They Awoke the Scent of Spring
Lustre
- Style
- Ambient Black Metal
- Label
- De Tenebrarum Principio
- Year
- 2012
- Reviewed by
- Andy
/ 100
Killing songs: None
Ambient/atmospheric black metal is a trickier thing to get right than it first appears. We've been seriously spoiled
by amazing atmospheric metal artists who stretch the limits of what the genre can do (I'm a die-hard fan of
Summoning), but their successes in the field enable some artists to add some less-than-stellar offerings that
have little in common with their forebears but still try to call it "black metal". I regret to say that Lustre,
Swedish one-man-band Nachtzeit's ambient project, is one of these. His latest full-length offering, They Awoke the
Scent of Spring, is a series of repetitive, keyboard-loop-driven tracks that are a far cry from anything considered
black metal -- or even metal at all.
The first track, Part I, sounds promising at first. It's dark, slow, and droning, with hissing vocals that
have more in common with the "magic straw" the dentist uses on a patient than with any human voice, but are by no means
offensive. The track and riff is the same for about six minutes, with the vocals on and off, and then halfway through,
the melody changes to a more cinematic and forlorn melody, producing an atmosphere of fading nobility and grandeur that
I can imagine Silenus and Protector of Summoning busily dubbing clips from The Lord of the Rings over. (In
fact, since I had another six minutes to go before the song faded out, I tried doing the LoTR clips myself, in a solemn
a voice as I could manage -- and really, it sounded pretty good, except for the slight problem of being unable to stop
from chortling as I did so.) Ten minutes in, a drum track is added. This is a decent song, even given the very low metal
content, but it's the high point.
We go downhill from there. Part II sounds like the continuation of Part I, but the melody's not quite
as good, and halfway through, plinking keyboards are added to the mix. 11 minutes of repeats later, we've faded out.
Part III is a series of similarly plunking keyboards with a warm synth bass sustain in the background, paired
with a simple arpeggiated keyboard melody with a second, sharper instrument. The sharper line then cuts out, leaving the
plunking to go by itself till a little over halfway through the song, when the drums cut in for effect; that being said,
it's not terrible. Part IV starts with a pouring rain sample, and goes to an ethereal synth pattern that fades
into the background. At this point, I was trying hard not to fall asleep, and by six minutes in, the music was already
fading out in favor of the rain -- that was two minutes of pouring rain.
This is ambient metal, and it doesn't have to be the sort of thing to which one headbangs; there are plenty of quiet,
reflective, or slow albums with a metal pedigree that are fantastic. None of that stops They Awoke the Scent of
Spring from being a fundamentally lazy album that leaves the listener feeling unfulfilled, because one feels that
Nachtzeit could make more interesting songs than this, but is content to repeat 1-2 riffs after doing so. This has all
the atmosphere of one of those "calming ambient" CDs they sell in big-box stores near the greeting card section, and
while there it has a couple of good moments, by the end of it, there is no reason to spin it again.