Damien
Mystic Circle
- Style
- Black Metal
- Label
- Massacre Records 0
- Reviewed by
- Jack
/ 100
Killing songs: <i>666 (Mark Of The Devil), God Is Dead - Stan Arise, Kingdom Of Blasphemy, Unholy Alliance</i>
Damien… The Omen… After the movies, comes the soundtrack from satanic
German quintet, Mystic Circle. I was unfamiliar with the band
until they released their third opus Infernal Satanic Verses that had
sort of impressed me at the time with its bombastic and symphonic approach à
la Dimmu Borgir. In fact this album featured the amazing voice
of Sara Jezebel Deva (Therion, Cradle Of Filth,
The Kovenant, Mortiis) which was a big asset
for the band. That album was released in 1999, exactly a year after such releases
as Cruelty And The Beast by Cradle Of Filth and Nexus
Polaris by The Kovenant, and just a couple of years after
the amazing Enthrone Darkness Triumphant by Dimmu Borgir.
Symphonic bombastic mainstream black metal was quite trendy at the time and had
probably reached its peak.
Spring 2001 saw the band returning as a quartet with their fourth album, The
Great Beast which was at first, quite a disappointment to me mainly due
to the fact that the band did not employ Sara Jezebel Deva on that album (she
was replaced by Ophelia ???). The special edition features a cover of One
Road To Asa Bay from Bathory’s viking metal era
Hammerheart album. Repeated listens show this one as a superior album
than it’s predecessor.
In a few weeks comes their fifth album, Damien featuring the amazing
coverartwork of French artist J.-P. Fournier (Immortal’s
At The Heart Of Winter is his most reknown work). First thing I asked
myself was whether or not this album would be as great as the cover art. But
be wise my friend, never judge a book by its cover. Damien sees the
band as a trio, (they might release their sixth album as a duo) playing a more
straightforward true (?) black metal. This is not the kind of true black metal
of such bands as Mayhem, but they get rid of their symphonic
approach. The band still use keyboards, but they are less predominant and the
music has gained in aggressiveness. The vocals are getting a step further into
truer black metal territory, but they don’t sound too different than on
their previous work. The style moves closer to bands such as Dark Funeral
or Necrophobic than the likes of Dimmu Borgir.
This might look as a new start for the band. I don’t think the fans will
turn their back on them since when you are into black metal, you like either
Dimmu Borgir or Dark Funeral. A great piece
of unholy satanic black metal. Don’t miss it, or Damien will
curse you.