Viogression â Thaumaturgic Veil Review
By Angry Metal Guy
By: Nameless_n00b_602
For every well-known, successful band, countless similar acts havenât caught the same break or enjoyed the same recognition.1 For every Thou, thereâs an Indian; every Abigail Williams, a Crepuscle; and every Obituary, a Viogression. One of the original but unsung stalwarts of death metalâs earliest days, Viogression formed in 1988 and released a well-received debut, Expound & Exhort, in 1991. The 1992 follow-up, Passage, failed to meet expectations, leading the band to take a three-decade hiatus. Their third full-length, 2022âs 3rd Stage of Decay, was praised for its old-school core and modern flair. Three years and a major lineup shuffle later, they return with their fourth full-length and first self-release, Thaumaturgic Veil. Promising a transcendent discourse on the interconnectivity of infinity and individuality, can this new version of Viogression maintain its momentum and deliver?
Like the good doctor, Vickie Franks, Viogression stitches together the genreâs most recognizable touchstones, but parts of themselves peek through, distinct from their influences. Sole remaining founder and vocalist, Brian DeNeffe, exhumes Obituary and Pestilence for his unintelligible rasps and howls, but employs impressive gutturals and layered screams of his own on âVulnus Sclopetariumâ and âSummon.â Guitarists Lief Larson and Johnathon Ibarra evoke the doomy vibe and disorienting, whip-crack tempo shifts of Autopsy and Asphyx (âJinx,â âLight Extinguisherâ), but the western dust on âSuperpositionâ belongs to Viogression alone. An uncharacteristically twangy chorus and heavy distortion build an atmosphere for a clean, soulful guitar to cut through. Larson, Ibarra, and drummer Erik Schultek halve and double their tempos on âRenumerationâ to create a pace both consistent and in flux. Punky album high point, âPummeled,â sees DeNeffe acting as a rare counterpoint for a jazz-infused solo.2 These moments showcase the bandâs excellent synthesis of influence and individuality when the stitches hold and the heart pumps strongly.
But the stitches donât always hold; Thaumaturgic Veil suffers from indiscretionary inclusion, or poor compositional choices. Bassist Jason Hellman provides Cannibal Corpse-esque hooks (âJinx,â âTravesty öv Darknessâ) and a palpable heft to the album, but his performance often feels like parody. The opening basslines of âSuperpositionâ and âAs the Light Fadesâ plod and meander in ways that recall the tongue-in-cheek parts of Green Dayâs catalogue. A recurring nasally guitar tone tries to instill unease but is instead repetitive and annoying (âJinx,â âAs the Light Fadesâ). âEaten by Fliesâ invokes Polka and, like âSuperpositionâ and âSummon,â is paratactical in its lyrical delivery, imitating amateur slam poetry. This disharmonious construction hamstrings Viogressionâs ability to cultivate the philosophical and contemplative tone their subject matter requires.
Even with more consistent songwriting, Thaumaturgic Veil would still feel stitched together and disjointed. The album presents less as a coherent work and more as a series of vignettes. Each proper track (save closer, âLight Extinguisherâ) is paired with an intro, giving the sensation of moving from painting to painting in a gallery rather than viewing one grand tapestry. Itâs an interesting idea, but it fails for three reasons. First, these intros donât bleed into their songs. I struggled to find a correlation in these pairings, whether musically, thematically, or lyrically. Second, without stronger connective tissue, these intros only add bloat to a relatively lean record.3 Third, and most damning, they prohibit the listener from building any momentum throughout Thaumaturgic Veil. This start-stop-start-stop structure makes the album feel twice as long as it is and turns every spin into a test of endurance.
While I can applaud the ambition of Thaumaturgic Veil, the execution ultimately falls short. âPummeled,â âRenumeration,â and âVulnus Sclopetariumâ show that Viogression has the chops to write and perform a great, concise album, but uneven songwriting quality and an interrupted flow mar what could have been a prime offering from the old guard. Either of these flaws in isolation would have been manageable, but taken together, their impact compounds. Thereâs potential here, and with tighter threading and a more cohesive structure, I have no doubt Viogression could achieve the recognition they deserve.
Rating: 2.0/5.0
DR: 5 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Self-Released
Websites: viogression.info | Bandcamp | Instagram | Facebook
Releases Worldwide: July 11th, 2025
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