Ravishing Grimness
Darkthrone
- Style
- Black Metal
- Label
- Moonfog Productions
- Year
- 1999
- Reviewed by
- James
/ 100
Goat:
Killing songs: <i>Lifeless, The Beast, The Claws Of Time
After something of a hiatus following
the so-so Total Death,
Darkthrone
returned three years later with Ravishing
Grimness,
one of the more underrated albums in their extensive back catalogue.
It continues down the same Celtic
Frostian-path
they'd been going down since Panzerfaust,
but the band sound revitalized here, Ravishing
Grimness
benefiting from a thick, seasick guitar tone that's sure to raise the
ire of black metal purists. There's a hint of the brawling black n'
roll sound they'd pick up on in later releases, the end of Lifeless
and the punkish attack of The
Beast
riding on blackened Motorhead
riffing. Not that there's an absence of the blackened majesty of old,
as highlight The
Claws Of Time
is as good as anything they've ever done, the sweeping opening riff
pre-empting the likes of Wolves
In The Throne Room
by a good few years. It's a track that doesn't sound like anything
else in the Darkthrone
catalogue, and it certainly would have been interesting to see them
go in that direction rather than become snotty black n' roll
pranksters. It would have saved us from the mess that was Dark
Thrones And Black Flags,
at least, and who knows, it may well have sparked an artistic revival
for the band.
Coming
as it did at the demise of the Norwegian black metal scene, with most
of the major players in decline or moving away from black metal
altogether, Ravishing
Grimness
seems to be Darkthrone
taking on the mantle of elder statesmen, reliably churning out solid
albums every couple of years. Ravishing
Grimness
isn't the band trying to reclaim the position as leaders of the black
metal pack, it's the band kicking back and playing the music they
want to make, free from the pressures of critical or fan expectation.
And as a record by a band in the more advanced stages of their
career, the days of being something fresh and exciting behind them,
you really can't fault Ravishing
Grimness.
It's not always the most exciting of releases, but the band never put
a foot wrong, and even the weak spot that is the title track is
merely a bit dull.
However,
it's fair to say that the band didn't have much left in the tank at
this point. The album is brief at six songs and just over thirty five minutes, a good ten minutes shorter than the average Darkthrone
release. But that's probably to the album's benefit, Ravishing
Grimness being
one of the more accessible things they've put out. Pretty much each
song has it's own separate identity, and although the album falls off
a bit towards the end it doesn't outstay its' welcome. I wouldn't
recommend it before hearing any of their classic releases, or even
Goatlord,
but if you're still in need of a Darkthrone
fix after working your way through their best material you could do a
lot worse than Ravishing
Grimness.
Not life-changing, but a solid shot of black metal in your day.