Drifting into the Crypt
Phlegethon
- Style
- Death metal
- Label
- Xtreem Music
- Year
- 2010
- Reviewed by
- Charles
The sound is fuzzily unreconstructed, with Lasse Pyykko’s vocals a ghastly hiss, faded low in the mix much of the time. Guitars have a rotting quality, a bit like a punkier Obituary. The songwriting is really creative. Dissonant lead guitar flourishes squeal away over doomy introductions that frequently accelerate into a rattlingly lo-fi death metal assault, like a walking corpse that has suddenly found the gumption to run at the risk of snapping its ankles. As you trace the band’s progressions throughout their obscure career, all sorts of weirdness emerges- strange, the proggy daydreams that they dabble with from time to time really does give their whole ouvre, when lined up like this, a feel that goes beyond quirky and into the realms of the truly otherworldly. Special mention in this sense must be Without Tea Waters- a bizarre techno/death metal fusion that glistens luridly within this earthy collection. Then as you get further in some real unexpected gems start cropping up- particularly when the tunes from an unnamed 1995 promo are arrived at. Karma Vest is an incredible, swinging stoner number, that sounds wonderfully incongruous in this context. Teaser’s Whine also has the feel of early Cathedral.
This is a deeply enjoyable journey through a distinctive and original extreme metal band’s career. Beautifully low-budget whilst simultaneously refreshingly unpurist. For those that have missed Phlegethon’s output to date, your ears need this.
Reviewed by Charles — May 31, 2010