Decipher â ÎÎÎÎÎÎ (Thelema) Review
By Thus Spoke
Itâs not often I underrate something, but if there were ever a legitimate example, it might be my review of Arcane Paths to Resurrection, the debut from Greek black metal trio Decipher. Upon revisiting it recently, I experienced newfound intense appreciation for their slightly crusty melodic black metal, and this all stemmed from my initial spins of sophomore ÎÎÎÎÎÎ.1 Not overly atmospheric, not supremely dissonant or integrated into death metal, nor straightforwardly raw and aggressive, Decipher maintain a style in Thelema thatâs as subtly intriguing and melodic as it is punchy and to-the-point. The word Thelema means will2 and while thereâs no lyric sheet or storytelling in promo material to elucidate the concept, the snatches of audible references to Satan, and the generally extreme, yet anthemic vibe of the music broadcast defiant rebellion and the burden of being, which suit that word well.
Decipherâs sound is broadly the same as on Arcane Paths, a Watain-meets-Dissection viciousness temperedâif you can call it thatâby a darker, eerier side that pulls more from Icelandic acts like Svartidauði. Whilst remaining committed to frequent use of group-chanted and screamed vocal lines and plenty of recognisably malicious blackened riffery, Thelema sees the band experiment a little more. While not meanderingâwith the possible exception of âBound to the Wheelââsongs spread their themes into more variations (âThe Black March,â âTowards Renaissanceâ) or uncanny soloing, whilst rhythms shift more often, and build tension for longer before unravelling and transforming. The barely five minutes added is enough for the compositions to have more presence, whether with energetic malevolence (âReturn to Naught,â âSeven Scarsâ) or ominous finality (âLiturgyâ). Skirting the precipice that would see a descent into atmo-black, thereâs a relaxation and a layering to the melodic lines that deepens and darkens the sound.
ï»żÎÎÎÎÎÎ (Thelema) by DECIPHER
Thelema demonstrates that Decipherâs command of rhythm, melody, and grit has only gotten better, as it compels with the joint force of hookiness and evil. Using recurring patterns of riff, vocals, and percussion that each cue one another, Decipher create a thrashing feeling of push-and-pull thatâs downright magnetic. A group wail precipitating a gnarly descending arpeggio (âSeven Scarsâ); the way a guitar clambers up and down to the precise beat of the drums (âReturn to Naught,â âHail Deathâ). These manifest organically out of existing temposâblast beat (âSeven Scarsâ), march (âThe Black Marchâ), or shuffling skitter (âTowards Renaissanceâ) alike, making the shifts seamless and the identity consistent. Perhaps this is black metal thatâs not unusual on paper, but adorned with Decipherâs now recognisable bright yet sinister melodies, and continually layered vocals, it sounds freshly thrilling. The tingles that go down my spine when I hear the first riff on opener âReturn to Naught,â the solo that ends âThe Black March,â and the overlaid cries and urgent tremolo of âLitanyâ have not yet failed to materialise.
Thelemaâs enjoyability and power over its listener is also bolstered by Decipherâs additional refinements in areas not lacking before. By severing any instrumental interlude or protracted intro, the energyâhowever it transformsâand momentum are maintained, and the album has a more robust through-line. Rhythmic and thematic shifts flex and emerge variously with emphasis and mournful or spiteful intensity. The wails are just as agonised and chest-emptying in the latter half as they are in the first. Decipherâs production has also expanded to accommodate their slightly more nuanced and exploratory sound. Thelema sports a roomy mix that keeps the interspersed vocal and guitar lines, and the proudly beating drums and crashing cymbals equally audible and striking.
I recall bemoaning a lack of zhuzh in Arcane Paths and, whether or not I still consider that justified, it definitely wouldnât be here. For all the new layers and senses of intrigue, Thelema remains a black metal album with standout moments that threaten to overshadow and desaturate the more standard fare, and may strike some harder than others. It yet undeniably shows Decipher carving out a decisive space for themselves that adumbrates a dark, delicious presence. Thelema stands one step behind the inexorability that confers greatness in its sphere. But itâs a small step.
Rating: Very Good
DR: 11 | Format Reviewed: 320kbps mp3
Label: Transcending Obscurity Records
Websites: Bandcamp | Facebook
Releases Worldwide: March 20th, 2026
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