Scenes From Hell
Sigh
- Style
- Symphonic Black Metal
- Label
- The End Records
- Year
- 2010
- Reviewed by
- James
/ 100
Killing songs: <i>Prelude To The Oracle, The Red Funeral, The Summer Funeral</i>
When I heard Sigh
were continuing in the same direction as Hangman's
Hymn
for album number nine (counting mini-album Ghastly
Funeral Theatre)
Scenes From Hell,
I
was more than a little worried. Sigh
have never been a band to repeat themselves, and although the furious
symphonic blackened thrash of Hangman's
Hymn
wasn't bad, it was a fairly unadventurous release which completely
fell apart in it's third act. But here we are in 2010, Sigh
returning with new vocalist Mikannibal (Mirai's shrieks being less
prominent this time out), more real orchestrated instruments after
the MIDI-based prior efforts, and a none-more-gothic cover. And more
of the same, more or less.
What
does strike you as immediately different from Hangman's
Hymn,
however, is the rawer, uglier production. Shinichi's guitar is a
low-end heavy, rattling beast of a thing, recalling the deep, nasty
tone he used on the first two albums. The drums sound tinny as
anything, yet somehow it fits here, a cold-water shock for listeners
of a band who'd been getting increasingly refined and slick. What's
more, Scenes From
Hell comes
out of the gate immediately being faster and more vicious than
Hangman's Hymn.
Both Prelude To
The Oracle
and L'art De
Mourir
are full-on blasting assaults, the band returning to the queasy,
nigh-on non-existent song structure of their early works. Don't
expect any of the abrupt style changes of say, Hail
Horror Hail,
however, just lots and lots of orchestral flourishes.
But
outside of the three short, sharp shocks that open the record, what
about the longer pieces? These proved to be the downfall of Hangman's
Hymn,
the band's attempt at a more streamlined sound resulting in overly
repetitive tracks. The
Red Funeral,
however, gets it dead-on, opening with a piano and narration intro
(from none other than Current
93's
David Tibet) before alternating between sludgy doom and full-on
thrash, without ever running the motifs into the ground as was seen
on Hangman's Hymn.
And as a bonus, Shinichi's air-raid siren solo is perhaps the best on
the album. The
Summer Funeral
is the band at their mostly statley and orchestral, the song
propelled by the strings rather than the the riffs. It's here Mirai
shows his skill as an arranger, although the main melody has shades
of Imaginary
Sonicscape's closer
Ecstatic
Transformation.
The track ends abruptly on a distorted scream, the kind of cheap
shock tactic that the band have deployed much better in the past.
Would it have been so difficult for them to write a proper ending?
I
suppose Scenes
From Hell
is both a step forward and back for Sigh.
It's a stronger release for the band, tweaking the sound of Hangman's
Hymn
to make it more potent. It's also bringing back a little of the
old-school (and in my opinion best) era of Sigh,
the riffs and song structures being a bit uglier and looser. But the
avant-garde elements of the band seem more toned down than ever,
either coming out through the same orchestral flourishes we've seen a
million times before, or worse, cheap shocks that luckily don't quite
fall into the trap of being comical. Sigh,
it seems, aren't quite as deranged as they used to be, and although
Scenes From Hell
is
a great metal record, the band don't even really warrant the
avant-garde tag anymore.