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Grieving Age - Merely The Fleshless We And The Awed Obsequy (2xCD)

death doom metal, Solitude Productions, Solitude Productions
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The second full-length album by doom/death metal from Saudi Arabia is their first officialyy issued release (the debut album was self-released by the band in 2009).Five monolith blocks on two CDs, almost two hours of depressing and brutal doom/death metal framed by morbid lyrics. There is no mercy or salvation: the most powerful elements of the genre are involved: solid guitar sound, deadly riffs and brutal vocals. The gravestones are polished by the masters of sound depression: Greg Chandler (Esoteric) and Victor Santura. The album is not recommended to impressive persons due to overwhelming negative and tendency to nervous breakdown. If this planet would be destroyed by musical forms, “Merely the Fleshless We and the Awed Obsequy...” by Grieving Age will undoubtedly be a part of this final mankind performance.

Tracklist:
1-1 Merely The Ululating Scurrilous Warblers Shalt Interminably Bray!! 18:50
1-2 O, Elegiac Purulent Purtenance, O Sepulchral Longevous Billows 15:43
1-3 Till The Forlorn Opprobrious Malady Thrives Amongst The Dtridulous Indigents We! 24:55
2-1 At The Licentious Abortionist’s Abattoir, Thine Disinherited Gravid Worms Adjure Excruciatingly 18:38
2-2 I’m The Dilacerated Sewed Flesh ! I’m The Sculpturesque Doomed Soliloquy! 27:20

Artist:
Grieving Age
Artist Country:
Saudi Arabia
Album Year:
2013
Title:
Merely The Fleshless We And The Awed Obsequy
Genre:
death doom metal
Format:
CD
Type:
2xCD
Package:
Jewel Case
Label:
Solitude Productions
Cat Num:
SP. 078-13
Release Year:
2013
Barcode:
4627080610439
Country Of Manufacture:
Russia
Review
Darkview
8/10
17.01.2014

Dat kom je nu niet alle dagen tegen zie, een band uit Saudi Arabië.

En ze spelen dan nog doomdeath ook. Gespreid over 2 cds vinden we 5 massieve mastodonten van nummers die even lang en zwaar zijn als de titellengte doet vermoeden. Hier zou zelfs Bal Sagoth van opkijken. Aan de productionele knoppen vinden we zowel Esoteric’s Greg Chandler als Victor Santura, u wellicht niet onbekend van Triptykon. Deze tweede plaat heeft daarmee een indrukwekkende gitaarmuur opgetrokken die zonder al te veel moeite de uitgestrekte composities kan dragen zonder dat het saai of langdradig wordt. Doe er hier en daar nog een viool bij en het goeie oude My Dying Bride gevoel uit hun begindagen is nooit ver weg. Uitstekende plaat uit een onverwachte hoek.

Author: Samoht
Review
R.U.M. Zine
15.01.2014

Ambiciozní Solitude Productions se rozhodně nebojí poskytovat prostor zcela neznámým kapelám a GRIEVING AGE budiž jednou z mnoha vlaštovek. Věřte-nevěřte, tahle parta metalových nadšenců pochází ze Saudské Arábie a na svém kontě má doposud dva neoficiální nosiče, přičemž „In Aloof Lantern, Thy Bequeathed a Wailer Quietus…“ z roku 2009 je kapelou pokládáno za oficiální debut. Možná i na jeho základě se hochům z dálného východu povedl tento husarský kousek (vydat album pod Solitude Productions), jež by mohl kapelu trochu více popostrčit směrem do Evropy.

Nicméně… budou to mít těžké, hoši vousatí. Na webu R.U.M. zinu jsem v nedávné době recenzoval hned několik doom metalových nahrávek a právě tuto musím chtě nechtě označit za vůbec nejméně záživnou, a to i přesto, že GRIEVING AGE se nesnaží působit jako úplně tuctová kapela. Problém ovšem je, že jejich mix funeralu a stoner doomu nepřináší kromě „valícího se kamení“ vůbec žádné vzrušení, nemluvě o absenci jakékoliv atmosféry. Ta je dost možná ukryta v převelice obsáhlých textech, nicméně hudební komparz působí v doprovodném klusu spíše jako potřebné křoví, za kterého je ponejvíc slyšet zbědovaně nakřáplý vokál, v jehož silách pochopitelně není, aby překryl průměrnou produkci zbylého hudebního komparzu. Jediné světlejší chvíle vyvstávají v úsecích, do kterých byly poněkud překvapivě natlačeny cellové party, vkusně doplňující jinak poměrně chudou zahuštěnost kytarového zvuku. Ledacos se dá usuzovat i z místa pořízení jednotlivých segmentů, zatímco kytary byly nahrány v jistém studiu v Saudské Arábii, tak cellové party vznikly v britském Priory Recording Studiu pod dohledem Grega Chandlera z ESOTERIC.

Jakkoliv se tedy GRIEVING AGE snažili překonat nahrávky fotrů SAINT VITUS a napodobit podivíny REVEREND BIZARRE, malinko pozapomněli na nutnost přispěchat s něčím navýsost působivým. Navíc si uřízli obrovský krajíc z hlediska celkového času nahrávky, která dosahuje takřka sto dvaceti minut (proto 2CD)! Kapela tedy rozhodně měla vybrat nejzdařilejší úseky a rozestavit je úplně jiným způsobem… Takhle četnost hluchých míst evokuje myšáky prožraný ementál a z komplexního hlediska nepomohl nahrávce ani britský inženýring – pochopitelně z logických důvodů.

Přes všechny mínusy ovšem není situace GRIEVING AGE nikterak beznadějná. Příště by ovšem bylo záhodno, kdyby skupina přistoupila k sestavování aranží poněkud jinak. Násilná časová rozcabenost sice k doom metalu rozhodně patří, ovšem pokud je podtržena prvoplánovostí, vytrácí se z hudby obecné kouzlo. V současné chvíli mám dojem, že hoši z tajemné Arábie jaksi stále dost dobře nevědí, kterak přesně se na „lopatě sedí“. Představy o slovutném uměleckém by tu byly, ale zatím nejsou podpořeny tím nejdůležitějším.
Review
Aristocrazia
01.09.2014

L'Arabia Saudita non è di certo riconosciuta fra le patrie del metal orientale, eppure da lì proviene una buona realtà che si era presentata a noi quattro anni fa con il debutto "In Aloof Lantern, Thy Bequeathed a Wailer Quietus…": parlo dei massicci e mortiferi doomster Grieving Age. La formazione di Jeddah si è imbarcata in un'operazione particolarmente rischiosa, la seconda uscita del gruppo è infatti doppia e contiene cinque pezzi per un totale di più di un'ora e trequarti; ciò che viene proposto è quindi paragonabile a uno scontro estenuante capace di mettere a dura prova la resistenza dell'ascoltatore.

Il nuovo "Merely The Fleshless We And The Awed Obsequy" potrebbe essere vissuto come un devastante e collassante conflitto da godersi in soluzione continuativa sino all'ultima nota del secondo disco, una prestazione doom-death ruvida che — come avvenuto già in passato — utilizza il primordiale approccio di realtà quali Disembowelment, Winter e Decomposed, ma che oggi più che mai ha trovato i riferimenti ideali per estremizzarsi e contaminarsi ulteriormente nella figura di Tom. G. Warrior (sia per i Celtic Frost che per i Tryptikon) e in compagini come Esoteric e Unholy.

Al cospetto di un passato elementare e in genere poco dinamico e rudimentale nell'esposizione, le tracce odierne evidenziano il buon lavoro svolto in sede di composizione, si può infatti constatare come vi sia una cura maggiore nell'elaborazione del lavoro di batteria esposto da Emad Mujalled; l'uomo dietro le pelli è ora più propenso a utilizzare i tom e fornire una quantità maggiore di minimi ed essenziali cambi di passo all'incedere dei pezzi. Si è affinata alquanto anche la prestazione del cantante Ahmed Shawli che — se nel debutto era apprezzabile soprattutto in fase di growl — adesso invece riesce a convincere pure nelle sezioni in cui la sua voce pare declamare il testo, facendo sì che i Grieving Age risultino completi e competitivi.

"Competitivo" è in effetti l'aggettivo ideale per questo album, una realizzazione professionale sia dal punto di vista strumentale sia per la produzione (affidata a Mr. Greg Chandler), la grafica e le atmosfere, intrisa di sensazioni maceranti che variano dall'angoscia alla disperazione, dall'arrendevolezza all'esasperazione, adatte a costituire uno scenario desolante e inequivocabilmente avviluppato in un tema portante imperturbabile, di una scala cromatica costantemente grigia. In pratica una sorta di limbo privo di scappatoie.

"Merely The Fleshless We And The Awed Obsequy" rivolge il suo severo sguardo in direzione degli inossidabili sostenitori di prove mastodontiche e laceranti. Se il vostro desiderio d'ascolto volge in tale direzione e le band citate a influenza sono da sempre nelle vostre sessioni musicali giornaliere, date l'opportunità a questi arabi di dire la loro nello stereo, non ve ne pentirete.

Author: Mourning
Review
Ave Noctum
8.5/10
03.12.2013

It’s always a great delight getting a pile of carefully wrapped discs over from Russian label Solitude Productions and their affiliated label Bad Mood Man. It’s a difficult task listening to them and thinking how much I like the sound of most of the albums before realising that I have to be fair and share them out among the other writers. It does give me first pick at things though and this time it was a tough choice with so much quality material from the obscure Russian and Ukrainian vastlands where the label prospect for their doomed treasure. We are used to hearing their output and shivering as it freezes the very bones and submerges us in icy plateaus and deep dark semi-frozen bodies of water. “What is this though,” I thought when I plumped upon Grieving Age to cover myself, pretty much blown away on the first humungous listen? “Where in the name of Vladivostok are these hoary Cossacks from?” Well you could have knocked me down with a feather when I looked up for more information and discovered that this is no freezing tundra that they dwell in but more like the desert as they hail from Jeddah in Saudi Arabia. I really was not expecting that!

Apparently the band have been around since 2003 and released an album called ‘In Aloof Lantern, Thy Bequeathed a Wailer Quietus…’ in 2005, a two track affair. In case you had not guessed they have titles that would make fake desert dwellers Nile sob and the length and epic unravelling of their material matches it perfectly. Here we have 5 tracks spread over two discs weighing in at a whopping 105 minutes. Yep they do not do things by halves and as we are pounded by first number (are you ready for this) ‘Merely the Ululating Scurrilous Warblers Shalt Interminably Bray!!’ it really is being like weathered and ground down by the elements. This is not exactly funeral doom although it contains elements certainly at its deepest plodding core, it is at times almost doom death as it suddenly picks up pace and gallops away. A large emphasis that really makes it different is the vocal delivery of Ahmed Mahmoud. It really does sound like he is commanding a vast army, giving them one hell of a talking to and telling them they fight to the death or they may as well fall on their swords right here and now. It’s a Blockbuster delivery and one that has me thinking of ancient civilisations, which is perhaps what it is meant to. I get the same sense of feeling out of this as I do from the Grecian armies commanded by the likes of SepticFlesh and Rotting Christ at their finest. I guess in a way they make you look beneath the vocals themselves and search for some of the hidden tones in the music such as a snatch of cello and other parts that make you wonder if they are really there or maybe just part of your imagination. I did find this nearly impossible to draw parallels too although musically thought of Esoteric at their tortured best a little and it was no surprise to discover that apparently “the gravestones were polished” by Greg Chandler and Victor Santura.

Despite the huge depth and length of this over several listens it has not outstayed its welcome in the slightest. Having said that many would no doubt not last anywhere in the region of a whole song. Probably the most tumultuous and nerve wrecking part of the whole double album though is the last 27 minute number (are you ready for this) ‘I’m the Dilacerated Sewed Flesh ! I’m the Sculpturesque Doomed Soliloquy!’ It just builds and builds like the construction of vast pyramids, a task seemingly without end and one that has caused countless untold deaths as it progresses. It’s kind of hard to describe unless you actually hear it but it is most definitely a harrowing listening experience for only the most hardy of slow crushing doom pioneers. If you actually dip into the lyrics too they are almost biblical and fit well with the music, some of the long drawn out vocals make more sense as many words are used that are as large as the titles and long as the music. If you do decide to follow it probably is going to be best if you have a dictionary at hand. The only thing missing from the overall package perhaps is that they are printed here in a normal booklet rather than on aged papyrus.

Grieving Age have delivered a remarkable album here that is well worth checking out and absorbing yourself in. If you browse Metal Archives by country it is all the more surprising when you discover that there are just 13 bands listed from Saudi Arabia, not all of them active. I would be very surprised if any of them come closer than a camels spitting distance to Grieving Age and making music of this type cannot be an easy task at all and for a work of such depth and substance as this they should surely be commended.

Author: Pete Woods
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