Language: Norwegian (Nynorsk)
Genre: Black Metal
Label Number: WLR015
.FLAC via Florenfile
.AAC 256 kbps via Florenfile
☠: Selected by Buccaneer
© 1998 Wounded Love RecordsReviewed by "James" for Metal Reviews.com
All things considered, the last couple
of years of the 20th Century were a bit of a lean time for
black metal. The glory days of the Norwegian scene were over, with
many of the key players out of action (Burzum)
sliding into musical irrelevancy (Darkthrone)
or abandoning black metal completely (Ulver).
So along come Taake,
a band who are in every way a throwback to the prime years of True
Norwegian Black Metal. Aside from the notoriously
controversy-courting antics of one Mr Ulvhedin Hoest, the music is a
throwback to classic Emperor,
Satyricon and Ulver.
Hoest even uses the winning Grieghallen/Erik Pytten production
combination that worked so well for so many bands in the early 90s.
During this particularly difficult time in black metal (the USBM
movement hadn't yet come to prominence, of course) Taake's
unwavering comittment to
orthodox black metal dogma made them flag-bearers for the genre in a
time when it truly needed something special.
Of
course, all this would be merely posturing if the music couldn't back
it up, and while Taake
don't do anything particularly new, there's a true passion for black
metal here that lifts the music to another level. Hoest's knack for
writing blazingly fast yet refined riffs (this isn't the bestial
thrashing of say, early Immortal)
colours the album throughout. Indeed, Nattestid
Ser Porten Vid, being
essentially one long piece despite a couple of breaks here and there,
is basically a collection of high-quality black metal riffs. It's not
quite as catchy as something like Nattens
Madrigal,
but the riffs are fiery enough to keep you listening to the end.
There's also a strangely epic feel to the album, evoking the same
atmosphere of mighty Vikings and times gone by as Enslaved
(Indeed, the very name Taake
was
a tribute by Hoest to the fog that often surrounds his native
Bergen). The heart and passion in this album is perhaps best shown in
the howl of Hoest himself, throwing in the odd spot of cleanly sung
chanting for good measure, particularly on I
and
VII.
Although
it doesn't come quite up to the same standards as the legends it
clearly was influenced by (and hence misses out by the narrowest of
margins on classic status), Nattestid
is still a vitally
important record in black metal history. Why? Because it showed that
Norway could still produce exciting traditional black metal in a time
when it needed it most. As enjoyable as the more experimental wing of
black metal is, there's still nothing quite as thrilling as black
metal in its purest, most orthodox form. Hoest understood this
perfectly, and combined the best parts of Norway's finest to produce
an album that can stand up proudly on its own merits. It's not
perfect by any means: you'll be hard pushed to really remember much
from it, unless you know it inside out, but Nattestid
Ser Porten Vid is
nothing less than a hymn to the majesty of black metal. Hoest
understands the genre like few others, and if you're not awestruck by
the majestic choral climax to the record, well, black metal just
isn't for you. Taake may
not be the band they once were, trading off the majesty of old for
excess aggression, but lest we forget, there was a time when Ulvhedin
Hoest stood a fair chance of claiming the title of reigning king of
Norwegian black metal.
tags: taake, nattestid, 1998, flac,
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