CELTIC FROST: MONOTHEIST (2006)
1) Progeny; 2) Ground; 3) A
Dying God Coming Into Human Flesh; 4) Drown In Ashes; 5) Os Abysmi Vel Daath;
6) Temple Of Depression; 7) Obscured; 8) Domain Of Decay; 9) Ain Alohim; 10)
Triptych: Totengott; 11) Triptych: Synagoga Satanae; 12) Triptych: Winter
(Requiem, Chapter Three: Finale).
That Celtic Frost, upon dissolving in the early
Nineties, would eventually come back again, even if it took them about a decade
to do so, is hardly a surprise for the world of well-established musical
brands. That their next album would be significantly different from everything
they did before was not a surprise, either: self-reinvention was as much a
given for Celtic Frost from the start as makeup was for KISS, so it was hardly
realistic to expect them to return to the «black thrash» style of Mega Therion or, God have mercy, to the
«ugly glam» style of Cold Lake. But
it would be disappointing, wouldn't it, for the band to leave us completely
without surprises? Celtic Frost live and breathe surprise. And so they went
ahead and did it, surprising us by putting out their best album — not as in «best in several years / a decade / since
their last good one», but as in «best ever, period». For all the innovation and
experimentation they showed in the reputation-establishing Eighties, Monotheist is something completely
else.
The reason why I feel this way is simple: to
me, Monotheist is the only Celtic
Frost album that demands to be taken seriously — on a gut level, that is. All
of their previous stuff could be innovative, or kick-ass, or fun, or dull, or
embarrassing, but (like most of heavy metal, to be sure) it never really went
beyond the state of hyperbolized rock theater. This record, though it can also
be reasonably characterized as theatrical, is where Tom Warrior seems to have
sat down and come up with a plan — this would be music that would genuinely, rather than symbolically,
scare the shit out of the listener. No mean feat, considering that genuine fear
in rock music is usually sought in regions far subtler than heavy metal (from
Pink Floyd to Peter Gabriel), yet abandoning the heavy metal sound is the last
thought on Tom's mind here.
The two key components of this «authentically
scary» brand of metal that he has decided upon are (a) guitar tone and (b)
vocals. Neither of these actually comes out of nowhere: before the Celtic Frost
reunion, Tom Warrior spent some time playing and recording with his new band,
Apollyon Sun, together with a second guitarist, Erol Uenala, whom he would also
recruit into the reunited Celtic Frost; and they played a brutal type of metal
that was very heavily influenced by the industrial sound. This is precisely
what you get here as well: slow, pounding, monotonous grooves with
«industrialized» distortion, arguably the heaviest possible sound of 'em all,
and even if it was not invented by Celtic Frost, Tom has figured out how to use
it better than most — in the context of simple, repetitive, doom-laden riffs
that remind one of the primal purity of Sabbath rather than the confusing complexity
of Opeth-like or Tool-like ensembles. It does not take more than the opening
twenty seconds of ʽProgenyʼ to understand that there is something going on here
that tries to tap inside your darkest fears and complexes.
But maybe even more impressive than the
industrialized guitar riffs are the vocals. Although they, too, are sometimes
industrialized through production effects that professionally turn human voices
into demonic ones (see ʽTotengottʼ, the first part of the ʽTriptychʼ — which is
actually delivered by Martin Eric Ain rather than Tom), more often it is simply
all about a strategic positioning at the mike, with Tom singing in a gurgly,
guttural, but not demonically growling
voice that, at its roughest and toughest, is honestly more reminiscent of an
enraged Adolf Hitler than a cartoonishly constipated Lucifer. This, too, is a
direct carryover from the industrial scene (think Ministry at their finest),
but it is impressive how he gets these chilling results without having to resort to a lot of post-production sonic makeup —
that Tom Warrior can sound brutal and evil when he wants to is no revelation,
but that he can do this without sounding like a brutal and evil and thoroughly inebriated stinky hobo
certainly is. Even when this style is seemingly wasted on such trite refrains
as "oh God, why have you forsaken me?", the wall-rattling power is so
strong that he still manages to imbue some new life (or, perhaps, un-life) into these age-old questions.
(Let us just hope the Catholic church never turns its vigilant eye in the
direction of ʽGroundʼ, because Jesus
Christ Superstar this sure ain't: the same guy who addresses this question
to God begins with such cheerful statements as "I am hatred, seeping
blood... I am rage becoming flesh...").
As deliciously and creepily brutal as the first
few tracks are, enduring a 70-minute long album that consists of nothing but
the likes of ʽProgenyʼ and ʽGroundʼ would be a tough affair; so, pretty soon
some atmospheric elements begin to creep in — ʽA Dying God...ʼ begins with a
quiet Gothic intro, a two-minute cemetery-bound dirge with an ominous soft bass
punch to warn you that sooner or later, the ground will open and festering
zombies will begin to crawl out (which they do exactly as the song hits the
two-minute mark). Then the Gothic atmosphere is spread all over ʽDrown In
Ashesʼ, with haunting female backup vocals and psychedelic guitar overdubs in
the background — ultimately, this is more Bauhaus than anything heavy
metal-related. From then on, depressing romantic atmosphere and crushing
industrial metal riffs largely go hand in hand, with only a few songs (ʽDomain
Of Decayʼ, ʽAin Alohimʼ) offering no salvation from the demon Panzer onslaught.
The most ambitious affair is saved for last:
ʽTriptychʼ is a 23-minute long suite that pulls all the stops — the first part
is an ambient-industrial monster in the old spirit of Coil and Current '93,
with perhaps not the most original, nut one of the most blood-curdling vocal
performances you are liable to hear from
the metal community; the second part is what you get when the slowness and
fatality of doom metal are crossed with the evil cackle and hateful aggression
of black metal; and once the damage is done, nothing is left but to sadly
survey the carnage with the ʽRequiemʼ part, which is not a great neo-classical
composition by any means, but does a good job of calming down your nerves after
all the earthquakes and artillery barrages. It may be wise, though, to listen
to the whole thing on its own, separately from the rest of the album, because
after the first 45 minutes of brutality, its impact may be numbed; on its own,
it is a perfect synthesis of industrial nightmare, metal warfare, and ambient
nerve-care.
With a record like this, it is almost
impossible to tell what exactly constitutes high class and what is filler, even
if you do feel that 70+ minutes is a bit harsh for the system. But, of course, Monotheist has to be taken as a
single, multi-movement opus, most of which consists of bodies ripped to pieces
by heavy metal bombshells and pecked by vultures in the short interims — and
such things might take a long time, before the attacking side runs out of ammo.
Most importantly, it is vividly efficient in its imagery, and that is all it
takes to get a thumbs
up; but boy, am I glad they decided not to follow it up with
anything else — because (a) it would have been twice as exhausting and (b)
they wouldn't be able to top it anyway. The difference between Morbid Tales and Monotheist is that the former mischievous imps have matured into
demons of death and destruction, and the most frightening part of death and
destruction is when you do not repeat it on an everyday basis, but simply leave
the ruins behind as a reminder of what might yet happen again. (For that
matter, Tom Warrior's latest extreme metal band, Triptykon, makes music that is
somewhat similar to Monotheist but
sounds far more conventional).
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