Label: http://www.metalblade.com/
Release Date: February 22, 2004
Home Page: http://www.primordialweb.tk/
I was a little surprised to see that PRIMORDIALs latest effort, The Gathering Wilderness, was given to me for review. While I really love the lone PRIMORDIAL disc in my collection, Spirit the Earth Aflame, I just assumed this disc would have been snapped up by one of the other Royal Carnage reviewers, whose tastes run more to the extremes in Metal, than do my own.
The Gathering Wilderness is PRIMORDIALs sixth release, and their first for Metal Blade Records. For me, PRIMORDIAL is a band who can best be appreciated through headphones, in a dimly lit room, at a comfortably loud volume. And its in this manner that I approach The Gathering Wilderness. As the opening notes of The Golden Spiral pour through my headphones, I sense this is going to be an incredible, one hour journey. Like most of PRIMORDIALs songs, The Golden Spiral is a mid-paced track, epic in nature, made up of varying parts Black, Doom, and Folk Metal. However, the atmospheric qualities that it exudes are most closely associated with Black Metal. Regardless of how you choose to classify it, its pure musical bliss.
I wont even take a stab at what lies closest to the surface in PRIMORDIALs pool of musical influences. To me, PRIMORDIAL simply sounds like PRIMORDIAL. Their songs have a sense of sincerity, thats rare in todays Metal scene. Theyre a band most comfortable playing mid-tempo songs, that mix impassioned clean and Death vocals with an insurmountable wall of sound. The repetitive rhythms they use have a beautiful, trance-like effect. It would be easy to completely lose yourself in these captivating rhythms if it werent for the amazing drum work of Simon OLaoghaire. After listening to this disc a half dozen times, I can honestly say that Simon has moved atop the list of my most favorite drummers.
The title track from The Gathering Wilderness, starts with a quiet intensity thats almost unsettling; the lightly distorted guitar, the soft tribal beat which eventually joins in, the subtle chanting that follows. You can sense the coming storm, and when it hits, its as intense as you had hoped/feared. I have to say, I truly love the way vocalist A.A. Nemtheanga phrases the lyrics. There is a spontaneity to it, that suggests he has a perfect sense of the music beneath.
Lyrically, PRIMORDIAL, and more specifically vocalist Nemtheanga, view both mans future, as well as his past, through the bleakest of eyes. The lyrics here should not be glossed over, as theyre truly worth absorbing. I especially enjoyed the commentaries that follow each song, as they allow the reader to view the lyrics in the context which their author intended.
The third track, The Song of the Tomb, is one of the heavier tracks on the CD. From Alans opening scream, to Simons pounding snare, which like the crack of a whip, drives the song galloping onward. Its perhaps the most straight forward and least dynamic song on The Gathering Wilderness, but strong none the less.
End of All Times features with PRIMORDIALs trademark wall of sound riffing, and never lets up. Its strange how Ciáran MacUiliams and Michael O'Floinns guitars can be so present, yet still allow Alans voice to be front and center.
It isnt until the fifth track, The Coffin Ships, that we hear Nemtheangas voice in all its glory. What he lacks in range and finesse, he more than makes up for with sheer intensity and passion. Never is this more apparent than when he sings of Irelands struggles during the Great Potato Famine, and the people who abandoned the Green Isle in search of a better life in America. The music is sensational throughout (especially the acoustic part at the 2:18 mark), and if you choose to sample only one PRIMORIDAL song, it should be The Coffin Ships.
The Gathering Wilderness winds down with Tragedys Birth and Cities Carved in Stone. The former, straight forward and aggressive, the latter, mournful and dark. By PRIMORIDAL standards, neither are spectacular tracks, but they dont detract from the overall quality of the CD.
The Gathering Wilderness is the sixth, and perhaps the finest chapter in the PRIMORDIAL story. While longtime fans will surely spend countless hours debating where this effort falls in their discography, its hard for me to imagine a better PRIMORDIAL disc. The Gathering Wilderness is one of those rare releases where artistic integrity, creativity, mature song writing and production yield something so special, that it should be listened to by all.
Rating: 9/10
Reviewer: General Zod