SUMAC
Love In Shadow


3.6
great

Review

by Xenophanes EMERITUS
September 25th, 2018 | 100 replies


Release Date: 2018 | Tracklist

Review Summary: For all of its many faults, this is the closest Aaron Turner has come to realizing his art-house-post-metal vision.

As dissimilar as they are, you cannot separate last year's collaboration with Keiji Haino from Sumac's new album, Love in Shadow. The Japanese noise-rock auteur has blurred the lines of what rock, metal, et. al for years which helped create the delirious American Dollar Bill, an album by all rights Sumac was incapable of crafting on their own. After this experience Sumac went back into the studio to make adjustments to their already written third album, adding in the improvisational elements that made American Dollar Bill such an audacious feat. Therefore Keiji Hano, in a way is credited with Sumac's most outlandish and impressive record to date.

In so many ways, Love in Shadow succeeds as the art-house post-metal album that Aaron Turner has been striving for since Isis' Wavering Radiant. In fact, most of the album sees Turner at his bravest, with areas completely devoid of his signature density and energy. For every moment of aggression there are two moments of ritualistic procession or an unassuming and airy interlude. Those that found Sumac's previous release, What One Becomes to be too unwieldy might find a lot to love in this amalgam of post-metal, ambient, and jam-band aesthetics. It feels more free, more emboldened, but unfortunately, less tenuous. Acerbic bouts of noise in "Attis' Blade," for example, butt up to a very sparse but regimented guitar line which feels about as natural as it sounds. Most notable to this reviewer was a moment in "The Task," which felt revelatory; a heightened and beautiful moment of complete restraint and nuance that felt so at odds with everything I have ever known about Aaron Turner. About halfway through the song suddenly stops. It slips into an incoherent, eerie, and spotty collection of guitar and reverb, feeling completely unlike the Sumac that just wouldn't let up on 2016's What One Becomes; occasional shouts speckle a sparse landscape that calls to mind the quieter moments of maudlin of the Well or even Talk Talk. It continues. Then it continues to continue, until the end feels more like a favor rather than a satisfying goodbye. This is the moment that defines Love in Shadow, an album of two parts: one part brilliance and the other, a dart board of ideas with darts haphazardly strewn on the ground.

It's difficult to say how Love in Shadow would have turned out were it not for Keiji Hano agreeing to collaborate with Sumac last year. The jarring elements do feel shoehorned, like edits made to an already polished draft. These edits don't always feel natural, as if Sumac were imitating a sound they wanted, rather than a sound they actually felt. Regardless, Love in Shadow is a startlingly unique addition to the band's catalog, and the most dynamic and interesting album that Aaron Turner has ever created. It's easy to see the multitude of cracks and smudges that besmirch this messy record. It's even easier, however, to just sit back and enjoy one of metal's weirdest and most fascinating releases of the year.



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user ratings (209)
3.8
excellent
other reviews of this album
rafalafa (4.5)
Expressive, captivating, and exciting....



Comments:Add a Comment 
deathschool
September 25th 2018


28619 Comments


Great review. I really loved What One Becomes. I'll probably listen to this right now, honestly.

(Also, I missed the Haino collab)

TheBarber
September 25th 2018


4130 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Ecstasy of Unbecoming m/

Interesting take for the review also, although it reads a tad uncertain at times. To you, is this "their" record or is it not ?

robotmagician
September 25th 2018


1328 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

I don’t know if it’s fair to say they went back to the drawing board. it has sounded like there were already going to be improv elements to the album, something they’ve hinted at with the past two albums, but their experience with keiji emboldened them/made them more confident in what they were doing. they didn’t rewrite the album

Napes
September 25th 2018


26 Comments


I got an advance copy of the LP at one of their shows and though I haven't given it enough listens yet, the performance was one of the most awesome things I've ever seen. A true master class on how to play weird, heavy and noisy metal music.

kevbogz
September 25th 2018


6087 Comments


sounds like actual dogshit, but since it's Aaron Turner it's "art" and "improvisation"

brantron
September 26th 2018


33 Comments


Saw them play this in Nashville the other week! Mind-bending show

RogueNine
September 26th 2018


5535 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Agree with the review in many respects. Album has some loose ends that really need tying but woo buddy, Ecstasy of Unbecoming is fire.

trilo
September 26th 2018


6227 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

"sounds like actual dogshit, but since it's Aaron Turner it's "art" and "improvisation""



lol

rafalafa
September 26th 2018


288 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

You seem to have enjoyed the middle section of “The Task” more than I did. It felt very out of place in a bad way to me, whereas the end with the organ felt perfect.

¯_(ツ)_/¯

Taxt
September 26th 2018


1605 Comments


I love this
Probably doesn't top What One Becomes for me, but that's a high bar to clear

Tw1ster
September 27th 2018


236 Comments


Enjoying this quite a bit on first listen. On a side note, Aaron Turner's vocals have always made me think of the bad guy from Inspector Gadget....."I'll get you next time Gadget!"


Dewinged
Staff Reviewer
September 27th 2018


32019 Comments


Going through this now and holy fuck it's dense.

"You seem to have enjoyed the middle section of “The Task” more than I did. It felt very out of place in a bad way to me, whereas the end with the organ felt perfect. "

Agree with this, it's cool to see them trying new stuff, but it sounds like some of those improvisational moments during a jam where everyone is effectively lost but the rythm section.

Great review as always Xeno.

froghawk
September 27th 2018


189 Comments


The aforementioned part of the task is easily my favorite part of the entire record and fits perfectly in that song. It's incredibly tense.

Flugmorph
September 28th 2018


33951 Comments


best album of the year

Hawks
September 28th 2018


86953 Comments


Ohhhh I gotta jam this.

PistolPete
October 1st 2018


5304 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

I feel dumb for asking but what exactly is art-house-post-metal anyways?



I kinda feared Sumac would make an album like this after working with Keiji Haino. Not sure how I feel about it but "Arcing Silver" is pretty good.

Flugmorph
October 1st 2018


33951 Comments


this album is so fucking tasty man

trilo
October 3rd 2018


6227 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

drums on here are so fire

dbizzles
October 10th 2018


15193 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

This is one of the best metal releases of the year. I realize this is different than their other stuff, but I'm gonna have to give their first two LPs a shot.

robotmagician
October 10th 2018


1328 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

it’s not so different that you wouldn’t like it, I think. certainly more focused but not as much as you may think. the first song on What One Becomes has some of my favorite drumming ever. I haven’t listened to the album in a while but still find myself tapping my fingers to a section of that song



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