Genre: Doom Metal
Label Number: IHRCD107
.FLAC via Florenfile
.AAC 256 kbps via Florenfile
© 2013 I Hate Records
Review by Sonic Abuse.com
.FLAC via Florenfile
.AAC 256 kbps via Florenfile
© 2013 I Hate Records
Review by Sonic Abuse.com
Jex Thoth have been providing deeply
psychedelic, dark pagan folk to the masses since 2007, and in that time
they have delivered an impressive two EPs (with a third due this year)
and two full length efforts, their critically acclaimed, self-titled
debut (2008) and this sophomore effort entitled ‘Blood Moon rise’. It is
hard to pin point exactly what makes Jex Thoth so special. There is the
vocalist herself, of course, a singer whose voice is redolent of dark,
moonlit ceremonies and whose astonishingly personal tone feels like it
is speaking directly to the listener across the void; there is the band,
who seem to have drifted into the modern era directly from the
seventies, and whose reference points are the twin peaks of Black
Sabbath and Jefferson Airplane (via ‘white rabbit’) with hints of the
Doors, thirteenth floor elevators and pentagram thrown in for good
measure and there is, of course, the music itself, which is atmospheric,
hypnotic, beautiful and disturbing in equal measure. Whatever potent
element elevates Jex Thoth from the swirling miasma of doom and gloom to
the heights of ethereal beauty, one thing is clear: ‘blood moon rise’
is a remarkable record.
Opening with the short incantation of
‘to bury’, a song that feels more like an opening ritual than an actual
track, it is on the deeply psychedelic ‘the places you walk’ that the
band appear with their soporific riffs lazily intertwining over a
restrained beat before Jex’s sublime voice wafts into view, cleverly
multi-tracked and sounding darkly wondrous. It’s a bewitching voice,
delivered with a gentle power that hints at hidden strength, so sweetly
kept out of sight that you never doubt its presence and as the song
progresses, Jex weaves her spell around you so that you’re neither able
to leave, nor do you wish to. ‘The divide’ is a heavier beast, one that
opens with a devastating doom riff that is utterly crushing in its
breadth and depth, and the band concentrate all their power in
pummelling the listener with an unutterably slow trudge through the
fields of darkness, with only Jex’s beguiling voice as a guiding light
in the gloom, urging you ever deeper into the cold night air. It is a
deeply atmospheric on Black Sabbath’s darkest reckonings laden with
unsettling ambient noise that would not sound out of place on a Swan’s
record, and there certainly are parallels between Jex and that goddess
of the underground, Jarboe. ‘Into a sleep’ delves into the murky world
of Barry Adamson, with its dark, throbbing bass and subtle nuances
providing a skeletal backdrop for Jex’s truly lovely voice to coil
itself around your neck, oh-so-gently cutting off the oxygen even as you
relish its embrace whilst ‘And the river ran dry’ is an
ever-so-delicate instrumental bridging the two halves of the album.
The magic continues on ‘keep your
weeds’, a seductive piece of music that is closer to progressive than
doom, although that dark undercurrent remains at the core of the band’s
music, and once more it is Jex’s unutterably gorgeous voice that keeps
you utterly hooked into the music, absorbing every nuance of her warm
tones as her voice pours out of the speakers like liquid honey and the
music builds to a gentle crescendo. ‘Ehja’ is a massive, epic doom-laden
masterpiece that stands as the crowning glory of this wonderful album.
Powered by a huge, distorted riff and somnambulant drums, it is all the
more potent for the subtle nuances the band bring to the music, the
guitars slithering and crawling over the surface of the track’s extended
mid-section, and for Jex’s typically astonishing performance. ‘The four
of us are dying’ is a shorter, darker track, powered by those
wonderfully gritty Black Sabbath guitars once more and the stately
groove the band achieve is somewhat akin to head-banging on Prozac. It
would appear that the band have one more ace up their sleeve, however,
for the album’s closing track is the folk-inspired wonder of ‘Pysar’, an
eight minute epic that once again draws upon the beauty of nature and
the grandeur of the earth to see the album out on a high, especially
thanks to a huge guitar solo that draws the song to its climax amidst
swirling organ and hypnotic rhythms.
Jex Thoth are a band that offer so much
that it is all but impossible to take it all in in one sitting. Here you
will find love and loss, the power and beauty of nature and gentle
incantations which wrap themselves around you and hold you in their
embrace. What is most remarkable, aside from the strength of the songs
themselves, is the fluid grace with which the album has been sequenced,
so that in sitting and listening it feels like one stunning, continuous
piece of music that ebbs and flows across its sub-one-hour run time.
With glorious artwork to match, this is an epic, heart-breakingly
brilliant piece of work that stands as Jex Thoth’s greatest work to
date. Utterly wonderful from start to finish, the superlatives don’t
exist to praise this album highly enough.
tags: jex thoth, blood moon rise, 2013, flac,
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