NewFriendAncientEnemy wrote:
Haha. Well, each to his own, I suppose my obsession with death metal and brutality founds my opinion, but I hope you enjoy Origin none the less.
BTW, I'm a black metal fan, but I find more interest in the raw, organic styles. For brutality, I turn to DM/DG. So that's where I come from. Again, to each his own.
Actually, I tend to be more of a Death Metaller too. I'm a big fan of Black Metal, I spent a big chunk of my time chasing up bands and reading about its history when I first really got into Metal, however for the most part I've preferred Death Metal. (Note the Suffocation avatar)
I just find Axis of Perdition, Anaal Nathrakh etc so much more brutal and intense than the Deathgrind greats, and they have this unnatural, inhuman feel to them which differs them from the Black Metal you're used to, and just drags me in.
Origin's awesome, BTW, though I don't see their drummer eclipsing Flo Mounier. It's about as intense as human drums get, which (understandably) doesn't reach that of the automated drumwork Axis of Perdition employs.
Radical Cut wrote:
Anaal Nathrakh isn't even that brutal or intense, more like incessant and uninteresting...not to mention tepid. The vocals are the only truly interesting/enjoyable thing about the band, and that's just because they remind me of Emperor, which then causes me to go listen to the real thing.
Then again, I feel about the same way about Origin, without the benefit of good vocals. They are plenty fast, but there is no weight to the music. Their ideas are as thin as they get.
What can I say, I'm not much for one-dimensional extreme metal.
Anaal Nathrakh produce a few nice riffs, I happen to like the start of
Submission Is For The Weak, though like most of the album that quickly degenerates into something relatively unexciting. AN weren't ever too exciting to me.
Axis of Perdition produce far more rewarding and intricate guitarwork, and manage to integrate the automated drums in without taking from said guitarwork.
But then, I suppose I'm only comparing the debut albums of the two, and
The Ichneumon Method was released 2 years after
The Codex Necro. Axis presented a ramarkable evolution from AN, in the same way that AN innovated the experimentations of Satyricon's
Rebel Extravaganza from a further two years previously.