As the branches across white marble and the dead roots under the cold structures,
as the legacy of their kingdoms and the pain of the ancient albatross.
This is the final elegy, the red fury through cold centuries.
Watch the end of life with this tremble and honor the magma of resentment.
On a quiet and putrid atmosphere with millions of red light in the sky,
with a pyre of their ornaments and chants of remorse floating adrift.
supported by 32 fans who also own “Rusted Memorials”
It's haunting. It's chaos. It's energy. It's fatigue. It's happiness. It's sadness. It's love. It's hate. This is close to the perfect black metal album for me. Marcello Velasco
supported by 32 fans who also own “Rusted Memorials”
Dans The Density Parameter, Mesarthim reprend tous les ingrédients qui font leur marque de fabrique : des pistes assez longues au rythme énergique (très palpable sur "Recombination" par exemple) et jouant sur des structures cycliques, un chant qui erre parmi les étoiles... Les ambiances sont prolifiques mais elles changent la donne : gracieuses, certes, mais surtout plus mélancoliques qu'autrefois. The Density Parameter est un peu la dernière bouffée d'oxygène que donne la combinaison spatiale. Jordan Vauvert
supported by 31 fans who also own “Rusted Memorials”
I was always intrigued by this group's choice of album covers, it isn't every day that you see high quality space photos in this genre despite the rise of "cosmic" black metal. But the music blew me away, this sounds like Austere took the atmospheric spacey route. (I will assume it's a coincidence that both bands are Australian) porcelainheart-
Tokyo band contrast black metal's brutal complexity with shoegaze's abyssal grandeur, resulting in an LP that feels crushing, yet infinite. Bandcamp New & Notable Aug 24, 2022