Friday, 27 January 2012

Black Metal Logos


I've been thinking about doing a post about Black Metal logos for a while, as i'm intrigued about both the style (as for example Death Metal has a visual style with blood, gore and colorful illustrations, whereas traditional Black Metal is usually dominated by legend, fog, nature, darkness and black and white photography) and the design of Black Metal band logos, and why is it that it seems that the more illegible the logo the better. Most also seem to have a homemade feel to them, quite possibly even hand drawn (some probably at least initially) but remain effective all the same.


Others simply just use a font, none are unique, but generally look like old-fashioned script (such as Burzum and Gorgoroth) but are as equally effective. Though most are made, i'm sure, with no intention whatsoever for anyone to ever be able to tell their band name from the logo, or at the least to make it extremely difficult to read.


Indeed some of the Typography appears to be complex, as sometimes some symbols (like an inverted cross or a pentagram, the numbers 666) or images (such as the devil, goat horns, skulls, trees, branches, the moon) are incorporated into the logo and illegibility is achieved. Also for it to look authentic it must be drawn almost symmetrical, (but even that is not totally necessary), and obviously works (and looks) best if drawn (and presented) white on a black background.


Some of my favourites are the logos for Ashdautas, Dark Fortress, Exiled From Light, Drowning The Light, Faustcoven and Satanic Warmaster. Christophe Szpajdel, a Belgian but now living in England, is probably the most well known designer of logos for Black Metal bands, having created those for Emperor, Moonspell, Nachtmystium, and Enthroned amongst many.


I have put together twelve of these pictures using MS paint, will add the other six in another post.


Thursday, 26 January 2012

Black Metal Bands and "So Hideous, My Love..."

My first post on this blog listed all the Black Metal bands that i enjoyed listening to and had music by, so now i've decided to list all the bands that i have discovered since and whose music i've either purchased or downloaded, they are as follows:

Acherontas, Amesoeurs, An Autumn For Crippled Children, Angantyr, Aosoth, Archgoat, Austere, Battle Dagorath, Beherit, Brunanburh, Burning Church Forest, Celeste, Cult Of Erinyes, Deafheaven, Demonaz, Dornenreich, Enslaved, Falloch, Falls Of Rauros, Faustcoven, Forteresse, Gorath, Hrizg, Hyperborean, Kyla, Lapageria Rosea, Licht Erlischt…, Make A Change...Kill Yourself, Mgla, Midnight Odyssey, Myrkr, Nadiwrath, Negative Plane, Neige Et Noirceur, Neige Morte, Niflheim, Nine Covens, NunFuckRitual, Nyktalgia, Old Silver Key, Old Wainds, Owlscry, Paragon Belial, Pest (Sweden), Pest (Germany), So Hideous My Love…, Stutthof, Syn Ze Sase Tri, The Crevices Below, Thrall, Thy Light, Trollskogen, Wisdom Through Agony Into Illumination And Lunacy (W. A. I. L.), Weakling, When Mine Eyes Blacken, Wold, Worship, Zinumm.

Some of the bands listed above might not be classed strictly as Black Metal bands, such as Brunanburh, Enslaved and W. A. I. L. as they might have other elements such as Death, Doom, Folk and even Shoegaze within their music but still retain a strong Black Metal influence or sound. And all but one of the above list have an entry at Encyclopaedia Metallum (http://www.metal-archives.com) and which one is it they think is not "Metal" enough.........

http://store.playtheassassin.com/album/pta004-so-hideous-my-love
......personally i can't believe they don't think the band is "Metal" enough, check links below.

Monday, 9 January 2012

So what is it about Black Metal?

I definitely feel that it is a minority and possibly extreme genre of Metal music, and somewhat underground, but according to the pretty definitive Metal Archives there has been at least 20,560 Black Metal bands to date, now i will admit that although i'm forty years of age and i've been listening to metal music most of my life and i had heard of the happenings surrounding the scene, the murders, the church burnings etc, the First Wave of Black Metal still passed me by. It wasn't until i heard Emperor's "In The Nightside Eclipse" a few years after its release that i became intrigued, amazed by the astonishing atmosphere created, it was simply majestic and so i considered Black Metal a worthy sub-genre of that beast called Heavy Metal, and one i chose not to ignore, (it definitely had more substance than some of that Nu-Metal rubbish that reared its ugly head about that time when i first discovered it).

So i decided to delve further and purchased some Mayhem ("De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas"), Darkthrone ("Under A Funeral Moon" & "Transylvanian Hunger") and Burzum ("Burzum" & "Aske") which naturally led me to on Immortal ("Pure Holocaust") and Satyricon ("Nemesis Divina") amongst others. I must now admit though for years all i listened to was Emperor, of course, Dimmu Borgir, Gorgoroth, Behemoth, and now i'd even consider them a bit lame Cradle Of Filth, as the only record shop we had in the town didn't stock that much Metal, unless you listened to Nu-Metal or Iron Maiden or Sepultura (but i'll freely admit there's nothing wrong with a blast of "Roots" every now and then), and which is now closed maybe ten plus years and i had to travel to Peterborough or Northampton to buy records so thank god the devil hehe, for the internet and the advent of downloading as it just made the whole Black Metal scene more accessible, it could also be mentioned that it'll probably be always a little uncommercial, no bad thing i'm sure, i like it that way.

As it might be said that Black metal was created with the purpose to be the most inaccessible music possible, notoriously difficult for those listening to it for the first time,this could be true as early black metal was raw and (was it even knowingly?) very poorly produced, with blast beat drumming and distorted guitars and vocal styles that are high pitched rasps and guttural growls that are completely or mostly intelligible, and certainly that rawness was its calling card, some bands today still try to keep that sound (even though production values have improved) as to me Satanic Warmaster's "Nachzehrer" sounds like it was recorded in a cave, and Negative Plane's "Stained Glass Revelations", which i'm listening to at the moment, certainly has that early Black Metal sound but both are worthy examples of good modern Black Metal. Other bands which i consider to illustrate what is good about modern Black Metal are NunFuckRitual, Septicflesh and Ordo Obsidium (mentioned in a previous post), Throne Of Katarsis, Gnaw Their Tongues, Haemoth, Dodsferd, and the return of Archgoat.

And then there's these variations on Black Metal, such as Atmospheric Black Metal, Ambient Black Metal, Depressive Black Metal, and Post- Black Metal (sometimes called Shoegaze Black Metal - which might even possibly be considered bordering a little on mainstream) which are all deserving of merit and appeal to my tastes, as even though i consider Black Metal to be very atmospheric music there is nothing wrong at all with innovations that are a lot more melodic (hypnotic and ambient even) while maintaing a cetain rawness and the harsh sound, but with less aggression, and as such have re-kindled my love of Black Metal, bands such as Alcest, Falloch, Agalloch, So Hideous...., My Love, Thy Light, Lifelover, Deafhaven, Weakling, Lantlos, Heretoir, October Falls, An Autumn For Crippled Children and loads more, too many to mention, maybe in another post, and even Wolves In The Throne Room (the band that really got me into that atmospheric hypnotic wall of sound that can be created by the guitars, while still being firmly grounded in the Black Metal framework).

At the beginning of this post i stated that Black Metal is a minority genre but now as a genre it occupies at least half of my music collection (so now its definitely the majority!) and if you looked at my previous posts below about my recent purchases and downloads it's plain to see how that is, i'm always looking for new Black Metal music, hence this blog. (When i say new Black Metal music, i don't just mean new releases, as i'm sure there's loads of great Black Metal music out there, both old and new that i've not heard, as can be seen also with my wish-list).

Saturday, 7 January 2012

New Releases

Alcest "Les Voyages De L'ame" released 6th January 2012 on Prophecy Productions
Yesterday i downloaded my first two albums of 2012, Alcest's new release, "Les Voyages De L'âme" and the debut offering by Ordo Obsidium "Orbis Tertius" which was released a couple of months back, but which was still collecting favourable reviews, both online and in print so i believed it was definetly worth a listen, now don't get me wrong i do like what Alcest do, in fact i like it a lot, but i did kind of expect what the album would sound like, beautifully crafted songs, yet somewhat sad and mournful, that unmistakeable guitar sound, those dreamy but melancholy vocals, punctuated by the occasional raw shriek, building up into that wall of atmospheric noise that only Alcest can do, especially evident on the final track "Summer's Glory" but i much prefer the sound created by Ordo Obsidium and to be fair, its certainly also an atmospheric record, mixing sorrowful black metal with a depressive funeral doom feel which is by no means a bad thing and its certainly one of the most outstanding opening statements i've heard in a long time by any band (the only other debut album i can think of which had the same impact on me would be W. A. I. L.'s "Wisdom Through Agony Into Illumination And Lunacy", which musically is also in a similar vein), the opening and closing tracks are epic soundscapes, definitely a soundtrack for the cold dark dreary winter evenings and nights.

Ordo Obsidium "Orbis Tertius" released 10th October 2011 on Eisenwald Tonschmiede

Also Recommend:


So Hideous, My Love... - "To Clasp A Fallen Wish With Broken Fingers" released 12th April 2011 on Play The Assassin Records
Heretoir - "Heretoir" released Feb 25th 2011 on Northern Silence Productions
Deafheaven - "Roads To Judah" released 26th April 2011 on Deathwish Inc.
Weakling - "Dead As Dreams" released 2000 on tUMULt