Sweet Death and Ecstasy
Midnight (US)
- Style
- Blackened Speed Metal
- Label
- Hells Headbangers
- Year
- 2017
- Reviewed by
- Andy
/ 100
Killing songs: <i>Penetratal Ecstasy</i>, <i>Rabid!</i>
With Sweet Death and Ecstasy, Midnight returns to LP territory after last year's excellent
EP-and-everything-else compilation. This one slows the pace a little on a few songs, which may take some fans aback;
after all, Midnight is best at its harshest and briefest, and it would seem that a -- gasp --
six-minute song would start getting repetitive. And so it is. Fortunately, Athenar combines his experiments in
slower and longer songs with his usual addictive blackened-crust songs, which are as good as ever.
While the first influences that spring to mind when listening to Midnight are Bathory and Venom,
Shox of Violence's covers proved that Athenar is equally influenced by early-80s NWOBHM, and on this album, it
shows in the riffs. Rabid! could be an early Iron Maiden song if it had more complexity, and Bitch
Mongrel sounds like the work of that band's endless 80s speed-metal progeny. Midnight's in-your-face sleaze
is slightly toned down, though, despite the welcome presence of Penetratal Ecstasy and Poison Trash. It's not like
Athenar has given up headbangability, or singing about hellish lust and perversion -- the whole album's swimming in it. What is it about
Sweet Death and Ecstasy that makes it tamer than its predecessors?
I rather suspect the NWOBHM references in particular, and the band's experiments on this album in general, as the
source of this. It can't be fun to get typecast into a particular song style, so I can understand Athenar's need to
branch out. But what he's trying has a greater complexity to it which takes a bit
of the raw fire and mindless fun out of Midnight. Before My Time in Hell underscores the band's need to go
somewhere else, by following a slower, more epic version of their thrashing sound much in the way Hammerheart-era
Bathory did, a one-man band that also changed its style drastically for several albums in a quest to reinvent
itself. Athenar hasn't taken any such steps, but a few of the tracks on here leave the listener wondering what's next,
and if he's starting to get tired of writing filthy songs blasted to a d-beat.
He's still a superb songwriter, though, and Sweet Death and Ecstasy is still a very good album, even if I
don't feel like it's the equal of No Mercy For Mayhem. In true Midnight style, the buyer of the album is
presented with another twelve tracks, in the form of a band rehearsal. Even if the direction on this album is a bit cloudy,
there are still a pile of songs available here for one to go back and relive the band's checkered past.
Bandcamp: https://midnight-ohio.bandcamp.com/album/sweet-death-and-ecstasy.