Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Ensiferum - Victory Songs (2007)

Losing Jari Mäenpää to Wintersun in 2004 was a big blow to Ensiferum who by this time had already released two great folk/viking metal albums and were on tour. Initially Petri Lindroos (formerly of Norther) stepped in as a live replacement, but he was soon made a full member by the band. So with a new vocalist/guitarist, a new bassist/singer/songwriter, and a new drummer, could Ensiferum come back despite losing their amazing multi-talented frontman and a new line-up?

The answer is yes.

Musically, Victory Songs is similar to the extremely fast and aggressive folk metal characteristic of Ensiferum heard on their previous two albums - though the genre-merging Jari Mäenpää was so fond of is obviously absent (which I'm not sure is a positive or a negative). With the loss of Jari the vocals have been divided between Petri Lindroos (harsh), Sami Hinkka (clean), and Markus Toivonen (clean) creating a dynamic sound that I really enjoy. Petri thankfully uses a completely different vocal style from his work with Norther, a harsh throaty singing style that really fits in well with the music.

"Ad Victoriam" begins the album with a quite long folky intro which leads into "Blood is the Price of Glory" a great Amon Amarth-esque song about the honor of dying in battle and the cowards who run from it. The lyrics have all been written by newcomer Sami Hinkka (except for "The New Dawn" written by Lindroos) who does an excellent job filling in for Jari Mäenpää. "Deathbringer from the Sky" is a really excellent song telling the story of a dragon coming back from legend to wreck havoc upon the land. "Ahti" begins with soft sounds of the ocean (Ahti is a Finnish God of the Sea) which crashes into a sort of melodic death folk metal bar song - awesome. Then comes "One More Magic Potion", perhaps the greatest song about getting loaded off magic potions brewed by a strange old woman that you've met in the woods. "Wanderer" slows the album down - but not for a ballad, who do you think you're listening to, Rhapsody of Fire? Nope, just a badass song about the world's most interesting guy:

With bare hands he has taken many lives
He's had a hundred women by his side
From tending woods through the freezing north
He's known on every sea and far beyond


With it's cool recorder intro, "Raised by the Sword" brings the speed back up, and "The New Dawn" follows it with the fastest song on the album. The last song on the album is the 10 minute opus "Victory Songs". The first 3 minutes features a soft folk intro, but at the 3:13 mark the song picks up and easily becomes the best song on the album - bringing it full circle by using the main riff of "Ad Victoriam", heard near the end of the song, in the chorus and the eventual outro of "Victory Songs":

Swords in their hands they killed each and every man
Who dared to invade their sacred land
Victory songs are rising in the night
Telling all of their undying strength and might


Great album, pure and simple.

Verdict: Epic Win [10/10]

www.ensiferum.com

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Truly fantastic album. Good review, spot on.

Rhan said...

What he said. :P