The Black Flux
Virus
- Style
- Avant-Garde Metal
- Label
- Season Of Mist
- Year
- 2008
- Reviewed by
- James
/ 100
Killing songs: <i> Stalkers Of The Drift, As Virulent As You </i>
Mr Carl-Michael Eide has been having
something of a rough time of it these past few years, with his
mysterious accident effectively clipping his wings for a while. After
a utterly fruitless Ved Buens Ende reunion,
the past couple of years have seen something of a return to the fold
for Eide. Last year saw him break his silence with a guest spot on
Darkthrone's F.O.A.D,
and 2008 has seen him releasing a new Aura
Noir as
well as resurrecting avant-garde metallers Virus.
Last time around Virus
were
halted by Carl-Michael doing himself a rather serious mischief. Which
is a shame, as their debut Carheart
had
potential. It was rather too messy and sloppy for it's own good, but
it had a good sound behind it, something that could really be made
into something great.
So
it's a good thing that The
Black Flux is
essentially Carheart's
more
focused, mature sibling. It's still Virus
through
and through, mind, all weird chords and bizarre, practically
non-existent time signatures. I suppose this is where the oft-thrown
about comparisons to Talking
Heads come
in. Virus have
effectively done for black metal what Talking
Heads did
for pop music on Remain
In Light.
That is, blown it up, collected all the pieces and stuck them back
together in a completely unrecognisable form. For a more recent
example, check the odd, discordant excursions Deathspell
Omega started
going on their past two releases. Not that you'll find any blastbeats
or demented shrieking here. Carl-Michael's vocals are certainly
interesting in their own right, sounding approximately similar to the
style Garm used back in his Arcturus
days
(Eide's voice isn't quite on par with the godly Trickster G, of
course). Lyrically, it's every bit as bizarre as Carheart,
and
coupled with Carl's grandiose singing there's a passing, passing,
mind you, resembelance to Scott
Walker's utterly
terrifying The
Drift
(not that you'll be hearing a donkey crashing through the ceiling on
The Black Flux,
mind).
But
while The Black Flux is
a marked improvement over Carheart,
it still has many of the flaws that dogged that particular record,
albeit in a noticeably lessened form. There's still a disappointing
lack of variety here, the Virus formula
wearing a bit thin towards the end of the album. Yes, they can do all
sorts of jazzy, discordant stuff, but over 50 minutes of jazzy
discordant stuff (bear in mind that there's very little shift in
speed or time signature here) gets utterly gruelling. Still, it's a
hell of a lot more focused than Carheart,
As Virulent As You almost
sounding like a conventional song. I'm not adverse to more
free-flowing music, of course, but when said music simply feels like
the band are making excuses for not writing properly then yes, we do
have a problem.
Yet,
in small doses, I really like Virus,
and I really want them to pull it all together and make the special
album I think they can. While on The
Black Flux they've
reined in their experimental tendencies, and it's resulted in a
better album because of it, I'd actually like Virus to
really go
all out for the next album. A full-on jazz-metal album would work
well for the band (and at the very least, can I have some
improvisational soloing?), and the use of more instrumentation beyond
guitars, bass and drums wouldn't go amiss, either. Virus
have sown the seeds of a good
thing, now let's see it sprout into something magical. As it is, it's
good but a bit dull, and “good but a bit dull” records
tend not to stay in regular rotation for long, I've found.