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Eparistera Daimones

Triptykon

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Album Review

To the dismay of several generations of metalheads, Celtic Frost's celebrated new millennium reunion was to be a brief one, and the legendary curators of heavy metal's avant-garde movement would ultimately see their name retired for a second time by leader Tom G. Warrior after he fell out once again with bassist Martin Eric Ain. But the positive outcome of all this was that Warrior's creative juices were clearly reinvigorated by the experience and his confidence restored by the warm reception bestowed upon 2006's Monotheist, providing, along with the bitterness of another Frost collapse, plenty of motivation to launch without delay into his next musical endeavor, Triptykon. It's also apparent that Triptykon's first opus, 2010's Eparistera Daimones, initially germinated as Monotheist‘s follow-up, given the grinding doom tempos, occult-laced subjects, and pure, uncompromising heaviness characterizing key offerings like "Goetia," "Abyss Within My Soul," and "Descendant." Much like the typically disturbing H.R. Giger artwork gracing this album's cover (a throwback to Celtic Frost's seminal 1985 LP To Mega Therion), these are powerful yet frequently bleak sonic constructions prizing austere monochromatic shades of gray over melodic colors; they take some getting used to before revealing their subtle treasures, yet march in perfect lockstep with Warrior's trademark tuneless rasp. Interestingly, Eparistera Daimones also finds Warrior reaching into his past exploits with unprecedented lack of guilt, even as he continues to obey a fundamental instinct to break new ground, always. Thus, listeners get the stunningly refreshing Morbid Tales-worthy thrashing of "A Thousand Lies" and the Into the Pandemonium-recalling female vocals over stark solo piano midway through "Myopic Empire" on the one hand, and the unusual soundtrack experiment "Shrine" (consisting primarily of the subdued wails of the condemned!) and the gentle gothic atmospherics of "My Pain" on the other. And, tying all of these disparate elements together and simultaneously dwarfing them, one and all, is the album's closing statement and aptly named pièce de résistance, "The Prolonging," which never flags in concentration despite negotiating an astounding array of moods and ideas over the course of its colossal 20 minutes of duration. According to Warrior's own insightful liner notes (which accompany every song on the album), this extended piece's words were composed in the framework of a black mass, and its parts dated from several different writing sessions from before, during, and after Celtic Frost's final dissolution, possibly explaining its awesomely versatile fruition. Amid all of the other plaudits listed above for Eparistera Daimones, it's this sense of inspirational rebirth, more than anything else, that breathes life into Triptykon as a truly new and separate entity, no matter the group's evolutionary ties to Warrior's legacy. Celtic Frost is dead (well, most likely, this time around)…long live Triptykon.

Customer Reviews

From God to Satin

Triptykon's, Eparisera Daimones, debut is more then worthy of being Monotheist's successor. Carrying on the abysmal sounds of its predecessor, this album sinks deep into qusetions of faith in a different way. From God to Satin. It makes this album a different sort of beast. Crunchy guitars, Tom Garbriel Warrior's actually growling, and a foreboding atmosphere help make this album beautifully nightmarish and unforgiving. It's bound make their album artist, H.R. Giger, proud. Personally, I'd recommend the whole album, as each song has its own unique sort of funk to it. But if your looking for brutality, you won't go wrong with A Thousand Lies or Goetia. Don't be turned off by the 19 minute length of The Proloning though. It's 19 minutes of epic darkness and despair.

Darkly magnificent!

A dark, brooding record full of great atmosphere and mature songwriting. Tom G Warrior proves his worth yet again...

epic darkness

great successor to monotheist kind of a hellhammer/celtic frost mix buy this if you are a fan of all or any of tom g. warriors music it doesn't have any let downs

Biography

Genre: Rock

Years Active:

Switzerland's Triptykon is another avant-garde extreme metal proposition orchestrated by heavy metal legend Tom Gabriel Warrior (née Fischer), of Celtic Frost and Hellhammer fame. Founded in 2008, following Celtic Frost's second dissolution due to disagreements between Warrior and longtime cohort Martin Eric Ain, Triptykon consists of guitarist/vocalist V. Santura (also of Dark Fortress), bassist Vanja Slajh, and drummer...
Full Bio
Eparistera Daimones, Triptykon
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  • $9.99
  • Genres: Pop, Music, Rock, Metal
  • Released: Mar 23, 2010

Customer Ratings

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