Showing posts with label Kauan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kauan. Show all posts

July 1, 2017

Dynamic Metal Roundup

By Calen Henry. Metal is loud and abrasive, but metal fans like it that way. Over the past 25 years, there has risen a pernicious side to the loudness of metal (and music in general). Dynamic range compression has
By Calen Henry.

Metal is loud and abrasive, but metal fans like it that way. Over the past 25 years, there has risen a pernicious side to the loudness of metal (and music in general). Dynamic range compression has drastically increased in a phenomenon called the Loudness War.

Simply put, during mastering much contemporary music is altered to raise the volume of all parts to the same level as the loudest part, often the drums. The resulting loss of dynamics decreases the overall impact of the music; when you turn it up everything gets super loud, instead of some parts being accented.

A loud master doesn't necessarily ruin an album, and poorly produced dynamic albums can still sound terrible, but there are essentially no examples of more dynamic masters sounding worse than the louder version, provided other factors are not also drastically altered.

Thankfully, since I started paying attention a few years ago the trend has been toward more dynamic masters for metal, though it's far from standard. That being said, a few artists really stand out in both their commitment to dynamics and their excellent music.


I'm a sucker for concept albums and Vainaja take it even further; they're a concept band. Comprised of The Preacher, The Cantor, and the Gravedigger they play absolutely crushing death doom, in Finnish. The concept revolves around Wilhelm, a mysterious (and fictional) cult leader believed to have risen from the dead to corrupt the townsfolk with his blasphemous sermons. The albums are based upon unearthed excerpts of his writings.

Musically, their first album Kadotetut is pretty straightforward death doom while the second Verenvalaja expands the sound with more interesting arrangements and some guest guitar work by Hooded Menace's Lasse Pyykko. On music alone Vainaja have made a name for themselves, but going above and beyond, they've released digital versions of the vinyl mixes for both Kadotetut and Verenvalaja and they sound incredible. Vainaja was the catalyst to write this roundup.

Death doom is far from the first genre one thinks of in relation to dynamics, but the dynamic mixes sound incredible. The drums in Verenvalaja are absolutely thunderous and every filthy guitar note is clearly audible. Plus the dynamic master makes it positively easy to blow through the whole album in one sitting. It will make you yearn for a vinyl mix of every album



Bordering on a household name, at least in the metal community, Horrendous inject just the right level of "progressive" into Old School Death Metal to make super interesting albums without leaving the bounds of "OSDM". In contrast to full on progressive death metal Horrendous stick to the OSDM sound but shake things up with truly interesting melodic compositions. Their two most recent albums, Anareta and Ecdysis were some of the earlier of the "New Wave of Dynamic Metal" and they sound fantastic. Everything from the buzzsaw guitars to the powerful drums and lush acoustic passages sounds phenomenal.



Like Vainaja, Be'lakor made a name for themselves based on their music, then released vinyl masters of older albums. Widely praised for injecting new life into the somewhat stale Melodic Death Metal scene, the vinyl masters of Stone's Reach and Of Breath and Bone sound stellar. Each individual part of the music, right down to the individual drum and cymbal hits comes through with amazing clarity adding another level to already fantastic albums.



Kuaun's latest album, Sorni Nai, sees the Finnish singing Russian band craft a concept album about the Dyatlov Pass incident. In 1959 a group of 9 skiers in Russia disappeared then were found dead with bizarre injuries and the whole story is still unknown. Sorni Nai is a cinematic album flowing through doom, black metal, post rock and even sections broaching on classical. It's all delivered with a huge dynamic mix and is Pay What You Want on Blood Music's Bandcamp (like all their releases).



Auric are another fantastic anomaly on this list. The Arkansas based band play blackened sludge with echoes of early Mastodon (they use the same tuning) and Pallbearer. Their most recent full length, Empty Seas, is absolutely jaw dropping and criminally underrated. They employ an Elder-like ability to incorporate aspects of Stoner metal, sludge, black metal, and post-rock into a cohesive whole, and bless it with a hugely dynamic mix. The drums, though have an oddly compressed character which stands out strangely during slower passages, but helps preserve clarity during the some of the lightning fast sections. Of particular note is the track "Backlit", where they take a filthy sludge riff and build all sorts of levels of melody over top of it. So good.


If this list piques your interest in dynamic metal it's worth noting that Earache records has a large back catalog of classics ranging from the death metal triangle (US, Sweden, Britain), to grindcore available as Full Dynamic Range versions; digital versions of the vinyl mixes. It's worth revisiting classics like Carcass' Heartwork and Entombed's Left Hand Path to hear the dynamic mixes.

December 11, 2013

Kauan - Pirut

Written by Sean Golyer.


Anybody who knows me well knows I have a borderline unhealthy obsession with this artist. I loved the quirkiness of Kauan’s first endeavour, Lumikuuro from the first time I heard it. It was the strangest mix of doom, folk, electronic, and even a little jazz recorded on what was probably a shoestring budget. But it didn’t matter, it had an unforgettable charm to it. As the project progressed, there were shifts towards heavier electronic and post-rock elements, which in hindsight seem natural. I remember the first time I listened to Aava Tuulen Maa I was actually a little disappointed. At the time I was still on a very metal kick and wanted everything to be heavy. But I really wanted to like it, I had invested like, 25 dollars just to get this CD from Europe. If you’ve ever been a broke college kid, you know that’s basically the equivalent of “I guess I’m not eating this week”. Thankfully it really grew on me, to the point where it’s been my favorite release. I think it all clicked driving through a snowstorm while listening to this in the car on repeat for hours. The mix of snow-covered forests and prairies of my home state with that album just melded so perfectly, it was damn near spiritual.


[Go to the post to view the Bandcamp player]

Kuu.. released a couple years later. As well as personally investing in the project during its production, I bought just about every piece of merch I could afford. This time around it was an even stronger push into the realm of electronic post-rock, but the movements and motifs were just as hooky and emotional as they’ve always been. But it was the very end of the album that left me a little excited for the future. Nearly 4 years since the release of Tietajan Laulu we got our first taste of doom. A fan can dream that Kauan may revisit those themes, right?


[Go to the post to view the Bandcamp player]

Enter Pirut. While Kauan has always retained some elements of doom throughout their discography, one would be hard pressed to actually call any release since Tietajan Laulu metal. I don’t mean to say that disparagingly either, I truly believe Pirut would not be the masterpiece it is without these last 6 years of stylistic shifts, it’s all great music. Having that context in mind really puts this album in a whole different perspective, and I highly recommend listening to the entire back catalog. There are tons of melodies and compositional choices that are strongly reminiscent of both Kuu.. and Aava Tuulen Maa, much to its benefit I might add. I’m envious of such a beautiful mix too. The guitars are heavy, powerful, and foreboding, enough to make any doom fan crinkle a wretched smile. There’s a non-stop ebb and flow to the album with plenty of room to breath and take in the sonic landscape Kauan has so carefully laid out for us.

It should be noted there aren’t any “songs” in the traditional sense on this album, it’s merely divided up into a series of movements. It rewards a patient listener and fans of the “concept album experience” who are willing to sit down and listen from start to finish every time. Often times when I hear of albums such as these I worry about there being a great deal of “atmospheric filler” in-between otherwise decent songs, but no such filler exists here. It’s not a doomy jam album, it’s a non-stop, living, breathing piece of music, seamlessly shifting from one set of movements and motifs to the next, more akin to a 40-minute classical performance than a metal album.

Pirut genuinely offers us something special. The sweeping synths and haunting piano work, heart-wrenching string melodies, ear-smashing guitar riffs, and each vocal performance (language barrier be damned!) all comes together to make one impressive and moving piece of art. Kauan always has been and continues to be a statement of how powerful music can be, regardless of language or culture, and Pirut is one of the finest additions to their catalog to date.


[Go to the post to view the Bandcamp player]


Note: All of Kauan's previous albums are available as name-your-price downloads on their BadMoodMan Music Bandcamp page.