Liturgy’s Journey Through Aesthetic

Posted in Reviews on May 17th, 2011 by JJ Koczan

The hype surrounding Aesthethica, the second full-length from young Brooklyn black metal outfit Liturgy, has been near-suffocating. The album, released via the chic and diverse Thrill Jockey Records, traces through 12 tracks and varying levels of self-indulgence, concocting a brew of brightly-toned black metal with a post-rock influence, at times feeling like the four-piece took the most memorable aspects of what Wolves in the Throne Room have done over the course of their several records and injected it with a sub-tech progressive edge and youthful vigor. Album opener “High Gold” sets the tone for much of what’s to come with an abrasive intro followed by driving blastbeats, tremolo picking, largely indecipherable screams, and a brightness in the guitars of Bernard Gann and central creative figure/vocalist Hunter Hunt-Hendrix, responsible for both the lyrics and music on the album, which was recorded and mixed by Colin Marston at his Thousand Caves of Menegroth studio. Drummer Greg Fox consistently provides technical highlights throughout Aesthethica, and that begins as soon as “High Gold” gets underway and continues well through “True Will” and the more prog-feeling “Returner.”

Those abhorrent of musical pretentiousness can pretty much stop reading this review right now. Liturgy more or less carve their name in a style of black metal that’s more geared on artistic exploration than the sheer anti-accessibility of the genre’s roots, and they know it. They’re young despite having been together as a band for six years now, and there’s a young player’s arrogance about Aesthethica, which mostly serves the album well in achieving its lofty stylistic goals. You can do it if you know you’re already doing it, and so forth. Hunt-Hendrix’s innovation, if it is one, is in adding the relentless prog feel to black metal’s given genre elements, but it’s innovation that comes at the price of meandering and sometimes over-thought songwriting. “High Gold” and “True Will” both start with an intro that has next to nothing to do with the actual song. “High Gold” begins with a kind of ringing click fed through effects, and “True Will” with vocal droning from Hunt-Hendrix that also shows up toward the end of Aesthethica for the full three and a half minutes of “Glass Earth.” Listening, I thought that was going to be the pattern for the whole album, but “Returner” begins almost in medias res with its turning, stopping/starting guitar riff and impressive runs from Fox.

Oddly, the two instrumentals on Aesthethica provide some of the album’s most interesting material. “Generation,” which follows “Returner,” is seven-plus minutes of insistent progressive riffing that, unlike much of what’s come on the three tracks prior, feels like it wants to bring the listener along with it. Not very black metal, but Liturgy seem only concerned with stylistic confines only insomuch as they can toy with them to provoke a reaction. “Generation” chugs, twists and displays a tightness between the four players in the band – bassist Tyler Dusenbury will get his high point performance later – through its repeating riff cycle that feels lost in the morass at other points on Aesthethica, the lack of vocals allowing the instruments to both breathe and make the most of a structure that, were it not so intricate and obviously thought out, one might be tempted to call a jam. Again, it’s Fox making the song. His snare hits have a consistent sound that makes me wonder if they’re triggered or replaced, but even if they are, it’s done remarkably well and doesn’t detract from his actual playing.

“Tragic Laurel” doesn’t offer much that “Returner” didn’t already give, and with “Sun of Light” right after, Aesthethica seems to dip where it really should be hitting its stride, leading to the conclusion that at 12 tracks and 68 minutes, the album is simply too long and that Liturgy, for all their creative will and clearly-expressed drive, are still lacking an editorial voice in terms of realizing the ground they’ve already tread and when pulling back might be the more effective move. If Aesthethica is taken in three-song movements (as the back cover art seems to suggest, splitting the track-listing as though onto the four sides of a double-LP), then that beginning with “Generation,” which seems like it’s going to be the most fascinating and engaging, is ultimately the most redundant. The last minute of the “Sun of Light” is silence, as though to allow the audience time to process what they’re heard, but with “Helix Skull” essentially serving as an intro to the second half of the album, they’d have that time anyway before going into “Glory Bronze,” which instead of capitalizing on any momentum that might have been built previously, has the task of renewing the fascination of the opening few tracks. “Glory Bronze” might be a highlight of Aesthethica for its contemplative yet riotous feel, but again, the album has basically had to reset itself before getting to it, and much of the forward movement has been lost.

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Acid King, Candlemass, Ramesses, Liturgy and Wardruna Confirmed for Roadburn 2011

Posted in Whathaveyou on October 13th, 2010 by JJ Koczan

The headline pretty much says it all, but I’ll back it up with the enclosed Acid King flier and the notion that if you’re going to book a flight over to The Netherlands for Roadburn 2011, now is probably the time to do it. Shaping up to be quite a year for the festival.

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