As Sigh's
Scenes From Hell
is released this week, what better time to have a look back at the
history of the band? Infidel
Art
is Sigh's
second album, and sadly the hardest to get hold of due to various
record label “issues”, the band no longer on the infamous
Deathlike Silence Productions (although from what I gather there's
been a recent vinyl reissue). It's the last time they could be truly
called a “black metal” band (although still very much
rooted in the 80s tradition). However, it's also very much the band
on the way to the refined likes of say, Imaginary
Sonicscape, the
classical elements woven into the music, rather than as the odd
left-turns seen on Scorn
Defeat.
I refrain from using the term “symphonic black metal” to
describe Infidel
Art,
however- it's far too ugly for that. Opener Izuna
is all over the place, lurching between spiteful blackened thrash, to
cacophonous free-form piano solos, to attempts at neoclassical pomp
(played on the cheapest sub-MIDI keyboards you'll ever find). Whereas
Scorn Defeat was
weird just
because,
this time out Sigh
are
starting to delight in their reputation for sheer lunacy and disdain
for song structures. I prefer the less self-conscious, genuinely
bizarre atmosphere of Scorn
Defeat,
but there's still something charming about the way Infidel
Art
staggers through its' 6 songs, kicking over any notions of how a song
is supposed to fit together. The
Zombie Terror's
probably the most conventional track here, or perhaps it just seems
that way because I've listened to it enough times to know it inside
out. It's still ten freakin' minutes long and alternates between
punkish thrashing and long stretches of organ drones and piano solos.
Oh, and it plays us out with Spanish guitar, of all things. Speaking
of the guitar work, Shinichi Ishikawa begins to come into his own
here. His solos are less frequent, but they're far more melodic than
the guitar-bashing tantrums of Scorn
Defeat
(though I maintain the amateurish musicianship was essential to why
that record worked). Indeed, Infidel
Art
is a tighter, nastier record than its' predecessor, with the faster
parts being more vicious slices of volcanic thrash, and the slow
parts sounding more agonized than ever (Desolation
is utterly suffocating).The only break is in the odd, RPG-sounding
opening to The
Last Elegy,
a track maligned for many fans for its excessive length and weird
clean vocals. Still, it's got some great moments, particularly when
the chunky mid-paced riffs (the Celtic
Frost
influence is particularly noticeable here) interplay with the Eastern
flute melodies. The guitar solo's pretty awful, admittedly, Shinichi
sounding as if he was so drunk recording it he could barely stand,
let alone play guitar.
Infidel
Art,
due in no small part to its' rarity, is something of a lost gem in
the Sigh catalogue.
It's a transitional record, certainly, the band moving from their
position as black metal oddities to avant-metal masters. But there's
a certain magic to those early Sigh
records that's absent from everything post-Hail
Horror Hail,
and to dismiss this as badly-played and structured is to miss the
point entirely. It's as mental, ugly, and heavy as anything else the
band have done, and if you're prepared to track it down you'll find
an album easily on par with their more well-recognized material. Even
in somewhat limited circumstances, Sigh
show the creativity and eccentricity that made them one of Japan's
most well-loved musical exports.
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