Alleviation Of Pain
Chastisement
- Style
- Melodic (Very)Thrashy Death Metal
- Label
- Rage Of Achilles
- Year
- 2004
- Reviewed by
- Aleksie
/ 100
Killing songs: Another Pace, Destructutorial, Soul Evasion, The Journey, Tsavo - The Land Of Slaughter, Time Zone Zero, Joie De Vivre & A New Dawn
Sweden seems to be filled with skilled bands of the more extreme side of metal
these days. Chastisement, although having been in existence for
almost ten years, made the Alleviation Of Pain album already in 2001,
but couldn’t get a record deal till the end of 2003 with the now-defunct
Rage Of Achilles.
Anyone who thinks now that being a death metal-band from Sweden translates
into an automatic In Flames/Dark Tranquility copycat is sadly
mistaken here. Chastisement takes most of its influences from
very old school roots, mainly the legends like Morbid Angel and
Death. The band also throw in good doses of thrash and classic heavy
metal-like leads and even acoustic guitars every here and there, forming a very
potent mix. Singer Johan Klitkous growls are very much a like a bass-heavy version
Chuck Schuldiners throat-mastery, which sound very good with the brutal, grinding
riffs that the guitar tandem spews out. The thigh-muscles of drummer Fjellström
seem to also be made of concrete, judging by the speeds the man achieves on
the bass drums and with the pounding, precise thrash beats.
The opening instrumental Another Pace and Destructutorial serve
some extremely fast and heavy bunches of melody, with especially the latter
holding great debt to the rhythmic assaults of Slayer. Soul
Evasion dishes out some slower death metal-murder and good tempo changes.
The Journey is a more mournful instrumental with very melodic lead
patterns that give a nice chance to catch ones breath before Tsavo - The
Land Of Slaughter starts to hand out death (metal) sentences with a great
mid-tempo groove. Very Priest-like (Painkiller, anyone?)
riffs open up the most classic metal-elemented song Time Zone Zero,
which is also my personal favourite off the record. The very stylish and melodic
solo would probably even make Glenn Tipton smile if questioned on the fact.
The next two tracks, Disowned and Worlds Beyond are the mediocre
filler songs here that mash death metal and classic metal riffs together pretty
well but are just not that memorable. The beautiful acoustic-based instrumental
Joie De Vivre takes the album back on track with its enchanting, delicate
melodies and leads. I´d definitely like to see more death metal bands
having the guts to include more gentle songs like this on an album. An excellent
instrumental, much in the vain of In Flames´ Pallar
Anders Visa and Metallicas To Live Is To Die.
The two-minute follower Redeemer then again is pure black metal with
the devastating blast beats and circular saw-like riffs. The most brutal song
here and could even turn some hard core-penguin-faced spike-collars to dig this
band. A New Dawn finishes the album with perhaps the most modern-vibed
riffs in here, but also equipped with nice Maiden-styled solos.
A solid finish to a great album that leaves nothing to be desired for in the
production part, stellar all the way sound-wise.
Chastisement is a band that excellently mixes many styles
of metal together from the most brutal to the most touching. I definitely hope
that the current dismantlement that Rage Of Achilles records is having concerning
new releases doesn’t affect the future of Chastisement
too hard. Because this is a band that has the abilities to grow to great heights.
While we await, lets visit the pits of The Land Of Slaughter once more!