The Devil's Resolve
Barren Earth
- Style
- Atmospheric Proggy Death Metal
- Label
- Peaceville Records
- Year
- 2012
- Reviewed by
- Aleksie
/ 100
Killing songs: White Fields, As It Is Written, The Dead Exiles, Oriental Pyre & Where All Stories End
Barren Earth garnered a fair amount of deserved attention and accolades with their
debut release, Curse Of The Red River. Mixing an atmospheric brand of death metal
that recalled the early days Paradise Lost along with different phases of Amorphis
while keeping a distinctly progressive edge alive as well, the whole package lived
up to the big namepower of the band's members.
Their second album, The Devil’s Resolve, takes a similar path while upping
the progness a little bit. The epic opener Passing of the Crimson Shadows and
White Fields with its twisted riffage have a clear vibe of early 2000
Opeth in them. The playing has a tight groove to it and the folky acoustic elements
are spread evenly and seamlessly along the soundscape. Singer Mikko Kotamäki
(Swallow The Sun) delivers the goods on the mic with both the growls and the cleans.
The Dead Exiles drop the anvil of doom onto the listener with the kind of grandiose
power that really makes you feel the Candlemass-style punishment. The flute-intro
in As It Is Written takes the listener’s mind to Stonehenge where dancing
druids make you wait for the middle section that unleashes some Emerson, Lake
& Palmer on your arse. The biggest highlights of the record, Oriental Pyre
and Where All Stories End, feature the kind of magical choruses that make you
reach out for the repeat-button with the quickness.
Take all this and slap on a very strong production job by the Swedish sound wizard
Dan Swanö and I dare say we’ve got one of the strongest Finnish metal
offerings of the year that could easily end high on the global listings as well.
For Barren Earth, it’s also a very commendable step ahead from a debut that
expectations pretty high. Their future certainly looks bright.