apart from tuning the guitars a little bit lower. So basically, if you're familiar with Fistula's work that's earlier than "We, the Beast" you can have your conclusions made right now and beat the hell out of here, yet a hunch tells me the majority of you have never actually heard neither of Fistula nor Accept Death, so you might want to stick with me a little more. What Accept Death trying to do on this album is similar in essence to the generic and mandatory jail movie scene in which the new in-mate beats the living piss out of the most scary looking dude out there with a food tray, to establish his status and avoid becoming the jail-bait - sporting an ever-menacing and ever-grating sludge doom metal sound along with a complimentary and fairly decent production by the genre's standards, it's apparent that this band weren't pursuing for any substance (apart from the illegal kinds of, maybe) in their music, and are only here to trash you out of your puny body and mind by the sheer bestiality and, with the lack of a better word, "obesity" of their music - their guitars are fat and tuned down low, their use a moderate to slow tempo, although a bit faster than other doom and sludge doom acts, with insurmountably drive-centered and quite creative drum work along with and occasional fast parts (on the same breath I'd take the opportunity to credit the drummer for pulling off a fairly credible and decent performance on this album) and rely mostly on prolonged and continuous droning of open chords and very basic and daft melodic structuring and progression (to the extent the inclusion of "melody" and Accept Death in a single sentence feel like an abomination) to accomplish their goals and captivate the listener's attention, just almost as you'd might picture a extremely fat man prancing around. Now, there's the seemingly undeniable fun factor right there, and the good news are that it works. The bad news, sadly, are that it doesn't work for long. While the good parts of this album might resemble a fucked-up-in-a-good-way version of Crowbar, the prominent portion of the album sounds like - and I am dead serious - the elected outtakes (read: blatant rip-offs) off Slipknot's self-titled album. Now, being compared to a mallcore band, let alone being presented as the inferior in that comparison, would usually do enough, sadly it's my smallest qualm with this album - the hell with ripping Slipknot off, how about repeatedly ripping yourself off as well, and moreover - getting gradually worse in that? So OK, we have the first track, a really decent one to say the truth, that's thoroughly based on simple yet powerful grooves and not power chords and really gives his title - "I'm Sick" - an additional meaning... "Nah, too accessible, let's try the same song but dumb it down a little - let's put more emphasis on power-chords, and simplify the melodies a little". So far so good, but imagine the process being repeated over and over again - at the end of the road you get an album that that revolves around a very small amount of thoroughly regurgitated key elements, and at the same time begins with sweet groovy lines et cetera and downgrades to the last song, "Kill Everyone", that three minutes into it the only "riff" you'd hear is a repeated strumming of a single power chord, that eventually changes into a different, somewhat melodic riff that would accompany you for the remaining 4 minutes of it - but I assume you'd be forced to take my word for it, since you've given up on this album around the fourth track, because you couldn't take it anymore. This is not a work you'd expect from a bunch of otherwise accomplished peers (all of the members make music for quite a while already and with a wide variety of bands), in fact, "Accept Death" (the album) is probably what happens when creative minds go to sleep. In all seriousness - "minimalist" is one of the band's genre tags on their MySpace page, and I totally get what the term means - all except how and when exactly did it become a disguise, or an excuse if you will, to try and market something that was probably rejected by their main bands and shouldn't have left the development hell in the first place. As if aware of their weak spots, they frequently throw in wild cards like the aforementioned fast or melodic parts to keep things a little more interesting and usually keep the songs short so you won't totally lose it, but a. it doesn't really work, since you'll find the task of fishing the scattered few good parts out of the putrid pile a little too annoying, and b. it doesn't really fit into their primary intention of coming out as "bad-asses", ending up sounding as a confused mess. If I'm at debunking the alleged-badass charade already, I'd like to add the following: Accept Death are not the first and only band to tune their guitars down as low as G standard, but they're definitely the only band to do so on a 6 string guitar while seemingly using a standard set of strings for it. Now, every guitar player that's familiar with gauges or tried to toy around with tunings would beat their heads against the wall right now, but in case you aren't one of them, let me just tell you that a guitar tuned that low without the proper preparations done would go out of tune spontaneously during the span of even a single note or a chord played, so imagine what happens when you actually try to play riffs in that condition. But we are badass, we don't give a fuck and it's all intentional, right? Well it sounds like shit. And there's one thing I'm certain of - no music is made with the intention to sound like shit, even with "sludge" as their genre description, and I can think of a myriad of sludge and even drone doom acts that I might not enjoy or be remotely interested with, but at least I'd be able to listen to them without being lobotomized and/or shell-shocked prior to it - hell, I'd rather Fistula ten times over every day. This is more than ridiculous - given the band's countless experiments with groove and melody throughout the album, as basic and raw as they might be, that eventually end up sounding like a choir of molested cats most of the time - you really thought you'd get away with that? To round the review into a full circle, and as I've pretty much covered up the inputs of most of the band members in one way or another and there are no signs of the presence of the bass guitar in a radius of a thousand miles, I'd like to point out the downright terrible vocals as well, that consist pretty much of half assed growls and high yells the upholding of which for longer than three syllables seems to be a big issue. Overall: If you like your sludge metal extremely minimal and mind numbing, you might enjoy this one quite a lot, but then - you might enjoy train spotting as well; otherwise you'll find that this album takes too much time to grow on you, never sticks to your mind when it does, and gets saved by the bell more than you'd like it to be. As a debut, "Accept Death" is, well, acceptable, but given the band's currently indefinite status and lack of members, I hope their follow-up would be more focused and thought through (and I'll take "I Pray, God Fails" as a guarantee) and they won't skip the tutorials by Lazarus Blackstar again.
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Pestilent Emanation

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Abscess
Country of origin: Brazil
Location: Barão Geraldo, São Paulo
Formed in: 1991
Years active: 1991-1996, 2003 (as Kemöth), 2003-?
Genre: Death Metal
Lyrical themes: Gore, Insanity, Violence
Caio and Glauco are brothers. In 2003 they played a single gig under the name Kemöth.
Release date: 1994 Label: Independent Type: Demo
Band members
Pedro Amatuzzi Vocals
Caio Cezar Drums
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fot. Glauco Oliveira Guitars, Bass. Born Jun 1st, 1974 in São Paulo. Founding guitarist of Abscess (later Kemöth), ex-drummer of Barbarian Warriors in Search of Wisdom, bassist/vocalist of Laconist since 2008.
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