Carach Angren
This Is No Fairytale


4.0
excellent

Review

by MarchOfTheFireants USER (2 Reviews)
February 28th, 2015 | 3 replies


Release Date: 2015 | Tracklist

Review Summary: A non-conforming cautionary tale doused in impassioned symphonic song-writing arranged delicately to accentuate the theatrical, thunderous vocal narrative that delivers a script penned with an imprudent B grade bluntness.

Aptly titled, This Is No Fairy Tale has a simple plot but the concept can easily be misconstrued. This is no fairy tale because this is a non-conforming cautionary tale, which undeniably comes across as a bastardized version of Hansel and Gretel popularized by Brothers Grimm in the early 19th century. Such a tale uses folklore to convey a warning to the listener by making an unpleasant example out of the protagonist(s). Here, they would be the kids (Hansel and Gretel). The caution: There is no nightmare besides the one of reality and it doesn't matter if you're innocent; so brace yourselves, children.

Carach Angren have outdone themselves at song-writing: Little in terms of pushing the skill envelope and more so in striking a solid balance between writing coherent, engaging songs and a BGM-like passive approach to underscore the storyline. The latter elements sees them continuing their trademark melodramatic indulgence to spotlight the climaxes barring few underdone moments. The track "Dreaming Of A Nightmare In Eden" is a direct, sinister take on Hansel and Gretel, with stellar vocal delivery. The guitar-works on the record are no step up from their previous effort Where The Corpses Sink Forever. However, the track "Possessed By A Craft Of Witchery" stands out for it's intricate riffing with progressive tendencies. While there is a distinct black metal sound production-wise, the overall tone is ambiguous for they often charge with an Septic Flesh-like death attack.

Lyrically, as hinted, they're not trying to charm you with poetic genius. There is no subtlety. This This shouldn't be surprising given the fairy tale themed context. However there are awkward phrasings such as - 'successful suicide', 'a damn small chance to escape' , 'the witch's voice now whispers and laughs' - which can be off-putting to certain listeners. That said, they do manage to paint the story to detail quite gracefully with lines like 'Her ghost slithers like black fog down the chimney at night'. They don't loose all the points.

Overall, with This Is No Fairy Tale, Carach Angren have not raised the bar for themselves but have laterally released yet another consistent record with excellent musicianship to back an ambitious theme. This release, reinforces their place among the most creative and forward thinking artists associated with black metal right now.


user ratings (155)
3.2
good


Comments:Add a Comment 
TzarChasm
March 3rd 2015


279 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

I generally agree with your review overall: the album is amazing, intense as all hell, and the vocal delivery in particular is gut-wrenching. In my opinion this is second only to Death Came Through a Phantom Ship, and it's considerably better than Where the Corpses Sink Forever (which I found to have too many graceless, disjointed transitions and ugly riffs).



While the lyrics themselves are pretty eighth grade, the story isn't quite as cut and dry as you make it sound. It's actually a few layers deep and it ends in a place I actually didn't see coming. I particularly appreciate the revisitation of a few lyrics (e.g., "This is no fairytale" and "And when her bastard father shuts the door behind him . . .") as they suture the twisting narrative together like a prosaic Frankenstein's monster.

MarchOfTheFireants
March 3rd 2015


18 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Glad you enjoyed the record. I'm sorry I did not explain myself clearly, but Ive acknowledged the story in paragraph 2. My criticism was for the lyrical quality not the content. Yes, that revisitation part surprised me too, it was pretty cool and I had to go back to track 2 to check it out. In fact the entire concept is tied to this part of the story. And my second paragraph my interpretation of the concept. That said I'm pretty new to Carach Angren. (First heard them last year) so I'll give it some time to figure how much I like them on repetitive listens!

ToSmokMuzyki
March 13th 2023


10579 Comments

Album Rating: 1.5 | Sound Off

hell yes feature the 3 comment review



You have to be logged in to post a comment. Login | Create a Profile





STAFF & CONTRIBUTORS // CONTACT US

Bands: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z


Site Copyright 2005-2023 Sputnikmusic.com
All Album Reviews Displayed With Permission of Authors | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy