Deliver to OMAN
IFor best experience Get the App
directly available, more than 30.500 articles, excellent service - Perverted Taste Music GmbH
<**>
Sonar Bliss
I need to type nothing for this review - the guy before me said it all.But i will say that this is one of my favorite albums of all time.The marriage of black metal with such strong industrial elements is just bliss.A relentless barrage of beatufully crafted Black Hole Spells!Again, Aboryms signature techno tracks rear their heads "does not compute" and "Chenoble generation", and as ive said before for them - even a devoted black metal head such as myself has fallen in love with these tracks. Atilla is at his best. The whole band are at their best. Its unbelievable stuff.An absolute must for fans of aborym - why dont you have it already?!?!?!Newcomers who are interested must get this. I garentee if you like industrail balck metal, this will be one of you favorite albums!!!Excelent for full on metal tripping out with friends.
A**R
Stunning Techno-influenced Industrial Black Metal
The previous reviewer described this album as absolutely stunning, and he’s right. In fact, it was possibly the best Extreme Metal release of last year, and when you consider that that makes it rate above releases from bands as good as Nasum, Gorerotted and the rejuvanated Anthrax, you’ll realise that it’s no faint praise. If you don’t already know, Aborym are an Italian Black Metal outfit who incorporate elements of Industrial and Techno into their sound, and whilst they may not be as extreme as some of the British outfits that do a similar thing (Anaal Nathrakh, Axis Of Perdition) the end results are more listenable. The lead vocalist of Aborym is the same man who provided the ‘singing’ on possibly the greatest Black Metal album of all time, Mayhem’s ‘De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas’. Yes, it’s the Hungarian nutjob Attila Csihar, now relocated to Italy and sounding a great deal better than he did whilst fronting Mayhem. However, this doesn’t sound anything like his best-known band’s endeavours. Drum machine driven and loaded with samples and electronic effects as well as some scorching Black Metal riffs with Csihar’s deranged screaming over the top, if Darkthrone had a jam session with Fear Factory and then had the end results remixed by Ultraviolence, it would sound something like this; evil and apocalyptic. This seems to be the direction in which Black Metal is moving nowadays and Aborym are right at the forefront of it, and they’re all the better for it.
G**D
The cyber metal necronauts return!
Absolutly Stunning, this is the soundtrack to the end of humanity as machines take over. This CANNOT be praised highly enough, surpassing even the highest expectations! Words won't do this justice but if you like explosive, apocalyptic and downright insane psychedelic noise the buy this without delay!
ترست بايلوت
منذ يوم واحد
منذ أسبوعين