Get neige neutralized
Courtesy of my friend on discord
Maybe I'll change my pfp after this post
#alcest #neige #bruh #eye-contact
Get neige neutralized
Courtesy of my friend on discord
Maybe I'll change my pfp after this post
š“ LIVE NOW ON VORTEX
š» Vortex Sessions š§ (Indie pop, synth-pop, alternative rock)
āāāāāāāāāāāāāā
šµ Alcest - Ecailles de lune, Pt. 2
ā¶ļø Ćcouter / Listen : VorteX [Radio]
https://lesonduvortex.net
š¬ Join us on Discord:
https://discord.gg/d82hJZBeDE
#VortexWave #Alcest #Blackgaze #Post-metal #2010s
Lately, Iāve been listening to quite a bit of depressing music. Between Meadowlands, Qroba, and Exequiae, the themes of melancholy, death, and despair have been having quite the run āround these parts. So it figures my review of the day is Embrace the Deathāwhy turn away from a theme thatās doing well? This is the sophomore full-length release from U.S.-based Mother Crone, over a decade after their debut Awakening, and, if my research is accurate, with a completely different lineup. The topic of the day is clear, and Mother Crone approach it with a blend of doom, stoner, progressive, and groove metal. Itās always exciting to see what a band can do with a refreshed vision, lineup, and style, and apparently, grim topics are strong performers these days. How do Mother Crone compare to their contemporaries?
That my depend on how we define ācontemporaries;ā while Mother Crone share subject matter with the aforementioned groups, stylistically they have more in common with their own stated influences, Pink Floyd, Pantera, and Alcest (among others). As mentioned earlier, the sound on Embrace the Death is fairly well-rooted in stoner metal, with elements of doom, progressive, and groove naturally creeping in to fit the topic. Guitarists Edoardo Curatolo and Joe Frothingham (also vocals) oscillate between light, introspective play and a burlier, more aggressive approach, and Frothinghamās singing is the same. A lot of the albumās stoner and doom metal leanings actually owe to bassist Preston Wilson and drummer Charlier Romano, whose slower, grimier playing grounds the music in a progressive sort of styling. Together, the result is something at times aggressive, at times introspective, and always atmospheric in some way.
Embrace the Death by Mother Crone
But the best parts of āEmbrace the Deathā are unquestionably the albumās quieter moments, where Mother Crone embraces the doom and the atmosphere fully. The title track is the best example; here, Frothingham takes a break from what my father would affectionately call shouting in tune to do his best Mikael Ć kerfeldt (Opeth) impression and guide the listener through a somber acceptance of the inevitable. The plaintive guitars, soft singing, and rumbling bass give way to subtle, beautiful melodies that grow organically. Not that the heavier moments are not welcome onesāāFever Stoneā is a more traditional, groove-led rocker that demonstrates a nearly opposite side of Mother Croneās sound, the one that channels Pantera more than Opeth or Alcest. āEye of Providenceā is the middle track for the sound, best blending riffs, atmosphere, and heaviness. In all, Mother Crone donāt really sound like any of their influences, but bring forth something in the odd space between them all, something surprisingly affecting, sometimes heavy, sometimes airy, and often both at once.
Another thing I can say about Embrace the Death is that it is a fairly front-loaded album. In particular, the trio of āFever Stone,ā āEmbrace the Death,ā and āUnto the Dawnā is a powerful one-two-three hit of Mother Croneās sound, from burly, melodic aggression to more plaintive, introspective atmospheres. Towards the end of Embrace the Death, however, I think Mother Crone loses sight of their strengths. āInner Keepā in particular is an example of a song that could have used more editing than it received, clocking in at eleven minutes without making the impression I think it means to. āCelestial Lightā is a beautiful closer for the album, but tonally feels a bit out of place. Perhaps if more of Embrace the Death leaned towards its title track sound it would fit better, but as is, it feels like the two extremes of the Mother Crone sound are more in competition with each other than blending into a unified listening experience. Itās all good music, but as a full album, I think thereās too much back and forth between aggressive and plaintive music to feel as ācompleteā as it could have felt.
Still, there is a clear journey through Embrace the Death, and, despite its grim title and concept, itās a fun and reasonably thought-provoking listen. Mother Crone was not on my radar before now, but Iāll be paying attention to them for certain in the future. At best, this sophomore is a beautiful, compelling, and contemplative work of atmospheric metal; and otherwise, it is āonlyā good. Hopefully this new lineup sticks around for a bitāIāll be looking forward to album three for sure.
Rating: 3.0/5.0
DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Self-release
Websites: mothercrone.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/mothercronemusic
Releases Worldwide: March 4th, 2026
š“ LIVE NOW ON VORTEX
š» Vortex Shadow š (New wave, synthwave, cold wave, goth)
āāāāāāāāāāāāāā
šµ Alcest - Ecailles de lune, Pt. 2
ā¶ļø Ćcouter / Listen : VorteX [Radio]
https://lesonduvortex.net
š¬ Join us on Discord:
https://discord.gg/d82hJZBeDE
#VortexWave #Alcest #Blackgaze #Post-Metal #2010s
Itās not uncommon for death metal musicians to mellow and prog out the longer they roam this Earth. Far from a negative connotation, enough songwriting prowess can lead to a tasteful and potent way to carry out said development. One of many collectives in this category is the Morbus Chron expanded universe. These Swedes first went from classic death metal to Sweven, which eventually led to an even proggier Sweven. Now, in a further evolution following the Law of Increasing Hippietudeā¢, we arrive at Speglas. Although predating Sweven by some five years, it took until now for the debut full-length Endarkenment, Being & Death to come to fruition. Their goal of fusing death and black metal with heavy metal, however, has remained the same throughout. With two degrees of staff and sound separation between Morbus Chron and Speglas, where has all this evolution led to?
The Sweven presence in the lineup of Speglas is noticeable from the get go. Isak Rosemarin (Sweven, ex-Morbus Chron) acts as half of the guitar crew and all of the vocal crew, lending the album a warm but powerful, raspy growl often reminiscent of Niilo SevƤnen (Insomnium). Jesper Nyreliusās (Sweven) drumming is varied and detailed (āThe Spirit Postmortem,ā āHitherto Awryā). Alexi Hedlundās guitar and Victor Bergās bass round out the great performances of the lineup. Musically, Endarkenment⦠tends to fall somewhere between Inconcessus Lux Lucisās blackened Iron Maiden approach (sadly gone unmentioned on site until now) and Chapel of Diseaseās severely underrated deathened dad rock from 2024. Fans of Tribulationās Down Below era might find a lot to like here as well. The songwriting builds upon their preceding EPsā2015ās Birth, Dreams & Death and 2022ās Time, Futility & Deathābut improves on all aspects, nailing down the vocals and crafting a memorable dual guitar tandem (āIncessant Severance,ā āDies Maliā). And while the projectās vision does precede Sweven by a lot, its instrumentation inevitably ends up feeling distantly related (āDearthā).
Endarkenment, Being & Death by Speglas
Endarkenment, Being & Death flows seamlessly from atmospheric to intense in various styles and tempos. Iron Maiden licks run amok throughout the albumās dual-harmonized guitar work (āDearth,ā āRage upon the Dying Fireā) of course, but theyāre not carrying the record alone. Gorgeous clean guitar parts (āAiling,ā āDearthā) and sadboi tremolos (āDies Maliā) accompany the superb rhythm and lead guitar efforts elsewhere. Parts of āThe Endarkenmentā even resemble Alcest by way of Spiritual Instinctās fantastic post-black direction. All this leads to Speglas being progressive without it getting in the way of the music. In addition, a stellar production job only lifts up the bandās great stylistic choices. Simon Sƶderbergās (whose production credits surprisingly include early Ghost) placement of drums and bass in the mix deserve special mention, as it makes an already good set of instruments sound incredible. Though not a massively layered or complex album, the combination of both songwriting and production depth makes for a highly repeatable experience.
Careful pacing allows Speglas to end their experiment with a triumphant bang instead of a whimper. Though the album could benefit from showing more teeth and grit at its most aggressive, the ending one-two punch of the album in āDies Maliā and āRage upon the Dying Fireā is a cornerstone hard to argue against. I wouldnāt be surprised if both end up being among my Song oā the Year finalists. As for its softer side, the beauty of āWoeā and āAilingā wonāt change the minds of people diametrically opposed to intros and interludes. Some will say Speglasās style is too watered down, others might think itās not watered down enough. But I think Endarkenment⦠strikes a great balance in between, the music being both heavy and beautiful, intricate and addictingly catchy as a result.
You donāt need to reinvent the wheel to craft something that feels fresh and exemplary. Speglas took a long while to fine-tune their writing prowess for the debut, and it paid off in spades. Endarkenment, Being & Death succeeds in its primary goal as a superb example of progressive, deathened and blackened heavy metal. Despite not featuring any cowbell, I reckon itāll be difficult for future 2026 albums to top this one come year-end. As the final recent n00b remaining who hadnāt broken the Score Safety Counter yet, Iām glad I held out this long for something remarkable. And I wasnāt even originally in charge of covering it!
Rating: Excellent
DR: 8 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps MP3
Label: Trust No One Recordings | Bandcamp
Websites: Bandcamp | Facebook | Instagram
Releases Worldwide: February 27th, 2026
Happy 1st anniversary to the alcest concert of March 8th 2025
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ESh0oR7czM

Currently checking out Pictures by #HamaSaari.
I'd describe their music as dreamy, mellow #ProgRock, #Alcest'ey in places and some (late) #Anathema, too.

7 track album
What the hell do you mean it's almost been a year since this happened ššš
Atmospheric post-black metal is quite the concept. Both titular subgenres span wide varieties of inspirations, levels of aggression, and affinities for emotion. Done well, they are gateways to catharsis and emotional storytelling. So I was intrigued when Rituel : Initiation caught my eye. This is the debut full-length release from Swiss post-black metal band De lāAbĆ®me NaĆ®t lāAube, recommended, or so Iām told, for fans of Alcest and Heilung. You never quite know what youāre going to get with a debut, but I was eager enough from the concept to want more. On paper, Rituel : Initiation could go anywhere.
Fortunately, the first few minutes of Rituel : Initiation act as an interesting microcosm for its whole: āUne Pleine Absenceā lulls you in slowly with heavy atmosphere, wordless sighs, throat singing (I believe from lead vocalist SĆ©bastien Defabiani), and acoustic passages, slowly building in intensity. It does this so effectively, in fact, that when the guitars do arrive, they feel overly jagged, loud, and harsh. I signed up for a post-black metal albumāI expected loud. But De lāAbĆ®me NaĆ®t lāAube do somber atmosphere very well, and they do post and black metal well, but itās interesting how the two can be at odds with each other in this style. Ten minutes later, this moment is forgotten, and the guitars sound as natural as anything else. āUne Pleine Absenceā is still going, incorporating tremolos and depressive shrieks as a heavier atmospheric element, and you know well what to expect over the rest of Rituel : Initiation.
Rituel : Initiation by De lāAbĆ®me NaĆ®t lāAube
This intersection of rough-around-the-edges post metal, black metal aggression, and atmospheric melancholy seems to define both Rituel : Initiation and De lāAbĆ®me NaĆ®t lāAube. āLe Vertige dāune Descendanceā is similar to the intro in that it starts slowly and gives bassist Valerian Burki a moment to shine. It leans more post than black, with some strong riffs that give the song groove and, if youāll forgive a technical term, head-nod factor. āUn Sanctuaire de Cendresā is much more blackened than post, but when Fantine Schützās clean singing soars through the gloom, itās a genuinely touching moment. Tremolos towards the end from guitarists Dominique Blanc and Kilian Caddoux counterbalance nicely with Valentin Boadaās frantic drumming, and here, the intersections work very well.
If I were to criticize one thing about Rituel : Initiation, itās that the blended styles donāt allow for a ton of memorability. There are great moments throughout the five tracksāIāve mentioned a few already, and want to highlight the slow march riffing around the midpoint of āUn Sanctuaire de Cendresā as well. But generally, Rituel : Initiation does not feel very strongly structured as an album. Songs, all but one over eleven minutes long, move from one idea to the next coherently and naturally, but in such a way as to evade hooks or moments of particular catchiness or impact. I always enjoy listening, but after the fifty-three minutes are done, I donāt have much impression of specific songs I liked; rather, itās moments here and there that I know were early or late in the session. This makes sense of the style De lāAbĆ®me NaĆ®t lāAube play, but it also gives the impression of a dense album that I perhaps still need to spend more time with to truly crack.
Still, I like what De lāAbĆ®me NaĆ®t lāAube are doing here. Cold, regal, aggressive, anguished, and balanced on a knifeās edgeāthereās some good metal here! As āUne Absolute PrĆØsenceā builds to the albumās climactic end, I canāt help but be impressed. I wouldnāt have hated more editingāthereās a lot of metal here tooābut too much of a good thing isnāt a bad thing. Rituel : Initiation is, in my mind, an exciting debut, the kind that speaks of genuine potential. Color me intrigued.
Rating: 3.0/5.0
DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: 192 kbps mp3
Label: Hypnotic Dirge Records
Websites: danapostmetal.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/dana.postmetal
Releases Worldwide: February 13th, 2026