{"id":117334,"date":"2023-04-13T11:00:26","date_gmt":"2023-04-13T16:00:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/toiletovhell.com\/?p=117334"},"modified":"2023-04-13T13:23:36","modified_gmt":"2023-04-13T18:23:36","slug":"review-voidceremony-threads-of-unknowing","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/toiletovhell.com\/review-voidceremony-threads-of-unknowing\/","title":{"rendered":"Review: VoidCeremony<\/b> – Threads of Unknowing<\/i>"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Visions from the Voidside<\/em><\/p>\n

Metal supergroups are not something I typically look forward to. They\u2019re a fun idea on paper: take your favorite musicians, combine their strengths, and create something greater than the sum of their individual capabilities. In practice these rely less on pure musicality and moreso on the clout and star power associated with everyone involved. They frequently converge on the lowest common denominators to create a semi-presentable package and all the star power cannot change that. This is not to say they cannot work but it\u2019s difficult for the stars to properly align for it to be so. So colour me surprised when VoidCeremony<\/strong> main brain and founder Garrett Johnson managed to recruit Quebecois shred-wizard Phil Tougas (First<\/strong> Fragment<\/strong>, Chthe\u2019ilist<\/strong>, ex-Serocs<\/strong>) and StarGazer<\/strong> bassist Damon Good to his fairly obscure progressive\/technical death metal project. With master drummer Charlie Koryn (Funebrarum<\/strong>, ex-Ghoulgotha<\/strong>, Ascended<\/strong> Dead<\/strong>, Decrepisy<\/strong> among many more) already a member and Garrett himself a highly capable fretboard wizard himself, interest in the band began to rise.<\/p>\n

The last lineup was not unimpressive either featuring guitarist John Reider of Ascended Dead and bassist Ian Mann (ex-Ghoulgotha, Conjureth<\/strong>), both having been involved in some of the finest and freshest 2010\u2019s death metal. While none of the musicians ever involved have the brand name recognition as the lineups of Bloodbath<\/strong>, Hail<\/strong> of Bullets<\/strong>, Death<\/strong>, and Nader Sadek<\/strong>, that is a relief in this instance. Threads of Unknowing<\/em> rests not on the admittedly more niche recognition of its more underground musicians but its ambitious vision for death metal. It is ultimately Garrett\u2019s brainchild yet it\u2019s hard to imagine it having turned out so well without musicians capable of keeping up with his many particularities and idiosyncrasies. Stellar musicianship plays a huge part of its appeal but it is in service of an arcane and mysterious evocation of death metal its cover art hints at only for the music to fully enrapture and mystify. So not only is it a rare example of a functional \u201csupergroup\u201d, it is also a great example of where death metal could start heading in a time of oversaturation and comfortably turgid trendiness.<\/p>\n