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Blodhemn

Enslaved

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Album Review

Viking metal stalwarts Enslaved closed out the 1990s with their fourth full album, Blodhemn, taking advantage of the millennium threshold ahead to close the first chapter of their career from a stylistic point of view as well. From here on out (beginning with 2000's Mardraum), the group would transform its sound significantly with every record; but, although Enslaved's songwriting had never been anything less than inquisitive from day one, it had heretofore relied primarily on typical Scandinavian black metal attributes — shrieked vocals, buzz-saw guitars, manic blastbeats — only extended to Bathory-approved, epic lengths. Blodhemn (which means "vengeance in blood" in Norwegian) was no exception, and may in fact have seemed like the "blackest" of them all on first listen, thanks to the involvement of respected producer Peter Tägtgren, who recorded the band at his own Abyss Studios. According to some detractors, Tägtgren actually made the band sound Swedish, because of the album's generally shorter songs and cleaner, more compressed sound (a vast improvement upon its dismal-sounding predecessor, Eld, it should be noted), but as repeated spins gradually revealed, Enslaved's relentless will to experiment still writhed within. So despite the seeming rigidity of their titanium-plated exoskeletons, tracks like "I Lenker Til Ragnarok," "Urtical Gods," and "Nidingaslakt" (the last two being as "rock & roll" as black metal song structures get) merely disguise imaginatively contrasting riffs and occasional hints of sounds yet to come, like the psychedelic/electronic bridge seeping out of "Ansuz Astral." Elsewhere, dark hymns like "Eit Auga Til Mimir," "Suttungs Mjød," and of course the title track continue to add new triumphs to the band's by now almost unchallenged Viking metal supremacy. That's why, in spite of some imminently temporal qualities and enduring controversies, Blodhemn has largely been vindicated over time, as yet another victorious step in Enslaved's long and never-ending musical evolution.

Customer Reviews

NIDINGASLAKT

BUY this album simply for that song

a classic

Oh yeah this album is great viking black metal from one of the legands. This was when their music was more black metal then anything else, fans of the new material might actualy get into this. There is some spoken word passages, and clean vocal parts which are really good at capturing the viking atmosphere. Allaround a must have get it and let the majestic Enslaved take you back to the old times.

The end of the first Enslaved era

Ahh...the olden days. This is the first Enslaved album that I bought when I was just getting into extreme metal. It is definitely their fastest, and most straightforward album in terms of black metal, but as the itunes reviewer mentions, it does hint at the things that would happen in the future of this band. Enslaved are one of those rare bands where I can't find an album to tell curious listeners to avoid. Everything they have put out is gold, and this is no exception. Though it may not have the heralded status of classics 'Frost' and 'Eld', or the gap-bridging inventiveness of their newer material, this album is quite strong indeed. The opening riff of 'Eit Auga til Mimir' is my favorite Enslaved riff ever!!!

Biography

Formed: 1991

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '90s, '00s

Norwegian black metal band Enslaved were formed in 1991 by guitarist/keyboardist Ivar Bjørnson and bassist Grutle Kjellson; a demo titled Yggdrstll followed a year later. The group's official albums include 1994's Frost, 1997's Eld, and 1999's Blodhemn. Personnel shifts have plagued the group throughout its existence; as of 1998, its membership...
Full Bio
Blodhemn, Enslaved
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