Five Treasures of Snow
Dzö-Nga
- Style
- Atmospheric Black Metal
- Label
- Avantgarde Music
- Year
- 2016
- Reviewed by
- Andy
/ 100
Killing songs: <i>Eyes of God</i>
Re-released as a digipak just a few days ago, Dzö-Nga's debut Five Treasures of Snow may be of
interest to anyone who got interested in them via this year's The Sachem's Tales. Listeners hoping for more of
Dzö-Nga, as I was, be warned: This is a much less remarkable amateur release from before Cryvas greatly
improved his project's sound, and its music is nowhere near as good as what its successor was able to deliver.
Before Cryvas added Grushenka Ødegård to do female vocals, Dzö-Nga was a fairly typical one-man ABM project. You can see
hints of the current sound in the idiosyncratic chord changes of the tunes, but there's more keyboard and
less guitar on this one, and what there is is so heavily processed that it might as well be computer-generated -- perhaps it is.
Some of the neat 90-degree melodic turns are very ColdWorld-style, but feel much clumsier than that project's
output. The bouncy keyboard chords sound good on their own, but as soon as multiple instruments have to coexist, the music gets a computer-programmed feel, the high bass patch found on several of the tracks being especially
phony-sounding. It's unfortunate, because a few more listens of the individual parts show that with more agile mixing, some of these songs would have a lot more impact.
And yet I can't say that it's all bad. Eyes of God still has some rather poorly mixed synth underpinning everything, but the
chorus has flashes of brilliance, where Cryvas abandons his hissed vocals and puts together a poor man's thousand-man
chorus, a sort of prototype of the one on A Seventh Age of Fire. Towards the end of the track, you can see him trying out better melodic combinations than the awkward keyboard chording on
the first two songs, and making some progress. He even does a bit of black metal riffing on Through Kang La. Ultimately, though,
Cryvas's weird sense of rhythm leads to cringe-worthy moments that sabotage the atmosphere of every song on the album to some degree. And that's the only rhythm we have available, because there's no timekeeper, not even a metronome. I'd thought he and Grushenka
didn't care much about the drums on The Sachem's Tales, but they were downright obsessed with them
compared to what Cryvas does alone on Five Treasures of Snow, where they are simply nonexistent.
This is an ABM release of reasonable quality, which is listenable without being memorable or giving much hint to the heights to which Dzö-Nga was able to rise a year later. Completists may dare to love it, but it's a tougher sell for others.
Bandcamp: https://avantgardemusic.bandcamp.com/album/five-treasures-of-snow.