{"id":54137,"date":"2016-08-17T09:00:03","date_gmt":"2016-08-17T14:00:03","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.toiletovhell.com\/?p=54137"},"modified":"2016-08-17T09:00:38","modified_gmt":"2016-08-17T14:00:38","slug":"free-metal-detector-duns-nature-morte","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/toiletovhell.com\/free-metal-detector-duns-nature-morte\/","title":{"rendered":"Free Metal Detector: Dun’<\/b>s Nature Morte<\/i>"},"content":{"rendered":"
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This album is so castle. Prepare your buttress.<\/p>\n

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Like the edifice that adorns the castle,\u00a0Nature Morte<\/em>, the debut album from multi-instrumentalist Orde, is a stately, even regal monument to genius design and breathtaking scope. It’s apparent immediately that Orde built this structure with masterful hand and eye, each stone and spoke a carefully planned element intended fully to support the entire castle and to cooperate with its adjacent pieces to render the whole all the more majestic. It’s almost perplexing to hear this level of craftsmanship in lo-fi, underground black metal, and yet the grandeur of\u00a0Nature Morte<\/em> is undeniable, its curtain walls rising up from the black mire of an analog moat like some austere, impenetrable fortress.<\/p>\n