Descending Into A Deeper Darkness, by NAXEN
4 track album
4 track album
Hämatom
07.02.2025 München / Tonhalle
Knocked Loose
29.03.2025 München / Tonhalle
Naxen
24.10.2024 München / Feierwerk
Skunk Anansie
10.03.2025 München / Tonhalle
#Feierwerk #Hamatom #KnockedLoose #Munchen #Naxen #SkunkAnansie #Tonhalle #SteelFeed
Lascar – Equinox Flower Review
By Dear Hollow
Ah, my old friend. We look upon our very first reviews fondly, as opportunities for meditation and embarrassment alike as we grow older and just plain old. Six years ago, for my first assignment as a meek n00b (10), I was assigned to Chilean post-black act Lascar and its third full-length Wildlife. It was, uh, not a good experience. The biggest gripe was its obvious paper-thin Deafheaven worship, pretty ambient post-rock passages copied and pasted atop milquetoast blastbeats and shrieks, which gave it an ultimately disingenuous feel that undermined the post-black necessity for emotional connection. Mastermind Gabriel Hugo wasn’t a one-and-done, no sir, as his 2023 side project Voidmilker’s trver and rawer black metal attack offered meager redemption. Time has passed, so how will Equinox Flower fare?
Hugo has not been sitting on his hands; although Wildlife was the first release sent to our humble establishment, it was the third full-length and there have been three(ish) full-lengths and two EP’s since its 2018 release.1 In Hugo’s defense, Lascar has taken a more streamlined approach. Instead of a stark contrast between the heart-wrenching and the blackened attack, Equinox Flower feels more dynamic and balanced. While atmosphere is first and foremost, as you’d expect from myriad post-black acts, its more diminished chord progressions and fusion of lush ambiance and heavier black metal instrumentation set it above Lascar’s history. Old habits die hard, but Equinox Flower is a better album than I ever expected from this act.
The streamlined approach works for Lascar’s aesthetic better, that while Equinox Flower’s first priority is melody and beauty, it does awkwardly juxtapose it with black metal but rather fuses them. As such, the four tracks here are given more opportunity to flow and breathe, effectively utilizing its atmosphere in place of hooks, while the blackened attack gives it needed momentum. Also useful is that Hugo seems to have taken a more depressive approach not unlike Naxen or Austere which doesn’t undermine its blackened thrust while more diminished chord progressions and melodies recall Evilfeast or Midnight Odyssey. More long-form tracks do the album a fair amount of good, because while the atmospheric bombast felt rushed and muddled in Wildlife, Equinox Flower effectively balances, with a fairer production and mixing blueprint to go by, each of Lascar’s instruments given its due.2
Case in point, closer “Late Autumn” feels like a very solid black metal song complete with melodic tremolo, double bass, and blastbeats as a backbone while the soaring ambiance serves as a transcendent motif that enhances the nature-based vibe. The opening title track and “Early Spring” also utilize memorable hooks and passages of tranquility to provide an organicity that was sorely lacking in the stiff and unyielding Wildlife. In fact, aside from listener stylistic choices, third track “Floating Weeds” is the only track with issues. Existing as the only cut without lulling passages, the overwhelming synth hook gets incredibly old incredibly fast as the track length backfires. Of course, Lascar remains post-black or blackgaze or whatever, and an extremely triumphant version of it, the more subtle atmospheres of Wolves in the Throne Room or Alcest be damned, and thus listeners who are expecting more subtlety will be disappointed by the (albeit better) post-black bombast.
When I was alerted of Lascar’s new album, I sighed heavily, expecting the pretty and paper-thin shenanigans of Wildlife from my fledgling years to rear their ugly pretty heads. However, thanks to a more organic songwriting and safer utility of melody and ambiance, Equinox Flower turned out to be a surprisingly pleasant experience. It’s still stubbornly post-black with all the warts and bombast you expect, but channeled into a far more productive form. Sorry for ever doubting you, Lascar. Keep improving, you glorious bastard you.
Rating: 3.0/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Tragedy Productions
Websites: lascar.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/lascarmusic
Releases Worldwide: June 7th, 2024
#2024 #30 #Alcest #AmbientBlackMetal #AtmosphericBlackMetal #Austere #BlackMetal #Blackgaze #ChileanMetal #Deafheaven #DSBM #EquinoxFlower #Evilfeast #Jun24 #Lascar #MidnightOdyssey #Naxen #PostBlackMetal #Review #Reviews #TragedyProductions #Voidmilker #WolvesInTheThroneRoom
Naxen: Ziemlich massiver Black Metal mit geschmackvollen Epic-Einschüben (z.B. ab Minute 3)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oTbFFbSDWsk
#Naxen #DescendingIntoADeeperDarkness #FullAlbum #GermanBlackMetal
🔊 #NowPlaying on #KEXP's #SeekAndDestroy
NAXEN:
🎵 To Writhe in the Womb of Night
https://open.spotify.com/track/5aGQDWkSjifJIfUzLZIamH
https://naxen.bandcamp.com/track/to-writhe-in-the-womb-of-night-2
#Bandcamp
Naxen – Descending Into a Deeper Darkness Review
By Dear Hollow
Last we met Germany’s Naxen, we were deep in the swills of the pandemic lockdown here in the States. Released in June of 2020, debut full-length Towards the Tomb of Times was a solid black metal affair that I gleefully awarded a 3.5 but just never listened to again. Not that it was bad by any means, but it did not have the staying power I expected. The trio exists in the cross-section of black metal, adhering to hints of melodic black and death metal, but is pure unadulterated black metal. As such, aside from the act’s adoration of alliteration, we’ve got ourselves a neat lil’ blackened number.
Naxen has been around the blackened block, having released alliterative albums since 2018, including EPs To Abide in Ancient Abysses, Of Fainting Faith in Futile Flesh, and The Perilous Path of Pain as well as 2020’s debut. If you know black metal, there’s really nothing terribly unique about Descending Into a Deeper Darkness, but that’s okay. Semi-raw, semi-dense tremolo and heavy guitar grooves dance about the ears with harsh rasps, while percussion varies between funereal plods and blazing blastbeats. United by a feeling of melancholy founded in more depressive interpretations, Naxen offers us a rock-solid black metal album that ascends its alliterative antecedent by an awful amount.
Comprising four tracks with lengthier compositions dominated by diminished chord progressions, songs are smartly composed and neatly executed. Naxen attacks with a blend of scathing and riffy, balanced by sustained melodic plucking that adds a beating heart to the mid-tempo attack. The melodic layers of guitar plucking in the closing portion of “Our Souls Shall Fall Forever” or the heart-wrenching melodic template of “Triumphant Tongue of a Thousand Swords,” for instance, make their respective attacks extremely memorable in the balance of melody and shredding punishment – seriously, the latter really provided the scratch to the brain I needed. These two are most solid, while the fluid movements of “To Writhe in the Womb of Night” revel in a Trist-esque tremolo buzz while shapes of vocals and melody emerge and submerge around it, including an immense percussive presence that feels nimble and pummeling in its necessary measures. The most traditionally punishing track is “A Shadow in the Fire – Pt. III (A Life Led by Loss),” more punky upbeat drumming colliding with barbed-wire tones of drawling guitar, stinging melodies, and rabid percussion fills.
There is little to complain about in terms of the album at large or Naxen’s performance, but it likely should go without saying that four tracks with massive track lengths require a fair amount of patience. As fluid and smartly composed as “To Writhe in the Womb of Night” is, for instance, its melodic approach does not hold up as well as “Triumphant Tongue of a Thousand Swords,” and it grows old quicker over nine minutes than the latter’s fourteen, while the melodies in “A Shadow in the Fire…” can feel directionless in comparison to its more crushing moments as well as its successor in the closing opus. As with its debut, Naxen exists in the shadow of the early 2010s black metal releases of the likes of Altar of Plagues, Svartidauði, or Wolves in the Throne Room, whose more protracted lengths added up to greater breathing room and dynamic growth for both contemplative and punishment, but it still requires a fair amount of patience to sit through.
Naxen will not change your mind about black metal, but they also don’t make any pretense about doing so. It’s black metal with a melodic sensibility and an ear for dynamic songwriting, nothing more and nothing less. The bookends are the undisputed highlights in expert balance of melody, crunch, and shred, although the relatively weaker middle portions feature neat punishment and fluid songwriting themselves. In the end, Descending Into a Deeper Darkness is far from mediocre, but its alliterative bad self doesn’t do its duty in decreasing black metal dread. If you are a black metal fan, dive deep into Descending Into a Deeper Darkness, never neglecting Naxen.
Rating: 3.0/5.0
DR: 5 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Vendetta Records
Websites: naxen.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/naxenbm
Releases Worldwide: May 3rd, 2024
#2024 #30 #AltarOfPlagues #BlackMetal #DescendingIntoADeeperDarkness #DSBM #GermanMetal #May24 #MelodicBlackMetal #Naxen #Review #Reviews #Svartidauði #Trist #VendettaRecords #WolvesInTheThroneRoom
Naxen - Descending into a Deeper Darkness
min. Top 5 #BlackMetal this year.
Country: Germany | Year: 2024 | Genre: Black Metal CD, LP, MC, Merch & Digital Album available here: https://naxen.bigcartel.com https://vendettarecords.bigcartel.com https://naxen.bandcamp.com https://vendetta-records.bandcamp.com - Naxen - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/NAXENBM Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/naxenbm Bandcamp: https://naxen.bandcamp.com Metal Archives: https://www.metal-archives.com/bands/Naxen/3540447049 - Vendetta Records - Website: https://vendetta-records.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/vendettacult Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/vendettarecs Bandcamp: https://vendetta-records.bandcamp.com Bigcartel: https://vendettarecords.bigcartel.com Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNAYPvnIrPgXlhduhmbeOrw Tracklist: 1. Our Souls Shall Fall Forever 00:00 2. To Whrite in the Womb of Night 09:04 3. A Shadow in the Fire - Part III (A Life Led by Loss) 18:15 4. Triumphant Tongue of a Thounsand Swords 28:28 Upload on behalf of Naxen!
"Our souls shall fall forever
...
We will find no solace in this world’s embrace"
❤️🔥
https://naxen.bandcamp.com/album/descending-into-a-deeper-darkness
#Naxen #DescendingIntoADeeperDarkness #ThereIsNoLight #OnlyTheNightKnows #metal #BlackMetal #DepressiveBlackMetal #DSBM #BandcampFriday
4 track album
Happy #BandcampFriday, comrades!
#ICYMI and/or may be struggling to spend your hard-earned money... 💸
❤️🔥 New #Naxen comes out in less than a month.
https://naxen.bandcamp.com/album/descending-into-a-deeper-darkness
👊 #WitchVomit have just dropped #FuneralSanctum.
https://20buckspin.bandcamp.com/album/funeral-sanctum
🤘Catch up with #MetalMatters best of March recommendations.
https://www.popmatters.com/best-metal-albums-march-2024
#metal #BlackMetal #DeathMetal #DoomMetal #Aberration #Acathexis #Apparition #Boundaries #Cancervo #Coffins #Dionysiaque #Dodsrit #FrailBody #Mastiff #Zombi
4 track album
Some impressions from #Samhain Festival in #Maastricht last weekend.
Finally had the chance to see #Unru live and I'm still impressed from the concert. Go listen to their latest album "Die Wiederkehr des Verdrängten".
Also finally saw (Dolch), Darkspace and Naxen performing live. Afsky was also excellent as always.