{"id":2075,"date":"2014-08-19T15:00:51","date_gmt":"2014-08-19T20:00:51","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.toiletovhell.com\/?p=2075"},"modified":"2014-08-18T23:08:13","modified_gmt":"2014-08-19T04:08:13","slug":"review-two-shades-of-black-monolith","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/toiletovhell.com\/review-two-shades-of-black-monolith\/","title":{"rendered":"Review: Two Shades of BLACK MONOLITH"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Variety is good, variety is great. I tend to do a lot with my day, and like many of you, I like to curate appropriate and multifaceted soundtracks that coincide with my ever-changing activities and moods. Trouble arises when, on occasion, I\u2019m in two different moods simultaneously, and I resort to making a playlist that features tracks from two jarringly distinct tone realms in an attempt to satiate my audible duo-lust. I mean, what if I feel like somberly dragging a corpse barefoot through the woods, but also want to hack down some birch trees in a berserk, plant-murdering frenzy? <\/p>\n

Thankfully, Black Monolith<\/a> is here to make this shit easy on me by creating a record with two distinct, yet occasionally intermingling moods. Specifically, Passenger<\/em> is a satisfying mix of black metal and d-beat crust punk.<\/p>\n

Generally, the tracks on Passenger<\/em> bounce back and forth between the two styles, giving the record a clear pacing. I love d-beat and find good black metal transfixing, but I sometimes struggle to make it through a full record of either genre because the power of the mood can quickly dwindle as my prog-addled mind craves a break from what I\u2019ve heard over the last 8 minutes. Black Monolith\u2019s<\/strong> ping-pong track order trick solves that problem, albeit with an occasionally garish manic-depressive technique.<\/p>\n

The record kicks off with a pure black metal piece followed by a (mostly) typical d-beat banger, quickly establishing the parameters by which this record should be understood. The following tracks successively become more of a fusion: the vicious shoegaze of \u201cAdhere\u201d makes way for a double time drum break at the 3 minute mark, and some serene finger picking lets us down gently in the final third of the earnestly evil \u201cVictims & Hangmen.\u201d \u201cGold Watch\u201d is the most successful blackened crust integration, managing to find common ground and natural transitions across the whole 9 minutes, whereas the other tracks may merely use an oppositely-aligned section as a novel genre piece to keep the song moving after the second chorus.<\/p>\n

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