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Ondskapt > Arisen from the Ashes > Reviews
Ondskapt - Arisen from the Ashes

All this in man's obscurity - 82%

autothrall, March 20th, 2010

Ondskapt is one of the few bands that successfully hangs on to the naked tradition of the black metal genre and somehow succeeds in refreshing it with each new release, and alongside Watain and Dark Funeral they stand at the very foremost of the Swedish blasphemy. But where those other entities excel at writing faster, face-ripping Satanic volatility, Ondskapt is a far more morbid entity, capable of creeping out the listener like an old horrid film, as they give their compositions the space to breathe stale, dead air that bounces about the mind, casting ominous shadows. Ondskapt is a black metal gargoyle, slowly staring down at you through the ages with more wisdom burning inside its deadened stone lenses than most onlookers might ever garner.

Arisen from the Ashes is the band's third full-length accrual and trades in a smidgeon of the face-tearing, scathing intensity of its predecessor Dödens Evangelium for an increased sense of discomfiture. The band will still rifle through a blasting onslaught, but the majority of the playtime is devoted to a spookier, spacious exploration of the hideous occult, a ritual to rid the Earth of all hope and hypocrisy through the cleansing scourge of hellfire. It's not a surprise, as the band has evolved slowly through its roster shifts. Only Acerbus and Nabemih remain from the previous album's lineup, joined here by J. Wallgren and S.W. of Valkyrja on drums and guitars respectively, and rounded out by Avsky on the bass (who shares time in IXXI with Acerbus).

A bleak atmospheric intro paves the way towards the "Ominous Worship of the Divine", which perhaps misleads the listener into a feeling that this might be some generic, blaster-piece. This is the fastest track on the album, but even it takes a few pauses into a middle pace, and by the median it has devolved into slowly tinging drums, grooving black bass and eerie guitars straight from the mouth of horror. "A Graveyard Night" casts a hellish, dull glow through a serpentine guitar rhythm that is soon joined in resonant vocals and a slowly roasting atmosphere. "Vehicle of Stone" is nearly as morbid, with brief flirtations towards primal speed, and "Astute Sceptre" has this amazing overarching structure from which the guitars leer, bewitching subtly through a denser lattice of chords. The old black/death break at about 1:00 is a broiling catechism which can melt the wings off any angel of light. The remainder of the album is nearly as tight, with rapid title track being the best of its later moments, in particular the lurching, ominous tones entering the picture around 3:00.

Like a damned soul struggling to find an exit to his newfound pandemonium, grasping at lights which figure only as hallucinations in his mind, Arisen from the Ashes is a constant, cavernous reminder of the void awaiting every heart turned towards sin and sloth. It honestly goes above and beyond the usual Satanism to offer commentary on our media-nulled civilization, but cloaks its sentiment in the poetry of a paradise lost. It also does no disservice to the band's prior work.

Highlights: A Graveyard Night, Astute Scepter, Arisen from the Ashes

-autothrall
http://www.fromthedustreturned.com

Arisen from the Ashes - 100%

burnoutfool, March 20th, 2010

Well, Orthodox Black metal has reached it's prime. With bands like Unholy Trinity, Avichi and Ondskapt releasing extremely good black metal works, it's hard not to like the genre. As a person of a non-religious background, the subject matter is kind of dull to me. I mean, how many bands - not just black metal - have sang about the "glory of satan and killing the christians"? It just seems redundant to me... almost as bad shooting a dead horse. I will say that Ondskapt has always been exceptional in their music. They do have a feel to them that is almost like you're listening to the very voice of satan himself. Being that Ondskapt have had 3 releases, it could be said that they have settled into their musical voice, however, it could be that they are also just experimenting in their sound to find their true calling. I like to think it's a bit of both, meaning that they have found their sound, but want to experiment with it and make it better each record.

The intro is a noise/ambient piece. Kind of like screams of kids/women over some sounds of destruction and ambience. It's a nice intro into the first track. The album flows almost flawlessly too, being that all the songs link to one another, and the mixer had the perfect idea for this album. Basically it flows as well as Dödens Evangelium, but I like this one just a bit more for the reason that it moved away from being "traditional" and "cult" black metal.

The voices in the album basically follow the same theme as Dödens Evangelium in the sense that it's just a scream, found in most black metal, but it seems to have more feeling to it, as if he is drinking from the black chalice of the christ hunter himself. I would almost put this album in my top 5 black metal albums of all time, next to De Mysteris Dom Sathanas and In the Nightside Eclipse. It's really a masterpiece from all angles, especially Instrumentally. In fact, I would say that the instrumental tracks this time around are probably the best black metal instrumentals since the second wave from Scandinavia, even better then Marduk's Wormwood, which I held with high regards because of the instrumentals. The drumming stepped back from the simplistic blast/slow thrash/blast combo so typical to black metal, and followed a more progressive run, which is all around epic. I love it when bands step from the norm. It's so great to hear a black metal act that has traditional roots still, but steps away from the typicality of the scene.

All in all, I'd say it's the best black metal record of the 2000's, if not one of the best since the scene has started. It's a great place to start, even if you haven't heard Dödens Evangelium. It's almost as if you've taken a slow descent into madness, and Ondskapt is there to guide you. Buy this album whenever possible.