Jan 292013
 

Welcome to Part 20 of our list of the year’s most infectious extreme metal songs. In each installment, I’ve been posting at least two songs that made the cut. For more details about what this list is all about and how it was compiled, read the introductory post via this link. To see the selections that preceded the three I’m announcing today, click here.

We’re down to the final week of this list. In almost all the installments that preceded this one, there was some kind of discernible theme or shared trait in the songs that I grouped together. There really isn’t one in this post, or at least not one that may conscious mind is able to identify. These are just three songs that grabbed hold of me pretty hard in 2012.

WOODS OF YPRES

Most people I know who are fans of Woods of Ypres have been fans for a long time, and they’re devoted to a point of rare intensity. When they listen to the band’s final album, Woods 5: Grey Skies and Electric Light, they can’t separate the album from the eerie coincidence of David Gold’s death just a handful of months after its recording. The album’s reflections on death are inseparable from, and magnified by, Gold’s own tragic passing. For them, the knowledge that this album was Woods’ last lends the music a special poignancy.

I am not one of those people. Until Woods 5, I had never listened to any of the band’s albums all the way through, and even my sampling of widely heralded songs was limited. Given my tastes, the band’s music just never clicked with me. I can’t even honestly say that Woods 5 seduced me all the way through; some of the songs included more goth rock vibes than suited my appetites.

Yet the album did include songs that I thought were masterful. The one that hooked me the hardest, the one to which I’ve listened the most often (maybe because it’s less wrenching than some others I thought were excellent) is the next addition to this list.

It probably won’t come as a surprise to you that the music in this song is less morose, less doom-y, less gothic than other tracks on the album, and more hard-rocking, more tinged with elements of black metal, with caustic vocals paired with Gold’s baritone cleans.

The melody is also tremendously memorable — and the lyrics are fantastic. “The shock and awe, the fright and woe / And when I asked for a second chance, life said no.”

“LIGHTNING AND SNOW”

[audio:https://www.nocleansinging.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/01-Lightning-Snow.mp3|titles=Woods of Ypres – Lightning and Snow]

MONDVOLLAND

Exactly one year ago today, I lavished praise on Pestvogel, a free, three-song EP by this Dutch band. I also praised Bob Mollema’s cover art, which was one of my 2012 favorites. All three songs still make for a hell of a listening experience, but the title track remains my favorite. To repeat what I wrote a year ago:

“The immediately infectious riff, the big, rumbling bass, the pounding drums — they hooked me from the get-go. The rest of the song was a big payoff, too. The music is hard-charging and dynamically varied. The vocals effectively combine traditional, raking, black-metal howls and folkish clean vocals; the guitar tones and styles range from hammering rhythm chords to whirring, tremolo melodies, to clean guitar leads; the drums move from solid, rock-style beats to a blur of blasting; and that rumbling bass is never far away. It’s just a dynamite song.”

And it’s still freely downloadable via this link.

Web Site: http://www.mondvolland.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/mondvolland
SoundCloud: http://soundcloud.com/mondvolland

“PESTVOGEL”

[audio:https://www.nocleansinging.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Mondvolland-01-Pestvogel.mp3|titles=Mondvolland-Pestvogel]

A LIFE ONCE LOST

ALOL’s Ecstatic Trance was one of my most anticipated albums of 2012 . . . and 2011 . . . and 2010.  It did take a long time to be completed, even after word of the band’s revival first surfaced. But all of their previous albums had such a powerful effect on me when they came out that I yearned for some new ALOL, no matter how long it took.

Ecstatic Trance reflected numerous changes in the band’s sound, but that was to be expected with the passage of so much time. One thing didn’t change — the music was still built around mega-weight grooves.

I don’t think I would claim that “Something Awful” is the album’s best song. But for me, it has proven to be the most infectious, and that’s what this list is about. The same persistently repeating riffs and stripped down drumbeat that make it one of the album’s least complex tunes are precisely what make it such a compelling headbang. I’m also attracted to the spitting venom in Bob Meadows’ vocals and the spacey guitar leads that squall over the hypnotic lower end.

http://www.facebook.com/ALOLOfficial

“SOMETHING AWFUL”

[audio:https://www.nocleansinging.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/01-Something-Awful.mp3|titles=A Life Once Lost – Something Awful]

  8 Responses to “OUR LIST OF 2012’S MOST INFECTIOUS EXTREME METAL SONGS: PART 20”

  1. I’m one of those Woods fans, the ones who have passionately followed the band for years, and “Lightning and Snow” is simply one of the best songs David Gold ever wrote. Thanks for including it here.

    • I’m glad I picked a good one! I really wasn’t sure how serious fans of the band would react to my choice. I was just going with what appealed to me most strongly and what I’ve listened to the most from the album.

    • “Lightning and Snow” is probably my favorite Woods of Ypres songs. A few days ago, while in Chicago experiencing an minor ice storm that was marked by thunder and lightning, this song definitely came to mind. I am most assuredly a ThunderSnow kinda gal. David Gold will be missed.

      • I appreciate this reinforcement of my pick. I love the song to death, but I’m not the most educated Woods listener and wasn’t sure how this selection would be received.

  2. Speaking of Woods of Ypres, just out of curiosity Islander, have you listened to the two song EP Gold and Palmer did as The Northern Ontario Black Metal Preservation Society, and if so, what did you think of it?

  3. Well, after a year of not listhaving heard it once, I listened to that one Woods of Ypres song. And now I can’t stop listening to it. Dammit

  4. I loved the whole of Woods 5, and while Keeper of the Ledger, Alternate Ending and Traveling Alone but I’m just stoked to see the album featured here because for me, there’s not a bad song on the whole album.

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