Diagnosis
De Lirium's Order
- Style
- Technical Death Metal
- Label
- Shadow World Records
- Year
- 2007
- Reviewed by
- Aleksie
/ 100
Killing songs: Diagnosis: Deranged, Extermination Network, Drowned In The World Of Delirium, Ebola Instinct, To Walk With The Dead, Thy Flesh Consumed & Incarnated Solvent Abuse
It’s flabbergasting how impressive bands can slither by right under your
nose in your home country without you knowing a thing. One of the finer advantages
we reporters have is that our lazy asses occasionally get served promos right
to our mail slots, so we can at best get gems like this one out of the blue straight
to our laps.
Diagnosis is DLO’s second album and in my books,
it is a textbook example of how to make death metal intriguing and appealing
in the year 2007. Musically, it nods heartily in the direction of Death
and Carcass. It’s only fitting that the album ends with
a blistering cover version of Incarnated Solvent Abuse. You’ll
get a pretty good idea of the record’s style by mixing the grim technical
mastery of Necrotism with the rocking vibes of Heartwork, just
wrapped in a vortex of disordered murder-chaos. If you thought the singer would
imitate Jeff Walker, you would strike out in a second. The output of vocalist
Infection brings in more of a Florida-flavour to the stew, as they are much
more guttural than you would expect. The overall playing is frighteningly tight
and the production is crushingly superior, as the music occasionally gets quite
chaotic, but the sounds stay clear and merciless.
Differentiating songs for analysis doesn’t do much good as the album
keeps a steady, speedy base for its entire duration. Once the punishing riffage
of Diagnosis: Deranged hooks you in with airguitaring aplenty, hair
will be flung onto the walls and fists be banged against foreheads with reckless
intent. When very occasionally slowing down with sludging chords, like on To
Walk With The Dead, shades of Nile pop up in the atmosphere,
which is only a good thing. Thrashy sections, groovy elements and grinding blasts
are served with good taste and just in the right places to make them spices
that really add into the overall effect of this steamrolling ball of metal.
Guitar solos are present but they are not given the front of the stage, as they
serve the bigger mammoth of overpowering very well with spirited melodic moments.
I guess some can consider Diagnosis an album with technical flawlessness
and bland songwriting but out of the descendants of Carcass
and company, De Lirium’s Order bring a very catchy, brutal
flavour into it with different elements from several genres. For me, the hooks
were abundant and blandness was nowhere to be found. I don't know what it tells us about the twisted mindframe of the Finnish music lover, that an album like this landed in the top 30 upon its release. Oh well, more power to the loonies. Definitely the biggest
surprise of the year for me so far and a must-hear for any fan of high-quality,
insanely skilled death metal.