The Dark Gods
Foudre Noire
- Style
- Black Metal
- Label
- Obscure Abhorrence
- Year
- 2008
- Reviewed by
- James
/ 100
Killing songs: All!
Foudre Noire are
the side-project of Horna/Sargeist
man Shatraug (working under the name Hellseeker here). And despite
the spacey cover art and length of the tracks, this isn't the
Darkspace rip-off
you'd imagine. It's fairly standard, raw black metal in the manner of
Darkthrone, with a
smattering of depressive, Xasthur-y
moments scattered here and there. Both parts of The
Dark Gods
are incredibly lengthy, both over fifteen minutes with the second
being over twenty. And so it's really quite surprising, then, that
Hellseeker has made it work like he has, especially considering I
find Horna
dull and Sargeist
unremarkable. But here the riffs are of high-quality, and fit
together in a surprisingly cohesive fashion, although though the
motif of dropping into a doomy, melodic bit is a bit overused (mind,
pretty much every black metal band who does lengthy songs does this
these days). There really is nothing of the cosmic about The
Dark Gods,
save for Hellseeker's suitably echo-y vocals. On the contrary, it's
fairly dirty, grimy stuff, all rusty guitars and sloppy aggression.
There's certainly none of the robotic precision of Darkspace,
Foudre Noire
sounding as human and homespun as black metal can be (the whole
thing's wonderfully live-sounding, as if it was recorded in one
take).
What's
also surprising about The
Dark Gods
is how not
of its' time it is. There's none of that freaky dissonance or
wall-of-sound blasting that seems so common of many European black
metal bands today, or the post-rock dynamics of their American
brethren. The Dark
Gods
feels like it's from a bygone era, albeit a bygone era that's only
really about 10-15 years ago. It feels like it comes from a time
where bands were starting to break out a little from the Norwegian
template, the likes of Judas
Iscariot
and the Les Legions Noire combining Darkthrone
riffs
with Burzum
atmosphere to create a form of proto-depressive black metal, although
still with a healthy dose of bilious aggression and hatred. Indeed, a
good chunk of The
Dark Gods
could have come from Remains
Of A Ruined, Dead, Cursed Soul,
from the sorrowful riffs to the damp, muffled, demo-y production
(although not quite as hideously raw).
A
bit of a retro-trip it may be, but Foudre
Noire
have made an album that is as black metal as it gets. The
Dark Gods
feels like the work of two black metal fans bashing out the music
they love in some basement somewhere, and I've always found something
very charming about that. The
Dark Gods
is a great album from a somewhat unlikely source, and if I was
Hellseeker, I'd consider spending quite a bit more time on this, as
opposed to the rather worn-out-sounding Horna.
The man certainly has talent, I just hope The
Dark Gods isn't
some incredible fluke.