The Bitter Selfcaged Man
Divine Souls
- Style
- Melodic Death Metal
- Label
- Scarlet Records
- Year
- 2002
- Reviewed by
- Jack
/ 100
Chris:
Killing songs: Don't want to pick up one, they’re all equivalent
My teammate Chris stated in his review of Divine Souls’
first effort Embodiment that this album was almost a replica of In
Flames' Clayman. I could not tell you whether or not it’s
true because I left In Flames when they released this album and
I have not listened to Divine Souls’ first album either. I am
a fan of In Flames’ earlier stuff such as The Jester
Race, Colony and Whoracle. I can however rejoin Chris’
opinion on that. This band is an In Flames’s copycat, but
not for the worse, only for the better.
The Bitter Selfcaged Man is Divine Souls second album
and they sound very mature. This album follows indeed the best
tradition of melodic Swedish death metal in the veins of what In Flames
has released best so far. This album is loaded with 10 songs built
on a strong and direct impact, supported by aggressive vocals and intriguing
guitar riffs. No keyboards and no samples. The 10 catchy
songs are filled to the brink with aggressiveness and a clean melodic approach and
keep alive the original Swedish sound. Catchy riffs, excellent songwriting,
harmonic solos, some clean melancholic vocals and of course a great production.
Unfortunately their classical Swedish death metal is too predictable and not
very innovative nor original and thus with no real interest unless you are a
die hard fan of early In Flames which I don’t claim
to be although I like their earlier stuff alot. But their music is good because it’s filled with the best energy
of a young band who just want to do their best. The lead guitar work of Mikael
Lindgren and the rhythm guitar work of Stefan Hogberd is excellent and reveals
some strong musicianship. Matthias Lilja's vocals are no vocal hysteria and fit
the music very well.
While it may not offer anything outside the realm that has already been explored,
Divine Souls’ second full length is a good album that
really needs to make its place among many other Swedish death metal releases.