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Écailles de lune

Alcest

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Album Review

If any proof were needed that anticipation was at a fever pitch for Alcest's second full-length album, it could be found in the fact that a clever leak of Écailles de Lune that made the rounds before its release was rabidly snapped up worldwide even though most of the tracks came from a compilation of Chinese black metal acts. But the fact that it was treated as the real thing shows how strong Alcest's own aesthetic mark has been made already, and Écailles de Lune makes the most of its compelling fusion of black metal's theatricality and the after-echoes of shoegaze's propensity for utterly enveloping a listener, even if bandleader Neige approached that sound unconsciously at first. The first half of the two-part title track that begins the album starts with a gentle guitar chime before the full skyscraping riff kicks in, but — instead of getting even more intense as it goes — it's happy to turn even more elegantly beautiful, letting moments of strutting rock brawl feel more like exaltation than destruction. Neige's singing is some of his loveliest at many points throughout the album, a soft keen toward the middle of the second half of the title track, a low and contemplative rumination elsewhere — if not notably different from his earlier work in approach, it's at its most enjoyable here, and perhaps at its most beautifully serene on "Solar Song," vocals overlaid to lovely effect. In contrast to how Justin Broadrick's work in Jesu feels like brutal songs gone blissed-out, here it feels like calmly performed songs given sometimes full-speed accelerants that never lose a central grace, even when Neige's vocals turn into a familiar hollow rasp and wail.

Customer Reviews

Take A Deep Breath

As best I can sum up this album is black metal with a human heart. There are bursts of metallic energy, there aren't too many of these momments really, but they are more warm than furious. The music tends to be etheral, trancelike, and quite beautiful. I reccomend to just about anyone.

Not your typical black metal.

Although Alcest, without a doubt, can be described as black metal, it may not be of the usual dark, Satanic musings metal elitists are used to hearing from the genre. Alcest is much more than that. In fact, this musician deviates far from the cookie-cutter black metal moldings.

The album can be described as calm, harsh, beautiful, ethereal, and aggressive all at once, with a gentle post-rock flavor added into the mix. The vocals change between clean singing, smokey whispers, and raspy shrieks; it is heavily varied. I can only recommend this album to someone looking for a sound that is quite different from what they may be used to when it comes to extreme metal.

Great Album - Don

A lot of people pigeonhole this as being a black metal influenced album because of Neige's involvement in Peste Noire, but in reality Neige was only a studio musician on select material. Not that there isn't black metal influence here, but it's more realistic to take this album for what it is than the previous projects that the musicians were involved in. Early Alcest was more obviously influenced by black metal influence, but Peste Noire basically denies any influence of Neige in the music of PN, and states that he was simply a studio musician and wishes to disassociate himself with the scene that Amesoeurs, Les Discrets, and Alcest have created. This is a great album - but it is just as influenced by Ambient, Shoegaze, and Post-Rock as it is black metal. Listen to the album without a colored opinion and you'll see what I mean.

Biography

Formed: 1999 in Avignon, France

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '90s, '00s, '10s

Formed in 1999 by French black metal multi-instrumentalist Neige (who also worked with Peste Noire, Mortifera, and Amesoeurs), Alcest was originally conceived as a solo project. It would eventually take on the form of a full band as Hegnor (also of Peste Noire) and Arguth joined the fray and released a four-track demo entitled Tristesse Hivernale in 1999. This demo was a more straightforward black metal affair, much different from what would come next. After that release, Alcest returned to a one-member...
Full Bio
Écailles de lune, Alcest
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