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Death.FM - Emperor - In The Nightside Eclipse
Request |
Buy |
# |
Track Listing |
Length |
Played |
|
|
01 |
Into The Infinity Of Thoughts Emperor |
9:04 |
149 |
|
|
02 |
The Burning Shadows Of Silence Emperor |
5:34 |
108 |
|
|
03 |
Cosmic Keys To My Creations & Times Emperor |
6:04 |
150 |
|
|
04 |
Beyond The Great Vast Forest Emperor |
5:58 |
108 |
|
|
05 |
Towards The Pantheon Emperor |
5:56 |
106 |
|
|
06 |
The Majesty Of The Nightsky Emperor |
4:53 |
105 |
|
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07 |
I Am The Black Wizards Emperor |
5:59 |
156 |
|
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08 |
Inno A Satana Emperor |
4:47 |
138 |
|
|
09 |
A Fine Day To Die (Bathory Cover) Emperor |
8:25 |
113 |
|
|
10 |
Gypsy (Mercyful Fate Cover) Emperor |
2:53 |
108 |
Hint: Hover over buttons and album/artist name next to the cover for more info.
Reviewers Rating |
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2 reviews done for this album. |
|
In the Nightside Eclipse |
By: |
tr1sth3t |
Date: |
3 Apr 2011 |
Rating: |
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|
Arguably the finest Black Metal album of them all and Emperor top this list through having more than one defining album. In the Nightside Eclipse, revealed grandeur not yet experienced in the Black Metal scene and this opus par excellence can be cited as genre defining as Slayers ‘Reign in Blood’ or ‘Napalm Deaths ‘Scum’.
Featuring two of the most influential Norwegian musicians ‘Samoth and Ihsahn, [who were previously in, Thou Shalt Suffer], and spawning the likes of Mortis [original bass player], Emperor are the undisputed kings of Norwegian Black Metal.
‘Nightside Eclipse’ appeared after the equally astonishing split with Enslaved, taking the
invigorating keyboard imbued Black Metal to symphonic aural heights not yet beheld by man nor beast. The raw, desolate core of guitar and vocal delivery was intact, yet the majesty evoked by the keyboard orchestration was simply stunning.
The following album, 1997's Anthems To The Welkin At Dusk could never capture the astonishing atmosphere of ‘Nightside Eclipse’. What Anthems, did achieve was a progression of the former and where other bands would have struggled to maintain any momentum, Emperor just created a more dramatic and unique version of what preceded. The same equation can be applied to the 1999 release, IX Equilibrium. Once more the onus was not to surpass the former, but rather to strive onwards with far more intricate Black Metal components and daring music.
The bands influence has also had far reaching consequences with other acts of the same shivering ilk. Samoth played bass on Burzums ‘Aske, Gorgoroths ‘Pentagram & Satyricons ‘Shadowthrone, amongst others.
Emperor could never continue perpetually at such a release rate, and the bands last drops of ingenuity were used on the 2001 Prometheus: The Discipline Of Fire & Demise album, a release that was to be their last. [for now that is].
3 of 5 found this review helpful
Please log in to vote on this review
|
In the Nightside Eclipse |
By: |
tr1sth3t |
Date: |
3 Apr 2011 |
Rating: |
|
|
Arguably the finest Black Metal album of them all and Emperor top this list through having more than one defining album. In the Nightside Eclipse, revealed grandeur not yet experienced in the Black Metal scene and this opus par excellence can be cited as genre defining as Slayers ‘Reign in Blood’ or ‘Napalm Deaths ‘Scum’.
Featuring two of the most influential Norwegian musicians ‘Samoth and Ihsahn, [who were previously in, Thou Shalt Suffer], and spawning the likes of Mortis [original bass player], Emperor are the undisputed kings of Norwegian Black Metal.
‘Nightside Eclipse’ appeared after the equally astonishing split with Enslaved, taking the
invigorating keyboard imbued Black Metal to symphonic aural heights not yet beheld by man nor beast. The raw, desolate core of guitar and vocal delivery was intact, yet the majesty evoked by the keyboard orchestration was simply stunning.
The following album, 1997's Anthems To The Welkin At Dusk could never capture the astonishing atmosphere of ‘Nightside Eclipse’. What Anthems, did achieve was a progression of the former and where other bands would have struggled to maintain any momentum, Emperor just created a more dramatic and unique version of what preceded. The same equation can be applied to the 1999 release, IX Equilibrium. Once more the onus was not to surpass the former, but rather to strive onwards with far more intricate Black Metal components and daring music.
The bands influence has also had far reaching consequences with other acts of the same shivering ilk. Samoth played bass on Burzums ‘Aske, Gorgoroths ‘Pentagram & Satyricons ‘Shadowthrone, amongst others.
Emperor could never continue perpetually at such a release rate, and the bands last drops of ingenuity were used on the 2001 Prometheus: The Discipline Of Fire & Demise album, a release that was to be their last. [for now that is].
3 of 5 found this review helpful
Please log in to vote on this review
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