Krallice
Krallice
- Style
- Black Metal
- Label
- Profound Lore Records
- Year
- 2008
- Reviewed by
- James
/ 100
Killing songs: All!
When I heard that instrumental maniacs
Colin Marston and Mick Barr were teaming up to record a black metal
album, my first reaction, and I'm sure many others felt the same, was
that it would be 70 minutes of wank that would make Orthrelm's OV
seem
like an exercise in good taste. I wasn't expecting a great album, and
I certainly wasn't
expecting them to make the black metal record of the year. Yet,
that's what they've done, and produced something more exciting, more
musical, and just downright better
than
either Orthrelm or
Behold... The
Arctopus (Barr
and Marston's main projects respectively, for those not aware)
It
all fits, y'see. Once you've heard Barr's blazingly fast tremelo
riffing on opener Wretched
Wisdom, it
seems nothing less than baffling that he didn't think of doing this
sooner. I was vaguely familiar with Orthrelm
before,
but it never occurred to me that his distinctive light-speed picking
would be perfect
in
the realm of black metal. Colin Marston seems like a less obvious
choice, yet he's the equal of Barr here, harmonizing and
counterpointing him perfectly. Krallice
play
black metal built entirely around the kind of epic, melodic riffing
that recalls a cleaner recorded Weakling.
For what it's worth, this is practically Dead
As Dreams part
two, albeit without the odd, muddy sound and the deranged screaming.
Speaking of vocals, there aren't a great deal to be found here, and
when they do make an appearance they're pushed right to the back of
the mix. Still, perhaps that's for the best, as Mick Barr is
certainly not much of a singer, barking away fairly ineffectually.
Still, who on earth would listen to a Orthrelm/Behold..
The Arctopus side-project
for the vocals?
Despite
not really doing anything wildly different with the black metal
template (there's no avant-garde excursions or acoustic interludes
here) Krallice
succeeds
as an album simply because it's so satisfying. It's all perfectly
played (musicianship in black metal is a much underrated quality),
and later on, on the likes of Timehusk,
we get to see some of the frantic shredding you'd expect from the
musicians featured here. It's all tastefully done mind, never
sounding like an exercise in self-indulgence. The production is
nothing less than spot-on, with every instrument being as clear as a
bell in the mix. What's more, every instrument is doing something
interesting at all times, with the bass in particular doing it's own
thing rather than simply following the guitars. Despite it being a
debut, despite the band having only formed last year, despite it
coming from two musicians with no previous experience in the genre,
and ones that I wasn't particularly fond of, Krallice
have
nailed it
on this one. With their first attempt, Barr and Marston have seen off
competition from far more experienced bands such as Leviathan
and
Lugubrum to
craft the black metal album of the year. The fact that it's one of
the biggest surprises in metal history is undeniable. Whether
Krallice can
keep the creative juices flowing enough to ascend to the pantheon of
black metal greats remains to be seen. But right now, coming off the
back of such a strong debut, the world really is Krallice's
for
the taking.