#Helga

2025-09-22

Æl-Fierlen – All Is Far Away Review

By Killjoy

Like a specter emerging from the mist, Æl-Fierlen is a brand new post-black metal act that materialized in Southern England in 2024. Their name comes from an Anglo-Saxon phrase meaning “all is far away,” making their debut something of an eponymous record. This phrase resonates with me because, despite living so close to many wonderful outdoor locations, I don’t make nearly as much time as I ought to experience them. As if beckoning to me, Æl-Fierlen sums up their sound with the simple declaration, “We are what the woods sounds like.” If you long to become lost in mystic marvels, come take a walk through the metaphorical trees.

Just as a forest has both light and dark spots, so does the music of Æl-Fierlen. In this way, they sound very much like a sister group of Helga, weaving elegant post-rock together with strands of black metal. There is also a discernible folk tinge akin to cousin groups Kalandra and Suldusk. Æl-Fierlen mainly sticks to the brighter style of Kalandra, like a well-lit clearing near the outskirts. But sometimes the compositions dare to venture into darker Suldusk territory with ominous whispers and guitar strumming that erupt into blast beats and shrieks without warning. What these three related groups have in common is a captivating female lead vocalist, and Æl-Fierlen is similarly rooted in Stephanie Moffatt’s enchanting voice.

A lot hinges on Moffatt’s vocals and she comes through in a big way. Her singing has an otherworldly, spectral quality, yet is also warm and inviting. Then, in the final verse of “To Sleep Eternal,” she shifts to a higher octave which heightens the drama for a flourishing finish. However, much like Sylvaine, she is not confined to ethereal tones, adopting a piercing bite when the occasion calls for it. “Eðe”1 is the prime example of her masterful mixture of chilling rasps and guttural growls, and it also happens to be the song with the most black metal influence. Her coarse whispers cast a menacing shadow over “Pulrose,” just enough for an underscoring effect without being overused. All in all, Moffatt’s versatility is one of Æl-Fierlen’s most important assets.

Examined holistically, though, All Is Far Away seems a little thin in both sound and content. This is partly because the instrumental side often takes a stripped-back form, likely to accommodate the vocals. The other band members do have their moments to shine; I particularly enjoy it when Rob Melville’s guitar tremolos intertwine with drummer Ginger’s knotted double bass drum rhythms in the back half of “Ællmiht.” It’s just that these moments aren’t as pronounced or developed as I’d prefer. This might not have been much of an issue if there were a bit more to chew on. Clocking in at 33 minutes across only four tracks, All Is Far Away is barely longer than an EP. To Æl-Fierlen’s credit, even though most of the songs are in the 8-11 minute range, they flow silkily and hardly feel their length. One more such song would have been perfect.

Æl-Fierlen has a keen sense of grace and beauty. If, like me, you find it hard to set aside time to be physically present in nature, All Is Far Away offers a charming aural jaunt through the woods. Stephanie Moffatt’s delightful and multifaceted voice perfectly suits the evocative atmosphere. Each of the four tracks has its own distinct character, one leading into the next like a gently flowing brook. All Is Far Away is a cohesive and convincing first effort from a nascent group, albeit a tad on the lean side. While this may be more of a foundational work, I look forward to hearing what Æl-Fierlen builds atop it in the future.

Rating: 3.0/5.0
DR: 8 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Self-Release
Websites: ael-fierlen.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/AElFierlen
Releases Worldwide: September 19th, 2025

#2025 #30 #AllIsFarAway #ÆlFierlen #BlackMetal #BritishMetal #FolkMetal #Helga #Kalandra #PostRock #Review #Reviews #SelfRelease #Sep25 #Suldusk #Sylvaine

Hier in #Wacken wird anscheinend eine Person vermisst.
Ihr Name ist #Helga
Ständig rufen Menschen nach ihr.
Ich hoffe Helga geht es gut und ihre Freunde finden sie bald wieder

Harpij Pharpij
2025-03-30

@HannahCelsius nou, ik schaam me wel plaatsvervangend voor deze als 'vertegenwoordiger' van onze sekse.

2025-03-28

Nicole ist doch das neue „Helga!“

#fedi #fediverse #helga #nicole

"Haaga-Helian opiskelijakunta #Helga on sulkenut perussuomalaisten nuorisojärjestön vaalitapahtumasta. Syynä on aiemmin fuksiaisissa pidetty rasti, jossa ammuttiin leikkipyssyllä vieraslajeja."

Siellon varmaan taas argumentoitu, että #VitsiVitsi ja #KännissäJaLäpällä.

#Kokoomus, #KD ja varsinkin #RKP valitsevat tämän joka päivä.

#persut #HaagaHelia #kuntavaalit #aluevaalit #persunuoret #nuorisopolitiikka #politiikka #yhteiskunta #AMK #opiskelijapolitiikka

hs.fi/helsinki/art-20000110431

LASSEN_Bandlassen
2024-12-03

Wir hatten gerade eine sehr schöne Probe für das kleine Akustik- übermorgen (Do.) in der Kneipe in .
Morgen dazu mehr!

a f a s i aafasia_arq
2024-07-05

Blocksdorf ift.tt/stradc6 | posted by afasia | daily entries on contemporary art and architecture |

Patio Roof . Berlin Helga Blocksdorf Architektur . photos: © Ruben Be…

2024-07-01

Brothers, no surrender
We're all in this together
Sisters, no surrender
We're all in this together

youtube.com/watch?v=ns3yS64wAV

#Helga #RadioPouet #SomehowElectionDay

2024-04-01

#BlackMetalMonday #Helga One of my last years favourites.

Wrapped in Mist. Album by Helga.
2024-02-29

Suldusk – Anthesis Review

By sentynel

Way back in early 2020, Suldusk played the last show I attended before fun was canceled. I was introduced by the non-suspiciously departed Emya‘s excellent TYMHM piece on one-woman debut Lunar Falls. This sort of black metal-inflected atmospheric folk is incredibly My Thing, as you can tell from where Helga landed on my list last year. So Suldusk were a pretty important fixture for me, particularly in the tough early pandemic months. The whole thing has that slight air of unreality you get with memories from around then. Now they’re back—finally—with a full band and signed to Napalm, so the stakes are high for Anthesis (meaning flowering, or the time when a flower is open).

Fortunately, Anthesis is an apt name, with Suldusk successfully finding their feet as a full band. This sort of music is made or broken first in its ability to conjure atmosphere, and Anthesis is steeped in atmosphere. The acoustic guitar, violin, and cello work reminds me at times of the wonderful Nebelung (“Leven,” “Crowns of Esper,” “Sphaera”) and at others of Hexvessel. Both are favorites in the “lost in a misty forest” genre. At its best it’s genuinely beautiful; as I edited this sentence I got entirely distracted by the progression in “Crowns of Esper.” The second make-or-break point is not getting so lost in the woods that memorable songs fall by the wayside. Here, Emily Highfield’s vocals do a lot of the heavy lifting. From the BSG theme-esque intro to the almost campfire folk melody of “Mythical Creatures” to the unsettling cries of “Sphaera,” she offers many of the record’s best moments. Balancing these two factors isn’t easy and Anthesis manages admirably.

Many bands in this genre suffer a slightly awkward relationship between the acoustic folk and black metal elements (Myrkur, the aforementioned Helga). Suldusk doesn’t have this issue. The actual metal is used very sparingly—about half of the tracks feature fully metal passages, with only “Verdalet” dominated by this sound. Where it’s used it accentuates the songs very well, with a satisfying flow between elements. Unfortunately, the production hampers things a bit here, a common black metal complaint. When distorted guitars and blast beats hit I want it to thunder, but the production doesn’t offer enough room above the acoustic sections. This lack of contrast robs it of some of the impact. This issue hits “Verdalet” the hardest, and its placement as the first real track after the intro gets the album off to a slightly awkward start. Fortunately, it’s all smooth sailing from there.

I’ve mentioned “Sphaera” a couple of times already, but it’s an early Song o’ the Year frontrunner. The artful buildup reminds me of The Otolith, and every part of it from the piano to the spoken word sample to the vocals hits perfectly. Title track “Anthesis” nails the folk/black metal balance perfectly; “Mythical Creatures” is the catchiest song on the record. Finale “A Luminous End” brings together everything the album does well, and adds a solo by site cello bae Raphael Weinroth-Browne. As I allude to above, while it’s not a one-woman show anymore, Emily Highfield’s vocals are the most obvious draw here. Her versatility is notable, from the warm, sweet tone seen on “Mythical Creatures” to the cutting clean tone and black metal howls of tracks like “Anthesis.” The addition of Shane Mulholland’s pretty tenor on a couple of songs (e.g. “Leven”) adds further vocal variety. But the most impressive bit is how smoothly the voices flow among the instruments (“Sphaera” again). There are a lot of instruments to balance here, and the composition across the whole record is excellent.

My fear of reviewing bands that mean a lot to me is here assuaged; I love Anthesis. Beyond the production gripe, I have nothing to complain about. It delivers everything I want from an album like this: I can get lost in the atmosphere, hum the songs, and headbang. Suldusk have successfully grown as a band, both literally and figuratively. They do more than the debut without losing what I loved about that record. Anthesis is beautiful, thoughtful, and moving.

Rating: Great
DR: Less than I’d like | Format Reviewed: Stream
Label: Napalm Records
Websites: suldusk.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/Suldusk
Releases Worldwide: March 1st, 2024

#2024 #40 #Anthesis #AtmosphericBlackMetal #AustralianMetal #BlackMetal #Folk #Helga #Hexvessel #Mar24 #Myrkur #NapalmRecords #Nebelung #Neofolk #Review #Reviews #Suldusk #TheOtolith

FAWMfawm
2024-02-05

FAWM mascots Helga the duck and Sloan the sloth had a productive weekend collaborating on new FAWM demos and visiting the Rock N Roll Hall Of Fame!

Have you ever made trips for in-person collabs during FAWM?

duck and sloth in front of the rock n roll hall of fameduck and sloth using a drum machinesloth playing drumsduck playing tenor guitar
2023-12-28

Sentynel and Twelve’s Top Ten(ish) of 2023

By sentynel

Sentynel

Is it that time already? Whew. 2023 has raced past me, carried by a blizzard of endless Stuff. I need a goddamn break, which is currently tentatively scheduled for about 2025. As a result, I’ve been desperately behind on my listening for most of the year. I barely scraped together five reviews, all for bands I knew and liked, and was impressed by… one of them. I was nervous about my list all the way through to about November. Fortunately, I have once again ended up with a solid list of great albums, though the best doesn’t quite top last year’s The Otolith. I have lost track of what a normal selection looks like for me at this point, but this year’s big genre winner is apparently instrumental prog, while I felt it was a slightly weak year for post-metal. I also suspect I have more overlap with some of the cooler members of staff than I usually do, amongst all the records you already know are going to be on my list.

Despite a heavy year, contributing to Angry Metal Guy dot com continues to be one of my favorite hobbies. The other staff continue to have questionable taste, but I’ve found music that brings me joy anyway. We have new writers, I’ve met a couple of last year’s crop, and they’re all pretty chill despite their opinions on music. Everyone continues to put a huge amount of free work into this weird little corner of the internet. And my server load stats confirm that you, the readers, are still out there, using my bandwidth.

Finally, following Twitter’s ongoing trainwreck killing off the review autoposting there, we are now available on a slightly experimental basis on Mastodon and compatible platforms. Simply follow @angrymetalguy@angrymetalguy.com. (Note that comments don’t sync in from Mastodon, so you’ll still need to come to the site in order to tell us we’re wrong.) Of course, RSS and Facebook continue to be available.

#ish. Angus McSix // Angus McSix and the Sword of Power – I’ll defend last year’s Fellowship record to the death as serious music. The sophistication of its writing and the adulthood of its themes proves that upbeat, catchy power metal doesn’t have to be silly or lightweight. I offer no such defense for this record. This is incredibly silly. Honestly, between the track titles and how nakedly the whole thing leans on Winkler’s previous role, I was expecting to write this off as a failed attempt to recapture past glories without the wit—another soulless, forgettable pop-power metal band going through the motions. And yet it works. The fun feels genuine, the runtime too brief to be self-indulgent, the songwriting too varied to be a lazy cash-in. It’s infectious, it’s miles better than the new Gloryhammer record, and I’ve ended up listening to it a lot. I embrace the upcoming savaging in the comments section.

#10. Nuclear Power Trio // Wet Ass Plutonium – Speaking of silly, it’s the guys in creepy dictator masks. As I said when I wrote about this album, after a great EP they’ve stuck the landing on the album as well, cementing their position as serious musicians and not a one-off novelty. Fun, triumphant, soaring, Wet Ass Plutonium is an absolute blast to listen to. The musicianship is fantastic, and in particular I’ll highlight again just how great Putin is. (On bass.)

#9. Sermon // Of Golden Verse – Starring a rather more seriously masked musician, this is an emotional, gripping prog album. The only thing holding this back from a higher list placing is that I haven’t found myself compelled to listen to it all the time, which is definitely a me problem (see intro). The moment I actually do put it on I’m hooked. The dynamic, catchy songwriting has an urgent edge to it that gets under your skin and sets it apart from a lot of other prog metal, which can lack a bit of bite.  I absolutely love the vocal performance here in particular, but the whole thing is written and performed thoughtfully and impactfully.

#8. Ok Goodnight // The Fox and the Bird – In the best tradition of prog, this is a weird album. It tries to do a lot of things and manages nearly all of them. Williams’ charismatic, mood-changing vocals carry this whimsical tale. The first few times I listened I wasn’t sure it was going to stick, but I kept finding fragments of her lines in my head. With a few more listens, the whole thing settled. There are still a few little stumbles where weird and shifting gives way to just disjointed, but I find the rest of the album far too addictively, earwormily interesting to mind too much.

#7. Scaphoid // Echoes of the Rift – I owe this record more complete thoughts than I have space for here—there’s a TYMHM piece due, but see the intro for why it probably hasn’t appeared yet. In short: I’m a huge fan of this sort of pretty, thoughtful instrumental prog. I loved Absent Passages, and Echoes of the Rift is an improvement in effectively every meaningful way. Hobart has developed as a composer, and as a result it’s shorter, tighter, more varied, and more memorable. As with a lot of music on this list, my love for it is in the mood it conjures. It’s thoughtful, meditative, exploratory, and has been a favorite work and travel soundtrack for me.

#6. Sanguine Glacialis // Maladaptive Daydreaming – This record is A Lot. I mentioned it to Dr. Wvrm, who described it as “like Cradle of Filth bodysnatched Epica, then showed up to the studio and found it double booked with Nik Sundin hanging out with a jazz quartet. And instead of throwing them out being like ‘yea you know what let’s do all of it at once'”. Frankly, I have nothing further to add to this bit of poetry. If this sounds utterly horrifying, you’re not going to like Maladaptive Daydreaming. But if you’re maybe interested, know that it’s way more cohesive than it has any right to be and a lot of fun. The main thing holding it back is an inexplicably loud mastering job.

#5. Night Crowned // Tales – Here’s an interesting study in genre and reviewers’ tastes. Thus, who is far more brvtal than me, describes this as “symphonic/melodic blackened death.” I, meanwhile, relate to this as a folk metal album, though one much more interesting than the genre typically delivers. Just listen to that hurdy-gurdy or the styling of the vocals. (The female vocals really remind me of the Witcher 3 soundtrack’s Eastern European folk, for example. It’s notable that the cover art here features the Wild Hunt.) Either way, Tales is a wild ride and a certified banger through and through.

#4. Fires in the Distance // Air Not Meant for Us – This is so pretty. That seems like an odd thing for melodic death metal to be striving for, but there’s really no other word for it. Soaring guitar melodies, sweeping strings, and airy piano tug at your heartstrings. But a core of heavy riffs and harsh vocals keeps it anchored. The two mesh startlingly well. Fires in the Distance really lean into the lilting piano at times—if you’d told me a band were going to put this much piano into a melodeath record and everyone would love it, I would have laughed at you. You’d think it would sound insubstantial against the rhythm section, but it never does. Genuinely beautiful.

#3. Helga // Wrapped in Mist – This record reminds me of Gåte (who put out a good EP this year!) gone atmospheric, both in the folk composition but also in the slightly unusual vocals. There’s also some hints of Meer. It’s been criticized, not unfairly, for imperfectly mixing its folk takes on post-metal and airy dream-pop. I like both, but the more I listen, the less I think that separation is the right lens to view it through. Both these genres are characterized by a prioritization of atmosphere and feeling over immediacy, and that’s where Wrapped in Mist’s success lies. I’ve spoken before about my love of music that feels like a witches’ forest ritual, and this is the exact button Helga presses for me. Wherever it sits among its contributing genres, it conjures that feeling.

#2. Essence of Datum // Radikal Rats – Wildly underrated by some hack at little-known music blog Angry Metal Guy, “a heavier God is an Astronaut do the Mass Effect soundtrack” is right up my alley. Even then, I’ve been surprised by how much I’ve listened to this album. It’s not the world’s most challenging record, which has probably contributed to me reaching for it so often over a difficult few months. But don’t confuse that with a lack of impact. It’s cleverly written and impeccably performed, catchy, interesting and varied. This would be a fantastic soundtrack to a top-notch sci-fi film. (I listened to it a lot while reading the new Murderbot book.) As I said above, this has been a good year for instrumental prog, and the placement of this record despite two other strong contenders in the genre should speak volumes.

#1. Wayfarer // American Gothic – This one shouldn’t come as a surprise if you read my thoughts on Lathe on last year’s list. I’m a sucker for the micro-genre I’ll call industrial bluegrass, and last year Lathe mixed it with post-metal with unexpectedly successful results. Wayfarer, meanwhile, bring in black metal, a genre I normally find myself bored by. Indeed, A Romance with Violence didn’t quite do it for me. American Gothic though absolutely knocks it out of the park. The genre blend is utterly seamless, to the extent that to simply call it black metal does it a disservice. This is the best of bleak country painted with the instrumentation of black metal. Electric guitars pick up melody lines from banjos with a twang. Distorted slide guitars get that pedal steel feeling. There’s even a honky-tonk piano. It’s all deceptively melodic, and it helps there’s a heavy twist of post here. This seems to have put some members of the staff off—the second half is less immediate than the first—but these people are wrong. The atmosphere that results is pitch-perfect. The vocals and the lyrics are great. This is not an album that I expected, nor did I expect to love it like this. But it shot to the top of my list within the first couple of listens, and I love it a bit more with every spin.

Honorable Mentions

  • BRIQUEVILLE // IIII – I saw these guys play at ArcTanGent this year and was dead impressed. This is really slow-burn post, but it’s worth it.
  • Mutoid Man // Mutants – Another ATG band, although from many years ago. Not a big departure from their prog/punk usual, but a lot of fun.
  • healthyliving // Songs of Abundance, Psalms of Grief – “Bloom” narrowly missed out on my Song of the Year. The rest of the album is also really good post-metal, with a great vocalist.
  • Svalbard // The Weight of the Mask – This didn’t blow me away like When I Die, but it’s not for lack of quality; it’s a great album still, it’s just not a huge evolution.
  • Tribunal // The Weight of Remembrance – A really solid bit of classic doom. As with any well-trodden genre it takes a lot to stand out, and Tribunal nail it with some great interplay—on vocals and instruments—between the duo.

Disappointment o’ the Year

Repeatedly giving poor-to-middling reviews to bands I like. Also, the production on that Anareta album, which I wanted so badly to love.

Song o’ the Year

Vienna Teng “The Riversitter” – I’m not even going to pretend to claim that this is metal, though I did of course first hear Teng on this very website. She is my favorite lyricist ever, and one of my favorite musicians in general. It’s been a long ten years since Aims, and it’s fantastic to have new music from her again. This is a pretty, moving piece, based on a short story, about not overthinking or overplanning, community, beauty, and building on each other’s ideas. I can’t fully explain why I’ve been so gripped by this song, but it spoke to me. I’m not normally a “same song on repeat” person, but I’ve listened to this song over three times as often as anything else this year.

Twelve

Up until a few weeks ago, I’d have said this was a pretty solid year, all things considered—but alas, here I am, ending the year on a low note. 2023 felt both very long and very quick, and we weren’t too far into it when I realized my contributions to this here blog were pretty much abysmal. Thankfully, my fellow writers and alternate personas are very understanding people, but it’s still rough to realize that the year has ended to mark my lowest output yet here at Angry Metal Guy.

At least the music was solid. While I was off doing who-knows-what offline, a whole bunch of talented and wonderful writers ghostwrote a whole bunch of compelling reviews and recommendations here that have come to dominate my listening. So before I properly dive into sharing my top albums for 2023, I’ll take a second to thank every one of them, from the newest n00b to the oldest olde, for a level of dedication and talent I just didn’t reach this year. I’m looking forward to the next one, and the one after that as well.

Anyway…

#ish. David Eugene Edwards // Hyacinth – Usually there’s a space or two on this list for the most exciting neofolk that comes my way in a given year, but this year was a quiet one on that front. In its absence, however, the dark country tellings of David Eugene Edwards are quickly becoming a favourite. It’s not a style I’m very familiar with—hence the #ish—but owing to the gorgeously ominous storytelling on Hyacinth, that’s something I’m determined to fix in 2024.

#10. Sacred Outcry // Towers of Gold – Life™ works in mysterious ways; when I was unable to review Towers of Gold following my excitement at Sacred Outcry’s debut, I felt pretty badly. Thankfully, Holdeneye’s account captures what is so special about this power metal odyssey better than I’d have been able to at the time. An adventure for the whole family, and an impressively emotive power metal opus.

#9. Theocracy // Mosaic – Speaking of power metal, I also loved Mosaic in a way I haven’t been taken by a Theocracy album in some time. The balance of joyful and serious themes is something the band does really, really well here, and it’s a splash of positivity that I was happy to receive just as the weather began to turn cold. Not to mention it’s impressively heavy on top of it all, and the choruses stick around long after the album is done.

# 8. The Ocean // Holocene – I’ve said in a couple of places that I don’t care much for post metal, but I do like it when The Ocean does it. The trend continued this year with Holocene, which felt more experimental, less heavy, and altogether weirder than a lot of their past work. This all works great for me, and I found I kept returning to Holocene as the year went by. “Atlantic” in particular may be one of my most listened-to songs for the year. High defeatism, am I right?

#7. Warfarer // American Gothic – Blistering, beautiful black metal; a heartfelt reason for the anger; influence from the wild, wild West to keep it all fresh. What could there possibly be to not like about American Gothic? In the past, Wayfarer haven’t quite captured my attention, but this album broke through my resistance and pummelled it to the ground within the first four seconds of “The Thousand Tombs of Western Promise.” A phenomenal album, through and through.

#6. Briqueville // IIIIIIII is not an album I expected to list here; in fact, one of the first things I did when I saw Charcharodon’s 4.0 review for it was ignore it. More fool I. I thought I had this list down when I finally spun Briqueville’s latest for the first time and it tore its way up these IIII spaces astonishingly fast. Dreamy, experimental doom atmospheres are not easy to pin down, but the songwriting here is incredible. The time passes so quickly, and then what’s left to do but to spin the whole album over again?

#5. Godthrymm // Distortions – Rounding out the other half of my top doom metal albums of the year is Distortions, essentially because this album is heavy. I love the straightforward style, the well-produced misery, and the way Godthrymm is able to so cleanly convey such powerful emotions. This album is a testament to doom metal done well, and it’s been a welcome companion since the first time I heard it—I was hooked pretty much instantly.

#4. Burden of Ymir // Heorot – If you read my reviews, you already know that the accordion is the way into my heart. This feast of black metal incorporates exactly that, and makes for a heavy, folky journey, an amazing album with a story to tell and a ton of heart. It’s also a sneaky album, the kind that grows on you the more you listen to it, with small details hidden in clever songwriting. It’s hard to ask for more; this is an album that feels made exactly for me.

#3. Angus McSix // Angus McSix and the Sword of Power – Speaking of albums that feel made exactly for me, Angus McSix is some of the most fun you can have listening to power metal. I am a sucker for cheesiness, and Angus McSix’s debut dials the cheese factor up to the maximum. The other, crucial side of the dial, however, is the songwriting. Thanks to that, everything works in a way that makes the album more than the sum of it’s ridiculous concept1. It’s a very strong album, and one that’s only grown on me with time.

#2. Sodomisery // Mazzaroth – I can only imagine that Dr. A. N. Grier and I have dramatically different year-end lists, but his review of Mazzaroth is spot-on, and I’m certain we’ll share this entry. As orchestral black metal goes, this album is grand, heavy, and huge, making for a phenomenal opus that is my top black metal album of the year. The vocal performance, the orchestrations, the songwriting—everything on Mazzaroth is top-tier, larger-than-life, incredible black metal.

#1. Vanishing Kids // Miracle of Death – It will be difficult to sum up my appreciation for Miracle of Death in the short blurb I have before me. From the first seconds of “Spill the Dark,” this album takes me to a cold, comfortable place. It’s emotional, but it feels like numbness; it’s quiet, but leaves a huge impression. Everything about this album works to create atmospheres of bleakness and hopelessness, and any time I’ve felt low throughout the year, Vanishing Kids has been there2. Miracle of Death is, in that regard, an amazing album, and one that was always going to take this spot on my list. Truthfully, I’m shocked to realize this only came out a couple of months ago—it’s been so right for my 2023 that it feels like it’s been there since January 1.

Honorable Mention

  • Suotana // Ounas I – I had a lot of fun reviewing Ounas I, and have had a lot of fun listening to it since. The black/melodeath/power metal thing Suotana does so well lends itself to an extremely fun, energetic album that is just so solid. This is an album done well, and I’m still recommending it to pretty much all of you!

Song o’ the Year

Sometimes, you just need to have some fun. No matter how difficult, irritating, or otherwise negative this year may have been, “Ride to Hell” has been the pick-me-up song to deal with it. This is a terrific power-meets-traditional metal anthem, and the enthusiasm in which Angus McSix performs it is a huge part of the appeal. It’s catchy, it’s fun, it’s wildly addictive—it’s everything you need when times are rough and you don’t know any supernatural motorcyclists in the real world. It’s also a great song when you’re having a good day already and want to make it better.

#2023 #AngusMcSix #BlogPost #Briqueville #BurdenOfYmir #DavidEugeneEdwards #EssenceOfDatum #FiresInTheDistance #Godthrymm #healthyliving #Helga #Lists #Listurnalia #MutoidMan #NightCrowned #OkGoodnight #SacredOutcry #SanguineGlacialis #Scaphoid #SentynelSAndTwelveSTopTenIshOf2023 #Sermon #Sodomisery #Suotana #Svalbard #TheOcean #TheOtolith #Theocracy #Tribunal #VanishingKids #ViennaTeng #Wayfarer

Eskalator :fckafd: :tux:eskalator@troet.cafe
2023-12-27

Der #Datenelch beim #37c3 ist sowas wie #Helga auf Wacken ..

#37c3unlocked

2023-12-05

Helga – Wrapped in Mist Review

By Iceberg

The term “shinrin-yoku,” or forest bathing, was coined in Japan in the early 1980s to describe a therapeutic practice both mental and physical. One can imagine this as a response to the relentless march of modern life that pulls our kind ever further from a connection to nature. Dissatisfied with this state of existence, Helga weaves forest-bathing deep into their debut album, Wrapped in Mist. Led by Helga Gabriel, this Swedish quintet looks to blend folk atmospheres, post-rock, and fleeting black metal into a potent and unique brand. Plunging headfirst into woodland depths, can Helga pull us out of modern-day monotony and entrance us with the beauty of the forest?

Based on that myriad of influences, Helga’s sound is predictably difficult to pin down. The most obvious comparison here would be Myrkur—both past and present—but there are moments when the full band evokes the mid-aughts stylings of Flyleaf (“Skogen mumlar,” “Burden”), or the stately, soaring post-metal of Explosions in the Sky (“If Death Comes Now”). Gabriel’s vocal performance is the glue holding the meandering styles together, and I’m happy to report she turns in a command performance on this debut. A musician clearly in control of her instrument, she effortlessly floats between Alanis voice-flipping on “If Death Comes Now,” Bjork idiosyncrasies on “Vast and Wild,” and evocative black metal rasps on “Farväl.” The full band appears less than you may think, splitting their time with an eclectic ensemble of auxiliary traditional instruments that keep the record grounded in its folky, mist-drenched atmosphere. When they do take the stage, the rhythm section excels at producing fleeting infectious grooves (“Burden,” “Alive Again”), and the guitars handle post and black metal effortlessly (“Vast and Wild,” “Farväl”). This is exciting and unpredictable new music, and when it comes to the sheer amount of instrumentation, a rare example of more is more. But it’s Gabriel’s persistent haunting presence that keeps me coming back to this album, the central figure around which Helga weave their ritual of sound.

The contents of Wrapped in Mist tend to fall into two camps: one more experimental black/folk, the other more straightforward shoegaze/pop. This proves to be something of a double-edged sword for Helga, but when it works the band balance a bevy of timbres and textures with grace befitting a much more mature outfit. Gabriel pens her lyrics in both Swedish and English, and perhaps unsurprisingly, the tracks in Swedish skew more towards the metal-adjacent camp. Opener “Skogen mumlar” is the best of the bunch, easing in with a Morricone-inflected guitar pattern and careening through slick undulating rhythmic patterns, pizzicato strings, and djent-meets-handclaps until emerging into an exultant post-metal coda. More streamlined tracks such as “Burden,” “Water,” and “Vast and Wild” offer a more accessible version of Helga, featuring ear-worm choruses and richer vocal harmonies. These tracks act as a counterpoint to their more adventurous brethren, but their placement alongside each other illuminates Wrapped in Mist’s central obstacle.

Depending on how one looks at it, Wrapped in Mist has either a pacing issue, or an identity issue. “Skogen mumlar” sets a tone of hairpin genre switches and unexpected instrumentation, but the three-song run following it brings a more subdued, vocal-forward aesthetic. This lopsided alternation between Helga’s “camps” continues throughout the record and makes for something of a whiplash listening experience, which leads to the question of identity. In their effort to create a patchwork quilt of styles and influences, Helga sounds like two—and in the case of experimental closer “Wrapped in Mist,” three—different bands on this record. Make no mistake about it, Wrapped in Mist is full of well-executed compositions filled with aching melodies and detailed soundscapes, but it often feels that the band isn’t fully convinced of where their sound belongs, and this weakens the cohesion of the album overall.

I pick these nits because Wrapped in Mist is a very impressive debut, and frustratingly close to being an outstanding debut. If the strong tracks off of this record are any indication, Helga has a bright future ahead of them, and probably an electrifying live show à la Zeal and Ardor or Heilung. Fans of eclectic music that lurks around the edges of black and post-metal should take note of Helga. I, for one, will be watching their career with great interest.

Rating: 3.5/5.0

DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: PCM

Label: Season of Mist | Bandcamp

Websites: facebook.com | Bandcamp

Releases Worldwide: November 24th, 2023

#2023 #35 #Bjork #BlackMetal #ExplosionsInTheSky #Flyleaf #FolkMetal #Heilung #Helga #Myrkur #Nov23 #PostMetal #Review #Reviews #SeasonOfMist #SwedishMetal #WrappedInMist

2023-11-21

Aufgemerkt! #Helga veröffentlicht am 24.11.2024 „Wrapped In Mist“.
YouTube-Clip: youtube.com/watch?v=xvAeCCLOzK

🔗 gloomr.de/#1334 #️⃣ #NeuesAlbum

Zabethiezabethie
2023-09-18
Torger Åge Sinnesdalstroka@snabelen.no
2023-08-04

Innleier #helga med ei skål is. Kyrne, som gav melka, går 100 meter unna. DÅ snakkar du #kortreist! #Blåneis

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