In Hora Maledictus- Part I
Benighted In Sodom
- Style
- Black Metal
- Label
- Obscure Abhorrence
- Year
- 2008
- Reviewed by
- James
/ 100
Killing songs: <i>The Shepherd And The Atheist, Uncomfortable Serenity (The Opiate) </i>
The figure of Scott Connor, better
known as Xasthur mastermind
Malefic looms large in the American black metal scene, spawning
countless one-man black metal acts following the template laid down
by A Gate Through
Bloodstained Mirrors.
Benighted In Sodom
are yet another of his acolytes, revolving around a certain Reuben
Jordan, perhaps better known as current guitarist for Bethlehem.
And so, as you might expect, Benighted
In Sodom
specialize in slow, torturous depressive black metal. The
Shepherd And The Atheist
opens up with a burst of hissing, static-drenched guitars and a
extended howl from Jordan (working under the slightly silly moniker
of Matron Thorn here). As is normal for this sort of thing, it's a
heavily digitally processed piece of work, guitars and vocals swathed
in layers of digital distortion. The rest of the instruments are
buried beneath the mire, the insistent throb of a keyboard barely
audible in the mix, drums keeping the music in death-march time. The
song marches on for ten-minutes, suddenly bursting into furious,
mechanical blasting at the end (I'm assuming the drums are
electronically produced).
After
such a strong opener, it's a shame Fountain
Of Lies
is a bit of a weak track, riding a pedestrian riff for nearly half
it's duration before it gets going, Thorn exchanging his primal
shriek for a half-spoken growl very reminiscent of Leviathan's
Wrest.
It may be clear by now Benighted
In Sodom are
not the most original of acts, generally cherry-picking from several
established USBMers, but at least they do what they do very well. In
Hora Maledictus
is drenched in atmosphere, and despite the fact that I'm currently
listening on a sunny summer's afternoon the record is still
pleasingly morbid.A little overly familiar at times, for sure (I'm
sure I've heard the opening riff of Discarded
Halos elsewhere),
but still surprisingly strong stuff, even taking into account that
there are seemingly over nine thousand bands playing this sort of
music right now.
Depressive
black metal is a fairly limiting genre anyway, I suppose, and you've
pretty much got to stick to the template laid down by Xasthur
unless you fancy taking a trip into Silencer-esque
gimmickry. Even after 10 years, however, it's a remarkably effective
sound, proving that there's a suprising amount of life left in what
basically amounts to discordant melodies played with enough
distortion to render them almost inaudible. Uncomfortable
Serenity (The Opiate)
is an instantly effective track, working in as much riff-based
alchemy in its four minutes as some bands do in an entire career.
In
Hora Maledictus-Part I is,
to state the obvious the first in a two-part series, with the
concluding half being released a few months back at the time of
writing. Expect a review in the near future, as Benighted
In Sodom
have what it takes to make them stand out from the USBM pack. And the
fact that they've done this based entirely on, simply put, writing
better riffs than the competition is commendable. What they lack in
originality, they make up for in sheer sinister mood and feeling, and
with Xasthur
rapidly becoming more and more artistically invalid it's up to
Benighted In Sodom
to carry the torch. Beware dismissing this as yet more generica as I
did, as upon closer inspection In
Hora Maledictus is
as strong as anything more established acts have put out.