By: Richard Maw
Album Type: Full Length
Date Released: 01/11/2019
Label: Nuclear Blast
“Vile Nilotic Rites” CD//DD//LP track
listing:
1.
Long Shadows of Dread
2. The Oxford Handbook of Savage Genocidal Warfare
3. Vile Nilotic Rites
4. Seven Horns of War
5. That Which Is Forbidden
6. Snake Pit Mating Frenzy
7. Revel In Their Suffering
8. Thus Sayeth the Parasites of the Mind
9. Where Is the Wrathful Sky
10. The Imperishable Stars Are Sickened
11. We Are Cursed
2. The Oxford Handbook of Savage Genocidal Warfare
3. Vile Nilotic Rites
4. Seven Horns of War
5. That Which Is Forbidden
6. Snake Pit Mating Frenzy
7. Revel In Their Suffering
8. Thus Sayeth the Parasites of the Mind
9. Where Is the Wrathful Sky
10. The Imperishable Stars Are Sickened
11. We Are Cursed
The Review:
Four
years on from “What Should Not Be Unearthed”, Nile return with a new guitarist and bass
player, with Karl Sanders and George Kollias still in place. However, it really
is business as usual as far as the record's sound and approach are concerned. “Long
Shadows of Dread” is, as always, impossibly dextrous and fast. Oxford
Handbook of “Savage Genocidal Warfare” is brutal, the title track is a
welcome change of tempo and offers up some excellent dynamics and song writing.
The sound is excellent- the vocals are particularly well mixed and recorded.
What,
then, what can Nile offer a couple of
decades into the game and having rejuvenated the genre with their earlier
albums? Well, the band sounds enthusiastically focused and are technically incredible,
of course, and the Egyptian themes remain. Nile,
at this stage in their career have entered into a similar strata as Obituary or Cannibal
Corpse. They will no longer innovate- they have their own sound and
style- but they will remain at the forefront of the genre and some albums are
better than others! I found “Vile Nilotic Rites” to be more
instantly gratifying than “What Should Not Be Unearthed”- insofar
as that the songs are somehow less wilfully tech-y and seem to be a little more
natural in their composition and delivery.
Whether
it be the excellent scene setting intro of “That Which is Forbidden”,
the epic “The Imperishable Stars are Sickened” or the straightforward
aggression of “Snake Pit Mating Frenzy”, there is a lot to listen to
here; the individual instruments, the superlative production and even... the
song writing. It's not perfect; there is nothing here that can match Deicide for memorable 'tunes' and there is
nothing to trouble a listener who heard “In Their Darkened Shrines”
years ago and was blown away... However, this is a perfectly serviceable entry
into Nile's musical canon and is, I
think, better than their last album (which I loved at the time, but after
exploring other albums rate a little lower these days) while not being up there
with “ITDS” or “Annihilation of the Wicked”.
For
fans of technical and brutal death metal, any Nile
album is a must, for those who are new to the band- why not start here? For
connoisseurs of Nile... well, it's
solid and the band sound fully engaged and committed. On that basis, it's one
of the best death metal albums you will hear this year but only time will tell
how this fares in the overall Nile
discography. A classic band have thus delivered a good album. No complaints
here.
“Vile
Nilotic Rites” is
available HERE
Band
info: facebook