Pale Season
Thenighttimeproject
- Label
- Debemur Morti Productions
- Year
- 2019
- Reviewed by
- Andy
/ 100
Killing songs: <i>Signals in the Sky</i>
Fredrik Norrman's haunting guitar work graced Katatonia's albums through their most successful period, and in
Thenighttimeproject's second album, he offers a similarly melancholic vibe. A master of depressive, vaguely
gothic guitar musing, he showcases all his songwriting skills on Pale Seasons. It's not as misery-filled as a
Katatonia album, and a lot more muscular than his work on Trees of Eternity, but its introspective rock
has many of the same ingredients and prospers accordingly.
Pale Season brings on brother and fellow bassist Mattias Norrman, as well as a new vocalist (a couple of
previous members got too squeezed on time committments). At first I thought it was less ambitious than the self-titled
debut, but in fact this is mostly along the same lines. While In Mourning's Tobias Netzell was good, it feels
like Alexander Backlund's vocals actually fit the sound better. While there are metal elements, this is a rock
album, if a complex and proggy one. Most of the time it doesn't get too slow, although not everyone will be a fan of the
wanderings of Final Light. Signals in the Sky, the doomiest piece of the lot with Draconian's Heike
Langhans guesting, is by far the best track, with Norrman's guitar style calling to mind his previous work on Hour of
the Nightingale. But Rotting Eden and Binary keep a steady pace and provide some interesting prog
rhythms, although it is a bit strange to hear the drummer from Letters from the Colony playing this slow-moving
neo-goth.
Many metal fans might consider this sally of Norrman's to be too slow and melancholy, despite the quality of the songwriting; what would normally be gothic doom on
a metal album is diffused into a vague dispiritedness here. But like everything else Norrman's done, it's done very well
for what it is. I can see myself listening to Pale Seasons a few times, but based on the band's overall enthusiasm level on Signals in the Sky, I can't help wishing Heike Langhans had guested on a few more tracks.
Bandcamp: https://thenighttimeproject.bandcamp.com/.