| | | Ratings (23) |
Give your Rating |
| 3.5 great | Chino smoking it up! | January 13th 20 | A very interesting approach, simple sad tremolo riffs setting the mood...somewhat of the same
electronic beat along the album gives it a very unique flow. I pretty much like everything but
hoped for a little more variation, as the cool intros of the songs would induce so, all tracks
ending in fade out can become very un-engaging at a certain point. That said the slow track Zero
Point f.e. is very blissful (too bad even with the fade out, seems cut) followed by the relentless
Mourning Soul makes a def highlight. Bonus tracks on re-issue are about as good if not better.
rate is for the reissued version.
Bump |
| 4.5 superb | Gary STAFF | January 12th 20 | A fantastic DSBM album - more on the traditional second wave side. The album delivers tons of fast, tight tremolo riffing accompanied by a superb guitar tone, somewhat standard styled vocals, and exceptionally good production (but with programmed drums?). The album has a very uniquely agressive atmosphere - and I loved it! The bonus track "Death into Life" is a crushing masterpiece.
Bump |
| 3.0 good | AdenZerda | January 20th 11 | There's lots of potential on display in this album. Anti have their wonderful sound locked in, and I could get lost in it for hours. The problem is that they just won't let me.
The first thing I noticed about The Insignificance of Life is that it's short. Under thirty minutes to be more specific. How am I supposed to get lost in this wonderful sound when the song fades out just as I start becoming entranced by it? Song intro, excellent sound that I love, fade out. So many fade outs that it's a problem. So many fade outs that I audibly groaned as yet another one started happening.
But I could deal with that. Not all musicians write as we want them to, and if they want to choose a shorter track length then that's their artistic decision. I'm sure they had their reasons.
But I don't know what their reasons were for the percussion. I loved the drum sounds and how they fit into the music, but after ten minutes of listening I realized that the musicianship itself of the drumming was...not good. There were sections where the percussion didn't fit the music at all, and most of all they were repetitive and actually took away from the song. I found myself wishing that I was listening to a rough cut from the studio, just so I would have the hope that these weren't the final drum tracks.
The Insignificance of Life is a gem of an album locked inside a cage. You can see what's inside; you can reach through the bars and touch it; you can feel how wonderful it would be if it were free, but it's not. And you just have to live with that.
Bump |
| 3.0 good | DarkNoctus | January 20th 11 | Has potential but the band really have to have more of an eye on dyanamics and adding some complexity to their sound. They have the atmosphere down to a tee but they really need to put more effort into making their sound more diverse.
Bump |
| 4.0 excellent | zaruyache | June 28th 10 | Some pretty good stuff here. Not as pretentious and "atmospheric" as the likes of Xasthur or Leviathan, Anti are more traditionally-aligned black metal. Lots of sad, buzzing tremolo and slow, brooding drums. The vocals themselves are more along the Xasthur-esque line of "depressing black metal," their vocalist doing basically whateverthehell he wants; black metal rasps, whispers, groaning screams and making sufficiently strange noises. All in all a good listen. Lots of melody and a great doomy atmosphere.
Bump |
| 4.0 excellent | vakuola | January 3rd 25 |
| 4.0 excellent | Vetimus | March 31st 16 |
| 4.0 excellent | Athom EMERITUS | October 14th 13 |
| 3.0 good | rc1288 | August 31st 10 |
| |
Give Your Opinion on The Insignificance of Life
|