Farsot – ‘Life Promised Death’

Metal

I’ve been a Farsot apologist since their debut, IIII, bubbled under an eon ago. It was a banner year for black metal with Shining, Deathspell Omega, Watain, IXXI and others responding violently to the Norwegian overfishing of the early aughts. I built a small ivory tower, from which I could pontificate and hurl minor admonishments (against lesser black metal), around Farsot’s stately dirges of erudite murk. They’re not the most prolific—Insects and its successor Fail-Lure landed in 2011 and 2017, respectively—which has helped support their no-profile, pseudonym-laden posture. But when Farsot do drop, it’s a wheel inside my wheelhouse. Truthfully, I’ve sadistically waited for their no-fireworks cessation; or worse, the Germans to falter. Life Promised Death was, upon repeated listens, the latter. The once impenetrable fortress had crumbled. Or so it had appeared. Turns out, I wasn’t totally prepared to sit out the slow burn/old-school Ihsahn synths of “Buoyant Flames,” the submerged bassline nuggets of “Nausea,” the nods to Slint in “Into Vertigo,” or the dueling eight-minute Morningrise-like vignettes of “Descent” and “Lost Momentum.” I should’ve remembered Farsot require absolute attention—to soak and re-soak in their devious sleights of (dissonant/melodic) hand. Victor Bullok (aka V. Santura of Triptykon, ex-Dark Fortress fame) has managed an immaculate production—heavy, compact, and near-crystal clear. 10.XIXt’s vocals are particularly throaty and nasty. Life Promised Death is Two Hunters without the mountains, Ashes Against the Grain with blast beats, or Instinct: Decay without the personal bullshit. Actually, it’s none of those, but a record like this needs sign posts, ‘cause Life Promised Death doesn’t hit you until it hits you.

Originally Posted Here

Articles You May Like

Five Powerviolence Albums You Probably Missed in 2024
Brilliant Minds Season 1 Episode 8 Review: The Lovesick Widow
Morgan Wallen Wins CMA Entertainer Of The Year for 2024! – Country Music News Blog
Mike Tyson & Jake Paul Legally Banned From Going All Out, Claims DJ Whoo Kid 
DJ Cash Money Aims To Put Philly Hip-Hop Pioneers Back In Spotlight