Homeward Path
Vallendusk
- Style
- Atmospheric Black Metal
- Label
- Northern Silence Productions
- Year
- 2015
- Reviewed by
- Andy
/ 100
Killing songs: There's not a mediocre track on the album
Indonesia, my wife's former country, is a land where the charts are dominated by pop offerings. I've heard there's a
death metal scene which I have yet to check out, but the overall listening habits of almost everyone I know there tend
towards the frothiest of pop music. Which made it all the more of a pleasant surprise when Vallendusk's second
LP, Homeward Path, came to my attention, with a sound that seems to belong more to the frozen wastelands of
northern Europe than to the muggy climate of Jakarta, but with an overall signature of comfort rather than
loneliness.
Windswept Plain starts with some sweeping of its own in the form of a fierce but melodic storm of
tremolo-picked guitar, switching at the drop of a hat to folky, Agalloch-style acoustic musings underscored by
the distorted rhythm guitar. They've got a Hammond and Leslie organ that gives the songs a nice prog-rock flair, and the
following track, Earth Serpent, feels like a continuation, as if they couldn't manage to pack everything they
wanted into the first track. Rizky's mid-range growls are throaty, reminding me of John Haughm's style, and his rare clean
vocals, in contrast to many atmospheric black metal bands, are free of any trace of whininess. The superb sense of
timing of this band, though, is exemplified in Derek P.'s drumming, which is beautifully produced and is as precise as
an automaton. Some songs, such as The Wayfarers, will halt abruptly for a dramatic moment and then resume
blasting on the double-kick, which were passages I particularly enjoyed.
The part most surprising here is how...well...soothing the album sounds. Most black metal is designed to be as
bleak and menacing as possible, and all too often, when a black metal album is gentler, it degenerates into
aimless, synth-dominated emo garbage. No one can accuse Homeward Path of the latter, but for all its ferocity in
the picking and double-kicking department, it is filled with uplifting melodies that leaves the listener with the kind
of catharsis that one gets from watching a movie where the good guys suffer, but still ride off into the sunset in the
end. Their organ has a lot to do with it; its old-fashioned sound make a hypothetical synth keyboard alternative seem
like it would be fake and hollow by comparison. The production is another win; everything sounds crisp and stark, with
the exception of Rizky's clean vocals, which appear to have been deliberately muddied on the last track, Grains of
Horizon, which ends the album with a final clean instrumental melody in the last minute of the song.
I found Homeward Path to be as excellent as it was unexpected, and I definitely recommend this one for any
black metal fan. It shows some influences from northern European black metal pioneers like Emperor, but the band
members have clearly moved beyond merely playing in the styles of their predecessors and have a unique style of their
own. That style, here, results in a dark but positive album that is almost impossible not to like.