Fear factory, Sylosis and October File photos »
By Ragnarok Radio on Mar 25, 2010 in Gig Photos | 0 Comments
By Ragnarok Radio on Mar 25, 2010 in Gig Photos | 0 Comments
By Ragnarok Radio on Mar 19, 2010 in Gig Photos | 0 Comments
By Ragnarok Radio on Mar 17, 2010 in Black metal reviews, Reviews | 0 Comments
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01. Havoc 06:42 02. Reason 06:55 03. The Stir of Seasons 04:01 04. For a Thousand Years to Come 06:46 05. Abrasion Tide 07:14 06. Fleshflower 03:28 07. Worldwide 06:39 08. My Domain 04:49 |
Borknagar are a Progressive Black Metal band. Let’s just think about that for a moment. If you’ll allow me to dust off the ol’ stereotypewriter, then Black Metal is going to involve a lot of spiked leather garments, face-paint, and possibly marching around in a forest with a burning torch and a grim countenance. You have to go some distance from this to prog; at least one guy in your prog band has an afro, and is wearing trousers that MC Hammer would declare to be just a bit much. He’s also so high that he’s trying to play a flute with his nose, and will only end up in a forest in the event of some kind of ‘Withnail & I’ situation. So…progressive black metal? How does that work, then?
Quite simply, Borknagar just make it work. They’ve just taken most of those ingredients and mashed them together, leaving furious double bass drumming going hand in hand with Hammond organ and spoken-word intervals. If by some chance you’re actually already Borknagar’s number one fan, and I’m just condescending to you right now, it’s been four years since their last album, and that was an acoustic effort (acoustic progressive black metal…the mind boggles). So I’d imagine we could all do with a little refresher course, right?
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By Ragnarok Radio on Mar 17, 2010 in Interviews, Ragnarok Radio Episode | 1 Comment

Its been a while since our last show but Ewan and Victoria are back co presenting with north east based gothic industrial musician Synoiz.
Synoiz released his first album Ambients in October 2009 and has followed that up with a recent single release entitled Ever Emptiness. Much of his inspiration comes from video game soundtracks and produces what can best be described as ‘horror soundscapes’.
We hope you enjoy this foray into co-presenting and it includes an interview with Synoiz where we talk about the pitfalls of being an independent artist and where the ideas for the Ambients album came from.
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By Ragnarok Radio on Mar 8, 2010 in Gothic metal reviews, Reviews | 0 Comments
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01. The One I Once Was 04:46 02. The Pain Infernal and the Fall Eternal 05:16 03. The Eye of the Storm 05:10 04. The Malice of Life’s Cruel Ways 05:02 05. The Wheel of Fire 04:09 06. The Chains that Wield My Mind 04:30 07. The New Desire 03:50 08. The Vile Bringer of Self-Destructive Thoughts 03:52 09. The Candle at the Tunnel’s End 04:00 |
Morten Veland is something of a pioneer in the world of Gothic Metal; he was one of the founder members of Tristania, and went on to leave them to form Sirenia. So it’s fair to say he knows his way around the genre, and it’s not much of a surprise that his solo project produces exactly that. For the sake of continuity, he’s even managed to end the band name in “-ia”.
This is a proper solo project, no messing about with guest musicians or even producers - Veland has done literally everything himself, all of the instruments, music, lyrics, even the recording, engineering, mixing and producing. In his own studios. The one concession he’s made to the existence of the rest of the musical world is to use a choir, but I bet that’s just because he didn’t have time to multi-track himself singing all twenty parts. Yes, this is the Morten Veland show, his musical vision finally put straight from his head to record in its purest form.
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By Ragnarok Radio on Mar 8, 2010 in Progressive metal reviews, Reviews | 1 Comment
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01. Snakes for the Divine 08:23 02. Frost Hammer 06:07 03. Bastard Samurai 06:37 04. Ghost Neck 05:01 05. The Path 01:20 06. Fire, Flood and Plague 06:08 07. How Dark We Pray 08:06 08. Holy Flames of the Fire Spitter 04:13 |
It’s hard to believe that it’s coming up on three years since the last High on Fire album was released. That founder, guitarist and vocalist Matt Pike takes this long to produce an album is always going to instill a note of fear in his fans, most of whom are still traumatised by the saga of “Dopesmoker”. Pike’s old band, stoner metal legends Sleep, attempted to release “Dopesmoker” in 1995, but it didn’t see the light of day until eight years later, by which time the band had long since broken up. Pike has actually been busy with a Sleep reunion in the last year or so, but fear not, High on Fire devotees: “Snakes for the Divine” has actually been released, at long last!
Notably, “Snakes for the Divine” was produced by Greg Fidelman, famed for his peerless work on Slayer’s “World Painted Blood” and Metallica’s “Death Magnetic”, when he rescued both of those legendary bands from sounding like nu-metal ponces. He’s once again gone for the crisp, precise, dry kind of sound he brought to those albums, so it’s a slight departure from the explosive High on Fire sound we all know and love. However, if you take a moment to get used to it, this new style actually works really very well.
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