PRIMORDIAL – The Gathering Wilderness

PRIMORDIAL - The Gathering Wilderness

Summary

Metal Blade
Release date: February 7, 2005

Sending
User Review
0/10 (0 votes)

Ireland has definitely produced some very good popular music – Thin Lizzy, Gary Moore, Sinead O’Connor, The Corrs and others – but there are very few huge all-out Metal bands hailing from Ireland. Primordial is one, and definitely a band out of the ordinary. The band is often compared to Opeth, not so much because of the music, but more because of the burning aspiration to sound unique. And the band’s sort of Celtic influenced Doom/Death/Heavy Metal is definitely one-of-a-kind. If you insist on musical references, however, maybe Bathory, Borknagar, and the previously mentioned Opeth can be indeed be listed. The band’s very folklore-istic approach, though, makes these Irishmen something uniquely themselves.

This latest effort definitely has some good music to offer. The opener, “The Golden Spiral,” has a tremendous groove, and although it’s very simple in its structure, it definitely justifies its length at just below 8 minutes. The title track is very atmospheric and features choirs and a very beautiful acoustic intro section, while “The Song Of The Tomb” and “Tragedy’s Birth” are the most aggressive tracks, and also feature the best sounding clean vocals on the album. The band has not been blessed with the best singer in the world, but on these tracks, his voice manages to create a great atmosphere, like at 1:50 in “The Song Of The Tomb” where the Viking-style chants make for an awesome effect.

These aforementioned tracks also stand out as the best ones on the record, as some of the other material tends to sound a bit anonymous comparatively. The band seems to have focused a too much on atmosphere and too little on songwriting. This, for some, may be a compliment rather than a criticism, as the album works very well for those evenings when you just want to turn off all the lights and travel somewhere far away without caring for song titles and the relationship between verse and chorus. Thus, this album has to be recommended for the open-minded Metalhead.

Author

  • Torgeir P. Krokfjord

    Torgeir was a reviewer here at Metal Express Radio. After hearing Malmsteen's "Vengeance" on a guitar mag CD at the age of 12 or 13, he began doing hopeless interpretations of Yngwie licks and it just took off from there. After shorter stints at other zines he was snatched to Metal Express Radio in 2003. Alongside Yngwie, Savatage, WASP, Symphony X, Blind Guardian, Emperor, Arch Enemy, In Flames, Opeth, Motörhead, Manowar, and Queensrÿche are a quick list of musical faves. Torgeir is also guitarist in the Heavy/Prog/Thrash outfit Sarpedon.

    View all posts

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*


This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

The reCAPTCHA verification period has expired. Please reload the page.