Album Type: Full
Length
Date
Released: 17/02/2017
Label: Independent
This is the heaviest thing I've heard
in a while. Hopeless, ugly, vicious, and pissed off slabs of soul destroying
death-doom is what we get here. This music makes me want to burn down my
neighborhood and wallow in the remaining sludgy aftermath.
“Marking the
Day” CD//DD track listing:
1).
From Nothing
2).
Expansion
3).
Far From the Sun
4).
Watching the Cycles
5).
Narrow of the Light
6).
Face Down in the Sea
of Oblivion
The Review:
Nomadic
Rituals
is a three piece band from Belfast ,
United Kingdom .
This album is my first introduction to them and I am quite impressed. The new record
is called "Marking the Day," and is scheduled to be
released on February 17th, 2017. The
music captured here is for people who are into the dirtiest and raunchiest
purveyors of sludgy, death-doom. Fans of Noothgrush, Indian, Serpentine Path, and Morbid Evils
should definitely check this out immediately. The first track,
"From Nothing," slowly eases the listener in and serves as a
fitting introduction to what unfolds on the rest of the album's six unrelenting
tracks, which ultimately clock in at a mammoth sixty minutes total running
time.
The
second track, "Expansion," has some nice chug and groove going on,
and is slightly reminiscent of early Celtic Frost hooks. On the third track, "Far
From the Sun," the song begins with a brief and extremely tasteful
use of ultra low, Tibetan monk/gregorian chant style of clean vocals making
this one a standout of the album for me. These vocals are very adequately
executed and suits the band well to contrast and accent everything else, in my
opinion. On track four, "Watching the Cycles," we
are given a little room to breathe as this one is loaded with plenty of big
chords left to ring out, hum, feedback, and fade away. The fifth track, "Narrowing
of the Light," sees the band getting back to the land of chug. It
has quite a bit of repetition and an almost mechanical and dissonant feel
throughout most of it's eight minutes in length, which to my ears serves as a
nod to the almighty Godflesh.
The
sixth and final track, "Face Down in the Sea of Oblivion ,"
is a true behemoth. It starts off with the return of those amazing
clean vocals which we were teased with in track three, plus adds a velvety
dream sequence drum and bass breakdown right before a slithering, harmonious
guitar solo sweeps in to take the spotlight and usher in the end of the song.
At fourteen and a half minutes, this is the grand finale that the entire
preceding works have been preparing us for, to behold its gargantuan unravelling.
It is our final journey into the everlasting darkness of the abyss.
All
in all, I think this is a great album. The overall tone of the recording is
massive and thunderous. The vocals range from being predominantly harsh and
scornful to clean and ethereal in a couple of small doses. This is the heaviest
thing I've heard in a while. Hopeless, ugly, vicious, and pissed off slabs of
soul destroying death-doom is what we get here. This music makes me want to
burn down my neighborhood and wallow in the remaining sludgy aftermath. The
album is currently available for pre-sale on the artist's bandcamp page and I
highly recommend you pick up a copy of this bad boy.
“Marking The
Day”
is available to preorder/buy here