{"id":120782,"date":"2024-01-05T11:00:42","date_gmt":"2024-01-05T17:00:42","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/toiletovhell.com\/?p=120782"},"modified":"2024-01-05T11:03:13","modified_gmt":"2024-01-05T17:03:13","slug":"review-full-of-hell-nothing-when-no-birds-sang","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/toiletovhell.com\/review-full-of-hell-nothing-when-no-birds-sang\/","title":{"rendered":"Review: Full Of Hell \/ Nothing<\/b> – When No Birds Sang<\/i>"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Moreso than collaborator Nothing\u2014<\/strong>who continue on the trajectory most recently established by 2020’s The Great Dismal\u2014<\/em>it is Full Of Hell<\/strong> whose contribution to When No Birds Sing<\/em> that is particularly illuminating. A band at an interesting crossroad, Full Of Hell have had an interesting two years since the release of 2021’s Garden Of Burning Apparitions<\/em>. For as consistent as their release schedule has been for over a decade, its not surprising that after burning the grind candle at both ends, they’ve been branching into more disparate, often slower, sounds. 2023 saw a slew of collaborations that often slowed the tempo and played around with space and texture.<\/p>\n

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Their material this year began in March with Suffocating Hallucination<\/em>, their collaboration with sludge favourites Primitive Man<\/strong>. The album was for Full Of Hell a direct continuation of their 2022 EP Aurora Leaking From An Open Wound<\/em>, dense sludge and doom metal covered with their trademark acidic balm. This was followed by the more abstract collaboration with Gasp<\/strong> from late August. More glacial and interspersed with broad drone pieces, the record had a more muted reception but was another example of Full Of Hell articulating this musical crossroads they find themselves at. A band at an intersection of tempo and aggression, all while still trying to incorporate elements of their past deathgrind, noise and power electronics material.<\/p>\n

“Rose Tinted World” is built around a descending, legato riff interrupted with bites of feedback reminiscent of “Crawling Back To God” with more harmonic interference. The samples of upbeat local newscasters giving way to overwhelming reports of 911 calls and warzone correspondence make for easily one of 2023’s best tracks, a song whose climax feels apocalyptic in a way so, so many bands fail to emulate. The extreme metal equivalent to “Exit Music (For A Film)”.<\/p>\n