Dødheimsgard – Supervillain Outcast

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Forest: Sold Out
Jul 5, 2003
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Dødheimsgard – Supervillain Outcast
Moonfog Productions – FOGCD6037 – April 16, 2007
By Jason Jordan

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Dødheimsgard have weathered many line-up changes over the years, and several former members are immediately recognizable for the work they’ve done with other bands. It’d be tedious and pointless to name them all here, though, so I’ll just say that the Norwegians return partially intact with their first output since 1999’s 666 International. As some predicted, Supervillain Outcast is an inconsistent release, occasionally offering tasty, avant-garde post-black metal, but overall lacking the ability to hold one’s attention for the full 57 minutes, even aside from the obvious filler, which results in a frustrating follow-up.

Extracting the positive elements from Supervillain Outcast is a no-brainer – high quality musical performances, speedy tempos, notable programming effects, songwriting and vocal/instrumental variation, et cetera. The group gets off to a good start with the uber-fast ‘Vendetta Assassin,’ which, like other songs, has a robotic feel in place due to the synthesizers. It’s evident, as it has been for some time, that programming is an essential component of latter-day Dødheimsgard. While coursing throughout the record, ‘The Snuff Dreams Are Made Of’ does an excellent job of utilizing electronic effects to their futuristic, atmospheric potential. More than once, they ostensibly draw from fellow Norwegians Solefald – see the tailend of ‘The Snuff Dreams Are Made Of’ and elsewhere – but never quite reach the genius that the above-mentioned duo have on numerous occasions.

‘Horrorizon’ repeats the chorus too much, clean-sung interlude ‘Secret Identity’ accomplishes little to nothing, ‘Apocalypticism’ repeats, you guessed it, the chorus too much, clean-sung interlude ‘Chrome Balaclava’ accomplishes, right again, little to nothing, and the clean vocals in ‘All Is Not Self’ are atrocious to the point of being unbearable. Oh, and clean-sung interlude ‘Cellar Door,’ similar to its like-minded predecessors, is unnecessary too. Still, fast n’ furious numbers such as ‘Foe X Foe,’ ‘The Vile Delinquents,’ ‘Unaltered Beast,’ ‘Ghostforce Soul Constrictor,’ ‘Supervillain Serum,’ and ‘21st Century Devil’ are worth looking into, at least momentarily, as they are in tune with the material found at the beginning of Supervillain Outcast, which ranges from fair to great. Even so, there’s a lot that could’ve been trimmed.

Of the 15 tracks, there are certainly some keepers. In the end, however, Supervillain Outcast is not a triumphant return, but an average one. Also, for what it’s worth, it seems older, experimental black metal has traditionally fared better than the modern stuff, as heard in early albums by Arcturus, Fleurety, Ved Buens Ende, and others. In fact, the latter two each housed a Dødheimsgard member for a certain amount of time….

Official Dødheimsgard Website
Official Moonfog Productions Website