Fas -- Ite, Maledicti, In Ignem Aeternum is the second album in Deathspell Omega's metaphysical trilogy concerning God, Satan, and the human relationship with and between the two seemingly opposing forces. In fact, one member of this group, which remains shrouded in as much mystery as the band can consciously muster, is the founder of the Norma Evangelium Diaboli satanic black metal scene in Poitiers, France. In the 21st century, the deep underground of French black metal is making its way onto the shelves of shops on the ...
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Fas -- Ite, Maledicti, In Ignem Aeternum is the second album in Deathspell Omega's metaphysical trilogy concerning God, Satan, and the human relationship with and between the two seemingly opposing forces. In fact, one member of this group, which remains shrouded in as much mystery as the band can consciously muster, is the founder of the Norma Evangelium Diaboli satanic black metal scene in Poitiers, France. In the 21st century, the deep underground of French black metal is making its way onto the shelves of shops on the other side of the Atlantic and is garnering fans like wildfire. On the one hand, DO's earlier records were musically rooted in classic Nordic black metal. Before the indescribably -- nearly unbearably -- intense Kenose, the first recording the band issued stateside, DO had already issued albums as early as 1998 and appeared on a number of split LPs, singles, and compilations. Kenose, about 35 minutes long, contained only three tracks. Its overblown power and menace made fans of American black metal enthusiasts and the word spread. Then came 2006's Si Momentum Requires, Circumspice, the beginning of this trilogy. The band changed its sound considerably -- along with moments of buzzing black metal were long interludes filled with strange key and time signatures, keyboards and choral chants that made their sound much more experimental and spaced out, darker somehow, and even more sinister than anything they'd done previously. Post-rock heads took notice of the band, too, since a certain and considerable element of that sound had found its way into DO's mix. Released in 2007, Fas -- Ite, Maledicti, In Ignem Aeternum subverts expectations once more. While it does contain moody, drawn-out passages that rely on silence, cryptic sound effects, and moody minor-key guitar angles, it also contains an aggression not heard from the band since before Kenose, harking back to its earliest recordings. There is great experimentation here, but it is tempered with all-out assault. The drummer (there are no credits on the sleeve, in keeping with the underground credibility this band works hard at cultivating and protecting) doesn't play mere blastbeats when things are at their sickest, such as on the ten-plus-minute "The Shrine of Mad Laughter" -- he just blasts, filling every single space with thunderous, frenetic fills and double bass drum wallops. He doesn't stop. Likewise, the guitars are a buzzing whir of noise and hellacious volume. Of course, the words are all but indecipherable -- so there is a 20-page booklet that supposedly offers them (more on this in a moment) -- growled in seemingly maniacal onomatopoeia. But elements of space do open up in the proceedings -- which can sometimes resemble math rock, so there is some accumulation of Burzum, Xasthur, and Darkthrone wrapped up with Isis. A third of the way through the aforementioned cut, which is nearly quiet with displaced, echo-laden female chorus vocals that emanate from the deep and never quite make it to the surface, it explodes even more insanely a second time. Add to this the positively bleak soundscape the band creates on tracks such as the bookend pieces of the set, "Obombration." These pieces creep and rumble, offering subsonic, unidentifiable sounds, minimally bowed guitars that clang with some edge-up extrapolation of combined minor keys. There's plenty of drama on these tracks and on the album's hinge track, "The Repellent Scars of Abandon & Election," where plodding, nearly symphonic metal meets doom and the swell of unholy hell-raising black metal. Production has a lot to do with it, as guitar solos can be heard but never in the foreground. It sounds like the whole thing was recorded -- BIG AND LOUD -- in some cavernous locale.Lyrically, Deathspell Omega are something else again. Since there are no credits, listeners are led to believe that the vocalist -- or someone in the band -- writes the group's words. French culture being what it is, rooted in...
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Fair. All our items come in the original case with artwork, though manuals and slipcovers are not always guaranteed to be included as these items are donated goods and will show some wear and tear from normal use. Jewel cases will be included but may be damaged and/or cracked. We typically resurface discs that are visibly scratched prior to shipping, but we do not test disc(s). Digital codes may not be included and have not been tested to be redeemable and/or active. Thank you for shopping with Goodwill Colorado! Orders shipped Monday through Friday. Safe and Secure Bubble Mailer! Your purchase helps put people to work and learn life skills to reach their full potential. Thank you!