Orgone – Pleroma Review

By Dear Hollow

Pleroma is a kaleidoscope of colors and emotions, composed like an odyssey. It showers listeners with haunting arpeggios, winding riffs, and chamber instruments, adorned with a crown of myriad vocal styles both harsh and soothing, male and female – a far-reaching and royally ambitious sum and completion of its divine components. For an act that saturates its assault with all the decadence and bombast of a metal opera, Orgone is deeply entrenched in subtlety and restraint. Songwriting takes front and center, and nary a moment is wasted. It’s an exclamatory manifesto and toppling breeze of complete freedom and organicity – truly a religious pilgrimage of music shouted and whispered alike.

The act’s eighteen-year existence has been distinctly underground, its entire discography released independently and physical copies provided in limited runs. Adding to its obscure nature, it’s difficult to determine what style Pittsburgh’s Orgone professes exactly. Beginning as a technical deathgrind outfit with 2006’s debut EP Accumulator and 2007’s The Goliath, before drifting into more progressive death Opeth territory with the inclusion of acoustic and chamber instruments in 2014’s The Joyless Parson,1 Pleroma is even more elusive. With its sound recalling the hallmarks of post-metal, hardcore, technical death metal, jazz, and avant-garde, influences like Precambrian-era The Ocean, Diskord, Amia Venera Landscape, and Unexpect emerge – with the organic fluidity of Sleepytime Gorilla Museum and Language-era The Contortionist. In spite of all comparisons, Orgone exists in a league all its own.

What stands out particularly about Orgone is the act’s patience and restraint. While often an album momentum killer, Pleroma’s multiple instrumentals add uniquely graceful movements. The builds of the orchestral “Silentium” to post-metal “Approaching Babel” to the first metal attack of “Valley of the Locust” shows an impressive sense of crescendo and dynamics, likewise appealed in four-track run from the jazzy French lounge and female spoken word of “Hymne à la Beauté,” the ambient pulsing “Flâneurs,” the playful yet mournful elegy of “Lily by Lily,” and the more classical and cinematic “Ubiquitous Divinity.” While influences are scattered and seem contrived on paper, the songwriting and transitions are so fucking smooth, you would miss that they are separate tracks. Introductions of the metal attack are tantalizing in “Approaching Babel,” “Ubiquitous Divinity,” and “Mourning Dove,” hinting at the assault to come in successive tracks. Each track maintains its own identity in its respective genre pickings, but always in reference to the good of the whole – Pleroma truly. And all this is just the instrumentals.

Like the instrumentals, the metal tracks also exist on a slow and steady crescendo, not unlike the steady build of a master storyteller, as each successive track grows in intensity and fury. Letting multi-instrumentalist and Orgone mastermind Stephen Jarrett carry Pleroma’s movements through a brain-frying guitar and bass technicality that borders between intensely calculated and maddeningly unhinged, emphasized by his frantic hardcore barks, while percussionist Justin Wharton, in particular, shines in the ebb-and-flow dynamic of “Valley of the Locust,” both members highlighting passages of haunting strings and stirring vocals and blasting punishment through groovy complex riffs and dragged-out melodies that morph seamlessly between lush harmony and brutal dissonance. Eighteen-minute behemoth “Trawling the Depths” focuses on labyrinthine composition with herculean might, the heights of blastbeats and soaring riffs contrasting with passages of chamber acoustics and dark atmospherics, patiently guided across a scorched landscape. “Schemes of Fulfillment” offers the truest metal track here as well as album climax, as vocals are spit with a sudden ferocity that recalls Sleepytime Gorilla Museum’s “Helpless Corpse Enactment” alongside the heaviest riffs of the album. Finally, closing track “Pleroma” serves as the falling action – clean singing, meandering guitar, and scattered bass noodles giving a survey of the abstract destruction alongside brass explosions.

Pleroma is challenging, over an hour of content that requires multiple listens to unearth all its secrets. After a decade of silence, Orgone returns with a mighty hammer that is in equal parts evocative, progressive, diverse, and cohesive. Seamless transitions between the chamber elements and the more punishing passages with a unique melodic template that defies easy categorization all collide in a thoughtful and maddening, blindingly maximalist and bitingly minimalist interchangeably. Its more airy riffs can feel suffocating compared to a potential death metal crunch they could offer, but Orgone’s more exploratory post-metal edge makes Pleroma distinctly transcendent. “Pleroma” refers to the sum of divinity in the biblical New Testament, and Orgone’s Pleroma is divinely good.

Rating: 4.5/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Self-Released
Websites: facebook.com/orgone | orgoneus.bandcamp.com
Releases Worldwide: June 24th, 2024

#2024 #45 #AmericanMetal #AmiaVeneraLandscape #AvantGardeDeathMetal #ChamberMusic #DeathMetal #Diskord #Hardcore #Jazz #Jun24 #Lounge #Opeth #Orgone #Pleroma #PostMetal #ProgressiveDeathMetal #Review #Reviews #SelfRelease #SleepytimeGorillaMuseum #TechnicalDeathMetal #TheContortionist #TheOcean #Unexpect

Orgone - Pleroma Review | Angry Metal Guy

A review of Pleroma by Orgone, available June 24th worldwide via self-release.

Angry Metal Guy

Defect Designer – Chitin Review

By Dolphin Whisperer

Where do you even start with a band like Defect Designer? Part Trollfest, part Diskord—one fewer part now that bassist Eyvind Wærsted Axelsen has moved on since his brief participation on 2022’s blasting EP Neanderthal—and three parts weird, this eclectic Russian-by-way-of-Norway export hasn’t defined one singular sound for itself over the years. Full-length debut Wax showcased their would-be trademark of wildly bouncing riffs and pulse-hopping bass runs against an of-the-time mid-00s groovy Morbid Angel death metal that felt like it could have fit on a bill with Terra Incognita-era Gojira—except it was 2009! 2015’s Ageing Accelerator saw an injection of Cryptopsy punch enlisting the legendary Flo Mounier himself to add a kit smattering across the extra carnival synth embellished and hard-to-love sophomore outing. However, trimmed to grind lengths and with the quirky musical spirit of Diskord emboldened, Neanderthal proved to be less prehistoric and more fresh in attack than any of their past efforts, a true progression. Now with a fresh coat of Chitin, does Defect Designer threaten to strike hot again?

Before we get into the music that this newest effort presents, we can’t pass the most obvious link between the spirit of Neanderthal and Chitin: that glorious, intricately crosshatched Ian Miller artwork. Every buggy, creepy cornstalk; every sneering, veiny pillar; every paisley-mouthed demon spewing from the warped manor that houses Defect Designers’ unsettling thoughts, this cover continues the off-kilter, funhouse aesthetic into which this ensemble has slowly settled. With a scratchy, sliding scrawl, Defect Designer carves through many of Chitin’s twisted numbers a tense riffcraft that falls in line with skronk-bearing grind acts like Antigama or Atka, and its funkier bass-pop predilection also reminds me of the seemingly similar-minded underground groove of the recent Arthouse Fatso release. But rather than find a uniting, quirky lyrical theme, Defect Designer simply aims to tie together the room with referential tones and an insistence on remaining strange.

The problem, though, with valuing weirdness above all else is that Chitin, outside of pushing its image to a breaking point, does very little to hook the listener in that lane, at least not right away. Defect Designer leads with high crunch, wide-focus riffs, which struggle to leave a mark across the front half of Chitin. As sonically thrilling as many of the buzzing intros are, these kinds squirmy footings largely render as a blur in high doses, that is until the extra-torqued grind of “Certainty After the Kafkaesque Twist” and the slower escalation of “Gaudy Colors from Your Plastic Bag.” Ironically, the tangling of these two cuts highlights both how out-of-place Björn Strid’s Night Flight Orchestra intrusion on “Shine Shine” rests against all else, as it does exactly what the song implies. Glaring, garish, galloping, it kind of works, like a dark chocolate spread on a spicy wedge of salami.

Reaching back into the rhythmic oddities that carved the most vicious edges of Neanderthal, it’s the closing quartet that really brings home what makes modern Defect Designer work. Session smasher Eugene Ryabchenko (Fleshgod Apocalypse,1 Burial Hordes2) sprinkles in jazz club cymbal walks (“Story of a Styrofoam”), circus folk pomp (“Nu, Pogodi!”), all while striking back down to a crashing groove (“Insomnia”) or pummeling death metal assault (“Orgone Accumulator”). These cuts don’t feel entirely like a different band, but the writing focus on them builds around rhythm instead of in spite of it, allowing the tricky six-string work to find a home amongst more defined swells and splits. A few earlier hits come close to this kind of cohesion, but with the intro of “Uglification Spell” setting the tone early with a hard multi-second pause that stutters the album’s first strut, Chitin does not set itself up for a flowing success.

Despite its flaws, though, Chitin remains fun and forward-moving in its forty-minute run. Unlike other bands that tip-toe about the progressive moniker with flashy time changes and virtuosic squealing, Defect Designer wears its technical prowess to steer the audience around its misdirecting halls and trap doors. While the path that these devious death metallers take poses its own hurdles, Defect Designer stumbles about with full commitment to an outré attitude with a refreshing honesty. Sure, it’s taken them three full-lengths and an EP to really nail down what that means, but that leaves the future looking bright, still, for Defect Designer. Bright and weird.

Rating: 3.0/5.0
DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Transcending Obscurity | Bandcamp
Websites: defect-designer.com | facebook.com/defectdesigner1 | defect-designer.bandcamp.com
Releases Worldwide: March 15th, 2024

#2024 #30 #Antigama #ArthouseFatso #Atka #Chitin #Cryptopsy #DeathMetal #Deathgrind #DefectDesigner #Diskord #Mar24 #MorbidAngel #NorwegianMetal #ProgressiveDeathMetal #Review #Reviews #TranscendingObscurityRecords #Trollfest

Defect Designer - Chitin Review | Angry Metal Guy

A review of Chitin by Defect Designer, available March 14th worldwide via Transcending Obscurity Records.

Angry Metal Guy

Other of my purchases of the #bandcampfriday #bandcamp

Oscillations by #Diskord
https://diskord.bandcamp.com/album/oscillations

Very fun to listen #metal #deathmetal #progressivemetal record from Norway.

Thanks to @norskurskog , I got to this band thanks to your posts 🤘

Oscillations, by Diskord

6 track album

Diskord

Back in 2017 I drew a lot of covers of Deadpool, here's the one of issue 290.

The assignment was quite tricky, "Deadpool trolling Diskord, something out of Snapchat", it took me quite some time to find the final concept.

I used my own set of emojis for the final piece because of legal reasons.

#MastoArt #Deadpool #Diskord #CoverArt #clipstudiopaint #Snapchat