Paysage d'Hiver
Das Tor


4.0
excellent

Review

by MisterTornado USER (47 Reviews)
March 1st, 2013 | 1045 replies


Release Date: 2013 | Tracklist

Review Summary: The winter eternal

Black Metal has had a long, infamous past. What was once simply a niche of eccentric Norwegians playing a stripped down, raw, and noisier version of innovative Heavy Metal bands like Venom and Hellhammer, turned into a tabloid frenzied, front page publicity heist that has continued to define the genre ever since. Certain leaders of this niche (Varg Vikernes of Burzum, in particular) took it upon themselves to take out their politically and philosophically enraged views by vandalizing property, burning down churches, and committing murder. Interestingly enough, the internet has helped turn these stories and imagery into more of a reputable joke, a meme-of-the-week, than the intensity and ferociousness the music suggests. Several high profile documentaries have been taking these ideas more seriously, capturing its imagery and lore to a fine art. But even so these documentaries often fall into similar traps as internet-age mockery, coming off more like a cash-cow exploitation of a trend than an unbiased, serious attempt at understanding a genre. When it comes down to it Black Metal is about one thing, something far more relevant and interesting than corpse paint, church burnings, or how Varg Vikernes likes his corn flakes; the music.

One of the finest examples of this is Tobias "Wintherr" Möckl, who since the late ‘90s, has been the sole creative force behind Paysage d’Hiver; delivering a bleaker, more atmospheric side of Black Metal for those looking for aggression and destruction sealed in an ethereal, celestial package. His latest album (and rumored to be his last, which makes sense considering the cover art gives us what seems to be a zoomed in shot of the cover art of his first album, Die Festung) summons everything he’s released thus far into one convenient, hour-plus atmospheric black metal opus. Opening the album is “Offenbarung’, beginning with a nearly two-minute prelude of tape deck hiss and whirling nature atmospherics, yearning the listener into its palace of doom. A series of gorgeous, mourning synth drones then take over, like a drift of snow gently falling from the misty, charcoaled skies above. Before an inch has fallen, the mix is blasted in an assault of blazingly fast hyper-rhythms, a set of crushing cymbals marking tempo in the distance, and faint, indecipherable mumblings. From here the mourning synth chords cast a vast symphonic light upon the hypnotizing percussive whirlwind, fought barbarically by a scratching wall of noise distorting the mix throughout.

Following the powerful opener is “Macht des Schicksals”, guided by Möckl’s towering shrieks that seep into his climatic riffs and post-rock leaning guitar work like a sharp knife through burnt toast. The song builds and builds as if it’s scoring a heated blood-drenched battle for Middle Earth, before one last apocalyptic shriek suspends the mix in a slower, reflective pool of enemy blood. The meditation slowly fogs into the tarnished reels of the tape, revealing another gust of heavy wind, transitioning to the foreshadowed doom of “Ewig leuchten die Sterne”. These atmospheric “wind noise” preludes, interludes, and transitions can be heard at the tail end of each track on Das Tor, and while these do (for the most part) effectively create a sense of suspense and atmosphere (the underlining setting of the album clearly being winter), it becomes overkill after a while. In particular, the nature recordings don’t really work as a prelude to “Ewig leuchten die Sterne”, which after minute of whispering wind, immediately charges with a speeding percussive attack and noisy guitar riffs; failing to result in any kind of suspense, build up, or purpose. The most jarring example of this being the nearly eight minutes of suspended wind atmosphere on the tail end of the album, which would make sense if it were shortened to something around a minute, but eight minutes of the same sound effect is beating a dead horse. Though luckily, the songs throughout Das Tor absolutely make up for these minor deviations.

The volcanic finale, “Schluessel”, conjures earth-quaked blast beats pushing molten, skewed riffs through piles of harsh, staticy earth. Whirling doom encrusted guitar frenzy like a black metal Kevin Shields guide the spewing lava through a thunderous oblivion; the 23 minute epic closing Das Tor with an utterly cinematic and spiritual experience. Ushering in this simultaneously intense, disturbing, organic, and divine beast, it’s interesting where the music can take you mentally. Sometimes it can be the furthest, wildest places in your imagination. Right now, I'm taken back to memories of the "Banshee Boardwalk" course from Mario Kart 64; Bowser's go-kart speeding through the creaky wooden floorboards like pummeling repetitive blast beats, surrounded by that eerie ghost-filled atmosphere composed around a looped race track that was simultaneously intimidating, entrancing, and weirdly nostalgic. All of this, buzzing out of the little worn out 10-inch TV sitting where the fireplace used to be in the basement. Though it’s a stretch from the album itself, there’s a beauty in this; the idea of being able to connect real, tangible imagery, stories, and memories to music, rather than exploitative, trendy, and irrelevant ideas brought upon by popular culture that can distort a mind from true, unadulterated enjoyment.



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user ratings (284)
4
excellent

Comments:Add a Comment 
MisterTornado
March 1st 2013


4507 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

"Offenbarung": http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hk6WAptENIU



"Macht Des Schicksals": http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k1rDFuEopDI

Keyblade
March 1st 2013


30678 Comments


fuck yes new paysage...gonna get on this. great review bro. was about to pos, and didn't realize you became contrib...congrats

MisterTornado
March 1st 2013


4507 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

;)

Keyblade
March 1st 2013


30678 Comments


deserves a feature for that banshee boardwalk reference in the soundoff

Hawks
March 1st 2013


87072 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Can't wait to hear this.

Hawks
March 1st 2013


87072 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

123.

MoosechriS
March 1st 2013


6353 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

This turned up the other day, still havnt had the chance to listen to it yet.

Ignimbrite
March 1st 2013


6869 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

Awesome review, awesome album. I was gonna review this, but have massive writer's block and his review just rendered my opinions invalid.

TheSpirit
Emeritus
March 1st 2013


30304 Comments


hellhammer wasn't british

zaruyache
March 1st 2013


27367 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

thread should have 100 comments by now, im dissapointvd



Paysage is too trve for Sputnik m/

Skoop
March 1st 2013


2201 Comments


i cant find this anywhere

seedofnothing
March 1st 2013


3422 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

how did i not see this on the front page

seedofnothing
March 1st 2013


3422 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

someone needs to load the track list

Gnocchi
Staff Reviewer
March 1st 2013


18256 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

I havent decided what to rate this yet, just got it and i feel it needs that time to grow.

Ovrot
March 1st 2013


13304 Comments


AOTY

mindleviticus
March 1st 2013


10486 Comments


OH SHI-

Awesome review man. Good to see YOU as a contributor. I think you trawled this album pretty hard

MisterTornado
March 1st 2013


4507 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

I'd say this is the best black metal since Murmuüre

MisterTornado
March 1st 2013


4507 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

not sure why the tracklist wasn't on here, but it's fixed now

BallsToTheWall
March 1st 2013


51216 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

"What was once simply a niche of eccentric Norwegians playing a stripped down, raw, and noisier version of innovative Heavy Metal "



That's pretty offensive and ignorant considering black metal wasn't just played by and innovated by the Norwegians.





MisterTornado
March 1st 2013


4507 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

""What was once simply a niche of eccentric Norwegians playing a stripped down, raw, and noisier version of innovative Heavy Metal "



That's pretty offensive and ignorant considering black metal wasn't just played by and innovated by the Norwegians."



That's a good point, although I'm referring to the early 90s period of Black Metal when it started to take off. Not so much how and where it was actually developed.



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