An Aeons-Long Shadow
Under Eden
- Style
- Death Metal
- Label
- Sleaszy Rider Records
- Year
- 2017
- Reviewed by
- Andy
/ 100
Killing songs: <i>Aeon Alpha-Storming Primordial Shores</i>, <i>Catalyst for Massacre</i>
Returning after a six-year pause in album-making, St. Paul death metal outfit Under Eden lays down a thrash-oriented death
metal sound with a lot of melody in their newest, An Aeons-Long Shadow. An album dominated by the guitars, with
an almost painfully sharp production, it's a good, solid album following the same themes of extraterrestrial meddling
with humanity that they had on their last one.
The production needs some getting used to. Everything's so treble-filled on the first track, Aeon
Alpha-Storming Primordial Shores, that for a second I thought this was a demo. Nope, it's just the way they mixed
the drums and guitars. Halfway through the second track you forget all about the odd production and get down to some
nice headbanging: the band knows both how to thrash and how to write a consistent melody that combines
off-kilter beats with a wrist-breaking rhythm palm-mute, such as on Eclipsing Even Darkness. Where the demo-style
production works for the band is when a solo breaks out; with the highs so sharply defined, the lead guitar, crammed in
front of the mix is a razor-edged affair that stands out over the stolid, blocky rhythm chords. Frontman Alex Gorgos
also does a decent job of snarling out the nearly unintelligible vocals, in an ursine growl that blends tightly with the
riffing.
It must be admitted that there are a few too many plodding beats, though. The opener is a good sample of what has the
band shining the most, a good alternation of inexorable rhythm with raging speed, and so is Unseen by the Sane
(Darkness Ascends), but some of the others are a little too predictable. This is partially corrected by Under
Eden's willingness to vary the slower pieces with clean instruments and break them up with more dramatic riffing
than the ordinary blastbeat-driven fare that is the meat and potatoes on the sonic menu -- Catalyst for Massacre
shows them especially good at that balancing act. Then, too, are the unconventional choices of guest vocals, done by
fellow Minnesota metallers. On Ensnared in the Rapture, they bring in former Visions of Atlantis singer
Melissa Ferlaak, and the next song has Dawn of Valor's Justin Howland. They're certainly a strange experience for
anyone who's heard their vocals only in the context of their normal bands, but they make it work, partially because both
guests only sing a line or two before being ushered offstage.
An Aeons-Long Shadow shows a solid performance by Under Eden, resulting in an album that makes for a
decent listen without blowing listeners away. This isn't pure melodeath -- there's more traditional death metal in the album than a Gothenburg album would admit to -, but listeners to melodeath will probably like this more than would those who prefer
mindblowing technical expertise or old-school brutality.