Showing posts with label desaster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label desaster. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Desaster & Sabbat - Anniversarius EP (2009)

Anniversarius is certainly not the first case of a pair of bands covering one another on a split release, but here it's at least two bands that I truly enjoy. It only seems natural that Germany's Desaster and Japan's Sabbat would share an affinity, as they are both pioneers in the world of black/thrash metal and possess a similar level of underground credibility (though Sabbat have been far more prolific in their endless stream of vinyl releases, splits, live Eps, and so forth).

This is a short but sweet 7" release; as a standalone value I could only recommend it to diehard vinyl collectors and fans of the bands. Sabbat covers "Porter of Hellgate" from Desaster's A Touch of Medieval Darkness (1996), giving it an even more raw, rehearsal feeling with Gezol's bass playing loud as fuck and vocals slathering in all their rugged charisma. Desaster reaches back further yet, with a treatment of Sabbat's "Darkness and Evil" from their 1988 Desecration EP. The Desaster version is an enhancement in studio quality over both the original and the Sabbat offering on this 7", but judging by the hellish, raw pedigree that both bands have enforced throughout their career, it is unlikely this disparity of sound will affect the intended listeners.

Neither of the bands takes a huge liberty with their chosen track, it's more of a tribute to one another and themselves: Sabbat for 25 years of existence, and Desaster for 20 years (Desaster even pays lip service to Sabbat at the end of their cover). These are both phenomenal bands, and if you're not currently owning at least their studio output then I've a mind that you are blissfully ignorant at best, or a rotten stinking poseur! That being said, this isn't the place to start if you're just getting into them. 7" and 7 minutes of energetic, primal black thrash metal.

Verdict: Win [777/10]
(holy cross, sink with light)

http://www.total-desaster.com/

http://welcome.to/sabbat/

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Desaster - Hellfire's Dominion (1998)

Desaster have always stood out to me as one of the better bands who can take the vitriol of black metal, mire it in brooding, old school Germanic thrash, and create epic, charging rhythms that might often feel familiar, but nonetheless immersive and powerful. Hellfire's Dominion was their 2nd full-length, and a clear improvement from A Touch of Medieval Darkness, but it maintains that albums folksy medieval aesthetic.

A glorious, brief instrumental (which sounds like Summoning) marches forth "In the Ban of Satan's Sorcery", with fast paced melodic chords over Okkulto's sloppy but memorable black slather. The guy sounded like he has rocks in his mouth half the time, and often emitted broken, unfinished snarls, yet I would prefer them no other way. "Expect No Release" begins with a slow sequence of chords over a Slayer-like riff, before the drums pick up into another epic rhythm. "Teutonic Steel" weaves a commanding folk rhythm into a forest of spikes and steel, and "Metallized Blood" features some guest vocals from cult thrashers Lemmy of Violent Force, Wannes of Pentacle, and Thorsten from Living Death.

Power chords come crashing down
Screams of frantic aggression
Only the true maniac souls
Can feel the Metal possession


The album only gets better from here. "Thou Shalt Be King" is a bruiser that creates some dark atmosphere through its rapid fire riffing, and the title track is truly a byproduct of the Netherworld, spewing harsh fires at every victim, eternal punishment for the damned. "Past...Present...Forever" is dowsed amazing riffs that are both proud and sorrowful, and "Castleland" is just glorious, an essential for fans of pagan or dark ages folk black. The album closes with the sad electrified folk melodies of "Across the Bloodfields".

Desaster have wisely recorded most of their catalog in a grim, timeless fashion, with raw but beautiful guitar work, scabrous and salivating vocals, and a dark environment. This is the perfect thrash album to listen to while wandering the rocky hills of olde, reminiscing the bloody signs of battle. It's quite good, and stands alongside Tyrants of the Netherworld as some of their strongest work.

Highlights: Teutonic Steel, Thou Shalt Be King, Past...Present...Forever, Castleland

Verdict: Win [8.5/10] (words of holy can't break my spell)

http://www.myspace.com/desasterofficial