*U.K. first pressing.
Contains 9 tracks total.
Country: United Kingdom
Genre: Gothic Rock
Label Number: SITU 22 CD
© 1988 Situation Two
Having built a considerable and passionate fanbase, the Nephilim
approached their second album with confidence and a clutch of stunning
new songs. The resulting, semi-self-titled release blows away the first
by a mile (the art design alone, depicting an ancient, worn book with
strange symbols, is a winner), being an elegantly produced and played
monster of dark, powerful rock. Even if McCoy's cries and husked
whispers don't appeal to all, once the listener gets past that to the
music, the band simply goes off, incorporating their various influences
-- especially a good dollop of pre-Dark Side of the Moon Pink Floyd
(think songs like "One of These Days") -- to create a massive blast of a
record. Buchanan again produces with a careful ear for maximum impact,
whether it be the roaring rage of "Chord of Souls" or the minimal guitar
and slight keyboard wash of "Celebrate"; McCoy's vocal on the latter is
especially fine as a careful, calm brood that matches the music.
Perhaps most surprising about the album is that it yielded an
honest-to-goodness U.K. Top 40 hit with "Moonchild," which is very much
in the vein of earlier songs like "Preacher Man" but with just enough of
a catchier chorus and softer guitar part in the verse to make a wider
mark. Though the first part of the album is quite fine, including such
longtime fan favorites as "The Watchman" and "Phobia," after "Moonchild"
the record simply doesn't let up, building to a fantastic three-song
conclusion. "Celebrate" is followed by "Love Under Will," a windswept,
gloomily romantic number with a lovely combination of the band's regular
push and extra keyboards for effect. "Last Exit for the Lost" wraps
everything up on an astonishing high; starting off softly with just
bass, synths, one guitar, and McCoy, it then gently speeds up more and
more, pumping up the volume and finally turning into a momentous,
unstoppable tidal wave of electric energy.
tags: fields of the nephilim, the nephilim, 1989, flac,








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