sábado, 6 de agosto de 2016

MGLA – Discography [320 kbps]


MGLA – Discography [320 kbps]





The third part on the Crushing the Holy Trinity compilation, Holy Spirit, increases the dosage of anger and blasphemy, and brings more modern elements into the play after the relatively traditional Son, especially after Mgla has delivered its payload of four tracks and Exordium gets it turn. Still, the deviations from traditional black metal are nothing to worry about, old times are not forgotten on Holy Spirit, either.

Mgla is the only non-finnish band on the whole Crushing the Holy Trinity, but the band's black metal fits the compilation extremely well. Faster, rawer and angrier than any of the earlier bands on the compilation, Mgla has a mildly more modern raw production than the bands on Father or Son, but still keeps things much more old-schoolish than Exordium after it. Mgla's metal is quite high-tempo, warlike pure black metal, and quite angry, or perhaps more accurately, disillusioned and bad-tempered. Orthodox black metal riffing saturates the four tracks, and the entirety is very concise, monolithic, and would work extremely well as a separate EP.

Mgla's spot on the three discs is almost fitting. Almost. While Father holds the two bands with more atmospheric and unorthodox black metal, and Son could almost be seen as a tribute to the old days, Holy Spirit is the fast, angry, raw, and perhaps a tad more modern than the other two, especially as far as Exordium's contribution goes. Musta Surma, with its faithful attention to old-school black metal, first gives way to Clandestine Blaze's slightly fractured tradition, and Mgla is the bridge between Clandestine Blaze's music and Exordium's modern interpretation of the same themes.

The final band, Exordium, has the most modern, and perhaps the most middle-of-the-road output on the whole Crushing the Holy Trinity. Unfortunately, it's also the only band that invites the use of the word "mediocre" in the whole box. While the music is in no way bad as it is, it also lacks the defining something that would define it as a band worthy of the other's company. It simply lacks individual character, and sinks in the morass of modern run-of-the-mill black metal. The production is easily the sharpest on the three discs, and the slight fuzz on the guitar tone is obviously more intentional seasoning than an essential ingredient. Tempos vary, riffs come and go, but the fundamental ideas are either lacking or lackluster. The inclusion of Exordium on the compilation seems as an afterthought, or at least a less than well considered idea. Especially the final track, "Unevangel", is an extended, repetitive and frankly boring piece of work in its stretched slowness.

Holy Spirit ends up as the only part that lacks balance or a theme on Crushing the Holy Trinity. Mgla is a perfect participant on the box, and while Exordium definitely has potential, it has no musical charcteristics that connect it in any way to Mgla or any of the other bands. If Mgla works as a more furious continuation of the music and bands on Son, Exordium is disconnected from the rest, and remains alone even if Father's atmospheric and emotional bands are taken into account. Thus, despite Mgla's convincing and dedicated contribution, and admirable attempt at bridging the gap, Holy Spirit is the part worth the lowest rating.

So what shall be the final ruling on this Metal Archives rules defying excercise at expanding splits beyong the breaking point? From the atmospheric and tradition-abandoning novelty of Father, through Son's faithful old-school spirit, to Holy Spirit's imbalance, the compilation stretches a long way, and somehow Exordium manages to be the only real miss among the six bands. The order of preference between the first two discs is, of course, a matter of taste, and there certainly are those who would reverse the ruling on the final pair of bands, but to an older metal fans, Musta Surma, Clandestine Blaze and Mgla, with the possible addition of Stabat Mater, are the real treasures here. Deathspell Omega has its own following, and there surely are those to whom DsO's single track is the nugget of gold. In other words, it might be difficult to find a black metal connoisseur with a taste so broad that none of the bands would seem redundant to him.

On the other hand, the compilation has an internal logic that only stubles a bit on Holy Spirit. It has an obvious order, a progression, and certainly goes above the sum of its parts. It is worth its price, as long as you can avoid being completely ripped off by a zit-faced bugger on eBay. And maybe, to an ideologically charged person, it might be a statement, a thesis and a manifesto. But that must be judged by someone actually interested in that state of mind.

As a compilation, Crushing the Holy Trinity can definitely be recomended.


Mgla Official Website

2005 Crushing The Holy Trinity (Holy Spirit) (Split)
2006 Presence EP
2006 Mdłości EP
2007 Further Down The Nest EP
2008 Groza Full-Length
2012 With Hearts Toward None Full-Length


To prerecord: this is one of the strongest black metal 7” ever. Let’s face the facts:

Polish MGLA are among the most promising black metal acts today. Their simple formula: balance. Balance between a true underground sound and a professional production, between the genre defining primitivity of mid-90ies Darkthrone and brilliantly executed songwriting, between primitive and highly aesthetic artwork, lyric-wise between intellectual demand and well common misanthropy.

This 7” has it all! If someone I care for would ask me what black metal basically is I would turn on both tracks of “Mdłości”. Supreme songwriting and haunting melodies, grim vokills, raspy but massive production. Musicianship is absolutely proper and serves the purpose.

My favourite track is Mdłości I because of its great main theme/riff. What a catchy tune, a true artistic experience! Nevertheless Mdłości II isn’t much worse. A bit repetitive for those who need complex song structures. I do not. To play a good riff long enough is much more better than to throw in a dozen of riffs into a 4 min. song.

It’s so good to see that polish black metal does not only consist of Darken, Capricornus & co and the typical early-Emperor-worshipping keyboard-black-metal – which I like, no doubt! For Poland this is a different approach to black metal. Musick-wise and when it comes to the lyrics. Just to make you curious: its not about pagan polish fatherland and swords but in the direction of metaphysical nihilism. Good lyrics btw. High standard!


Belphegor – Discography [320 kbps]




Belphegor is a blackened death metal band from Salzburg, Austria. They originally formed in 1991 under the name Betrayer before changing their name in 1993. They are named after the demon Belphegor.

Early Years (1991 - 1997)

Belphegor was founded as Betrayer in 1991 by vocalist and bassist Maxx, guitarists Helmuth and Sigurd, and drummer Chris. The band released their first demo Kruzifixion in April 1991, and Unborn Blood later on. After adopting the name Belphegor in 1993, they released another demo, Bloodbath in Paradise on Maxi-CD format. At somepoint before or after the release of this demo, Maxx departed from the band, resulting in Helmuth assuming his role as both vocalist and guitarist of Belphegor since. In between 1993 and 1996 session member A-X performed bass, after which bassist Mario "Marius" Klausner joined the band as a full-time member.

The band was briefly signed to Perverted Taste Records, the label on which the demo Obscure and Deep was released in 1994. This release featured a cover of the Black Sabbath song Sabbath Bloody Sabbath. Their first album, The Last Supper, was released by Lethal Records in January 1995. At this time the band's logo was also redesigned to include two inverted crosses surrounded by blood.


Last Episode & Phallelujah Productions (1997 - 2002)

The band's second album Blutsabbath was released in October 1997, featuring Man (of Mastic Scum) on session drums. This was followed by an eighteen date tour of Europe in April and May 1998 with Behemoth and Ancient. The band's debut album The Last Supper was rereleased in 1999 and came clad in all new artwork and featured an additional six extra tracks from the Obscure And Deep EP.

The following year, the third album Necrodaemon Terrorsathan was released by Last Episode (nowadays known as Black Attakk), where Man again performed session drums. The band eventually left Last Episode and later denounced them as a "rip-off label". In January 2001, Belphegor headlined a few shows at outdoor venues at 'Fuck The Commerce IV', 'With Full Force VIII' and 'Hell On Earth' in Germany with support from Dunkelgrafen and Dawn of Dreams. In 2002, Belphegor played at the Summerbreeze, Brutal Assault and Morbide Festspiele prior to further German gigs in December. It was also around then when Belphegor first recruited drummer Torturer (Mor Dagor) and bassist Barth. After releasing their live album Infernal Live Orgasm on their own label Phallelujah Productions, they signed with Napalm Records.


Napalm Records (2003 - 2005)

After having signed up with Napalm Records, the lineup of vocalist and guitarist Helmuth, guitarist Sigurd, bassist Barth and drummer Torturer recorded the fourth album Lucifer Incestus, produced by Alex Krull of Atrocity. The album was released in December 2003, and a European tour followed.

Belphegor entered Mastersound Studio in Fellbach during September 2004 record their fifth album Goatreich - Fleshcult, again produced by Alex Krull. The band undertook a mini-tour in November with Disastrous Murmur, and played at the X-Mass Festival alongside Napalm Death, Marduk, Finntroll and Vader. In February 2005, Goatreich - Fleshcult was released in various formats, including a vinyl edition limited to 1000 copies. Digipack variants added the instrumental track 'Heresy Of Fire' as a bonus. That same month, drummer Torturer left the band and was replaced by Nefastus (Tomas Janiszewski). In April, Belphegor headlined the eighteen-day Goatreich - Fleshcult Europe Tour Pt. I with support from Arkhon Infaustus, Asmodeus and In Aeternum. The band soon departed from Napalm Records, on the grounds the label "did not support them enough" and they were "fed up with this respectless treatment."






Early Years With Nuclear Blast (2005 - 2009)

Belphegor signed with Nuclear Blast in 2005, and commenced recording the album Pestapokalypse VI in producer Andy Classen's (who also produced the band's debut album The Last Supper) Stage One Studios in November.

After having played bass on six of the nine tracks on the new album, bassist Barth was forced to leave the band and terminate his career after suffering a hand injury that left him unable to continue performing. This led to Belphegor withdrawing from a tour with Hate Eternal in April 2006, and Helmuth was forced to record the remaining bass lines on the new album himself while Robin Eaglestone (ex-Cradle of Filth, Imperial Black) was recruited as a session bassist for live performances between April and October. Barth's full-time replacement was Serpenth, who joined the band in October.

Pestapokalypse VI was released in October 2006, and drummer Nefastus soon left the band. Session drummers have since been recruited including Lille Grubber, Blastphemer (Jan Benkwitz) and former Belphegor drummer Torturer. That same month Nuclear Blast issued a special ammunition box variant of the Pestapokalypse VI album, limited to just 500 copies and packed with the CD in digipack, a patch, a belt and "emergency provisions". A vinyl version of the album was also restricted to 500 copies. Pestapokalypse VI was further promoted by a promotional videos for the songs Bluhtsturm Erotika and Belphegor - Hell's Ambassador directed by Florian Werner.

Belphegor were set to play the X-Mass Festival again in December 2006, however the festival was cancelled. Nevertheless they were among the bands supporting Danzig on their Blackest of the Black tour in North America in December 2006 - January 2007, and they toured North America again in February - March 2007 with Unleashed, Krisiun, and Hatesphere. With support initially from Kataklysm and Unleashed and later from Arkhon Infaustus, Belphegor headlined the Midvinterblot European Tour Part II in May. The band also played at the famous Wacken Open Air festival in August. In September, the band coheadlined with Gorgoroth in most of the venues on the latter's tour of South America.

In January 2008, founding member Sigurd underwent eye surgery, and because of this it was not known whether he would resume with his role in Belphegor. A few months later however, Helmuth said Sigurd had chosen to leave the band permanently following their tour of Europe in late 2007. For Belphegor's North American tour in February 2008 he was replaced by Anthony Paulini, and he was eventually replaced by Morluch as full-time guitarist.

In April 2008, Bondage Goat Zombie was released featuring Helmuth on vocals and both lead and rhythm guitars, Serpenth on bass and Torturer on drums. As well as a standard CD release this album came in a variety of formats including a limited edition digipack complete with a DVD hosting video clips, behind the scenes footage, a studio "making of" documentary, live footage and a "freak" section, and a further limited option in Stahl helmet packaging complete with dogtag as well as a red vinyl version limited to 1000 copies. This was followed by an appearance at the Hellfest Summer Open Air festival in France in June 2008, and they supported Nile and Grave on the Ithyphallic tour of Europe in September 2008. In October 2008, the band once again toured North America with Amon Amarth.


Walpurgis Rites - Hexenwahn (2009 - Present)

In January 2009, an announcement was made stating the band was working on a new album, and Nefastus again would be responsible for the drums. It was reported recording had begun in February 2009, and Nefastus completed recording the drum parts. On February 23, 2009, Helmuth announced the rhythm guitar and bass lines had been recorded in the second studio session. Ostensibly, the new album was tentatively titled Hexenwahn - Totenkult:

   As opposed to previous tales of the inquisition, this focuses upon the darker, more dismal of the mighty, powerful witches who conjure and worship demons. Those who have a pact with the forces of hell through the occult. The concept deals with demonology, witchcraft/ Hexenwahn, depraved suKKubi, blackest erotica, and as always, the grand devil, himself.

On 9 June 2009, the album's title was revealed to be Walpurgis Rites - Hexenwahn. On 3 July 2009, it was announced that the recording was completed and that the album would be released in October 2009. Furthermore, Brazilian artist Marcelo Hvc commenced work on the album cover and imagery.

The band embarked on another North American tour in April 2009, which was headlined by Kreator and Exodus, along with Warbringer and Epicurean.

In November 2009, the band joined the Heathenfest tour in North America, along with Eluveitie, Alestorm, Kivimetsan Druidi, and Vreid. In December 2009, the band played in South America with Obituary.

In January 14, 2011 Belphegor released another album entitled Blood Magick Necromance and toured the USA with Sepultura in support of the album.

The band was on hold after their 2011 South American tour until May 2012 due to Hel "Helmuth" Lehner going through a serious and difficult operation after being infected with typhoid fever.

Belphegor still looking for a permanent new guitarist.

Belphegor will release their tenth album, "Conjuring The Dead", on August 8 in Europe via Nuclear Blast. It was recorded at Mana Recording Studios in St. Petersburg, Florida with producer Erik Rutan (HATE ETERNAL, MORBID ANGEL, CANNIBAL CORPSE). Songtitles set to appear on BELPHEGOR's new CD include "Gasmask Terror", "Rex Tremendae Majestatis", "Take Her, Lucifer!" and "The Inverted Cross". The cover artwork will be created by Greek artist Anthon Siro Seth, who previously worked on BELPHEGOR's "Pestapokalypse VI" album in 2006.



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