Lovingly pinched from Metal Underground: The Icelandic heathens that make up Sólstafir continue to push past the boundaries of their origins, hitting a serious landmark in sound on their fourth full-length album, Svartir Sandar. A description like “post-black metal” doesn’t even begin to do the album justice, as these songs are unique explorations into modern and genre-bending areas of metal that defy both the old school kvlt hangers-on and the newest trendy things.
Sólstafir likes to play with its sounds, twisting and bending notes and taking them further than they might have originally gone. Trailing guitar chords, heavy on the reverb and with a serious echo, are the norm and the preferred way to blend into the next section of music. Even when the music is toned down and atmospheric, which it frequently is, any given listener would still be hard pressed to lose interest in these melancholy soundscapes.
Although obviously influenced by black metal of the ‘90s, Svartir Sandar has much more of a rock and roll base, albeit with an almost apocalyptic attitude. The vocals are hugely emotional, yelled out in a somewhat harsh way, but without actually becoming a death metal growl or black metal scream. The singing is delivered like an honest-to-Lucifer wail, full of lamentation and with an undercurrent of rage.
There are tracks that breach the 10 and 11 minute marks, and somehow the songs don’t overstay their welcome or repeat the same ideas into infinity. There’s an ambient, swirling sort of chaos to the sound, but Svartir Sandar isn’t one of those droning ambient albums that goes nowhere and has no structure. The second disc does get a bit more avant-garde and conceptual than the first half, which remains a solid slab of melancholic rock mixed with an angry metal vibe. The songs on the second disc tend to use more odd sound effects and head more toward the trippy and bizarre territory.
Continue reading: Solstafir – “Svartir Sandar” CD Review – in Metal Reviews ( Metal Underground.com ).
Tags: Album of the day, Metal Underground, post black metal, post rock, Seasons of Mist, Solstafir, Svartir Sandar
This entry was posted on Monday, October 24th, 2011 at 1:07 pm and is filed under 2011, Album of the Day, Roadburn Recommended . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.








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