Author: Dr. Abner Mality
www.wormwoodchronicles.com
Here's another fine album from Chicago's own masters of "gloom metal". These guys are remarkably consistent with their output and this new one is no exception. Don't expect anything different from previous efforts like "The Novella Reservoir" and "The Pale Haunt Departure"...when you are locked into a groove like November's Doom, you don't need to experiment much.
They have a remarkably heavy and dense guitar sound that adds power to each full-bodied note. The title track builds beautifully from some ascending arpeggios until exploding into a brutal wall of sound. The other weapon in the ND arsenal is the vocal prowess of Paul Kuhr, who simply possesses one of the deepest and most powerful growls around. And yet it is always articulate, never mush-mouthed. He also uses his sensitive clean vocals to good effect and I'd say that after Opeth's Mikael Akerfeldt, he is the best practitioner of the growl-clean combo. The album has a great flow to it, with some fast raging cuts like "Lazarus Regret" and the epic sounding "The Harlot's Life" alternating with moody, doomy crushers such as "Empathy's Greed" and "Eulogy For the Living Lost". As always, there's a couple of ballads like "The Fifth Day of March" and "When Desperation Fills the Void" to round things out. As you might be able to suss out from the song titles, things remain as doleful and hopeless as ever in the world of November's Doom.
Only thing I really have an issue with is the cheap and cheesy looking cover, which is a drastic step down in quality for them. Fortunately, the material inside is a different story and "Into Night's Requiem Infernal" is another strong brick in the foundation that is November's Doom.
www.wormwoodchronicles.com
Here's another fine album from Chicago's own masters of "gloom metal". These guys are remarkably consistent with their output and this new one is no exception. Don't expect anything different from previous efforts like "The Novella Reservoir" and "The Pale Haunt Departure"...when you are locked into a groove like November's Doom, you don't need to experiment much.
They have a remarkably heavy and dense guitar sound that adds power to each full-bodied note. The title track builds beautifully from some ascending arpeggios until exploding into a brutal wall of sound. The other weapon in the ND arsenal is the vocal prowess of Paul Kuhr, who simply possesses one of the deepest and most powerful growls around. And yet it is always articulate, never mush-mouthed. He also uses his sensitive clean vocals to good effect and I'd say that after Opeth's Mikael Akerfeldt, he is the best practitioner of the growl-clean combo. The album has a great flow to it, with some fast raging cuts like "Lazarus Regret" and the epic sounding "The Harlot's Life" alternating with moody, doomy crushers such as "Empathy's Greed" and "Eulogy For the Living Lost". As always, there's a couple of ballads like "The Fifth Day of March" and "When Desperation Fills the Void" to round things out. As you might be able to suss out from the song titles, things remain as doleful and hopeless as ever in the world of November's Doom.
Only thing I really have an issue with is the cheap and cheesy looking cover, which is a drastic step down in quality for them. Fortunately, the material inside is a different story and "Into Night's Requiem Infernal" is another strong brick in the foundation that is November's Doom.