On the Dawning of Light
Nine Covens
- Style
- Black Metal
- Label
- Candlelight
- Year
- 2012
- Reviewed by
- Charles
First track Origin of Light exudes pace and energy, replacing the sometimes lumpen mid-tempos that dogged the last record with a blasting fury reminiscent of earlier Marduk. Ratcheting up the tempos is a good move, but more important is the riffing itself, which speaks with a clarity I didn’t detect before. As Fire Consumes picks out deadly hooks that are both immediate and urgent. It lasts almost six minutes, but by switching into windswept, Dissection-like melodic ideas in its latter half, it justifies the length. Similarly, the cleverly structured riffing of Fog of Deceit is also strikingly effective.
Even the slower parts, which I complained about last time, work better here. the Mist of Death is based around a grimly militaristic drum hook, which might become dull if allowed to linger, but which instead serves as ominous interlude. The outlier on the album- and perhaps the bit that most obviously hints towards the ‘Light’ of the title- is the instrumental White Star Acception. Here, the band swerve somewhat incongruously into warmer, more melodious post-rock influences.
Aside from that, this is a entertainingly fast and to-the-point release. So on that note, let’s finish. Overall, I’m considerably more impressed by On the Dawning of Light than I was by ...On the Coming of Darkness. I look forward to On the Eating of Breakfast.
Reviewed by Charles — October 1, 2012