| Genre | Unknown |
|---|---|
| Date (CEST) | 2024-10-24 17:48:56 |
| Group | BLEEDiNG |
| Size | 98 MB |
| Files | 11 |
| M3U / SFV / NFO | |
Mercyless-Those_Who_Reign_Below-WEB-2024-BLEEDiNG
Infos
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Tracklist (M3U)
| # | Filename | Artist | Songname | Bitrate | BPM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 01-mercyless-extreme_unction.mp3 | Mercyless | Extreme Unction | Unknown | Unknown |
| 2 | 02-mercyless-i_am_hell.mp3 | Mercyless | I Am Hell | Unknown | Unknown |
| 3 | 03-mercyless-evil_shall_come_upon_you.mp3 | Mercyless | Evil Shall Come... Upon You | Unknown | Unknown |
| 4 | 04-mercyless-phantoms_of_cain.mp3 | Mercyless | Phantoms of Caïn | Unknown | Unknown |
| 5 | 05-mercyless-thy_resplendent_inferno.mp3 | Mercyless | Thy Resplendent Inferno | Unknown | Unknown |
| 6 | 06-mercyless-crown_of_blasphemy.mp3 | Mercyless | Crown of Blasphemy | Unknown | Unknown |
| 7 | 07-mercyless-prelude_to_eternal_darkness.mp3 | Mercyless | Prelude to Eternal Darkness | Unknown | Unknown |
| 8 | 08-mercyless-chaos_requiem.mp3 | Mercyless | Chaos Requiem | Unknown | Unknown |
| 9 | 09-mercyless-absurd_theatre.mp3 | Mercyless | Absurd Theatre | Unknown | Unknown |
| 10 | 10-mercyless-sanctus_deus_mortis.mp3 | Mercyless | Sanctus Deus Mortis | Unknown | Unknown |
| 11 | 11-mercyless-zechariah_31.mp3 | Mercyless | Zechariah 3:1 | Unknown | Unknown |
NFO
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\______ \ | \_ _____/\_ _____/\______ \ |__|\ \ / _____/
| | _/ | | __)_ | __)_ | | \| |/ | \/ \ ___
| | \ |___ | \ | \ | ` \ / | \ \_\ \
|______ /_______ \/_______ //_______ //_______ /__\____|__ /\______ /
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artist: Mercyless
title: Those Who Reign Below
year: 2024
genre: Death Metal
type: Album
label: Osmose Productions
language: English
rel. date: 2024-10-25
source: WEB/MP3
quality: CBR 320kbps / 44.1 kHz / Full Stereo
runtime: 00:42:52
size: 103.18MB
rip date: 2024-10-24
source url: http://deezer.com/album/630270391
tracklist:
1. Extreme Unction 5:24
2. I Am Hell 4:03
3. Evil Shall Come... Upon You 3:59
4. Phantoms of Ca∩n 3:47
5. Thy Resplendent Inferno 4:12
6. Crown of Blasphemy 4:55
7. Prelude to Eternal Darkness 4:38
8. Chaos Requiem 4:14
9. Absurd Theatre 2:09
10. Sanctus Deus Mortis 4:29
11. Zechariah 3:1 1:02
release notes:
Summoned as a husk wrapped in smoke stained, eons-leathered flesh and spurred
on by the wailing hatred of never-ending conflict Mulhouse, France-based
death metal quartet MERCYLESS act as an enduring possessed cult once again
bringing to life visions of evil incarnate on this eighth and decidedly æold
schoolÆ death-thrashing full-length album. æThose Who Reign Belowæ naturally
re-tunes the long-standing quartetÆs ideation of 80Æs inspired and early 90Æs
entrenched death metal toward crueler, more frantically shot pathos as they
reinforce their signature and present an increasingly morbid angle at the
same time. The riff obsessed classicism found on this record upholds the
entirely consistent quality of the bandÆs post-reformation LPs with a
similarly high standard, sure to please existing fandom with a familiar touch
while also introducing an approach to death metal which is authentic to their
impetus.
Mercyless formed circa 1987 under their original name (Merciless) playing
evil thrashing heavy metal thatÆd changed shape slightly with each of their
first three demos and with very little of their work on those tapes
translating to the Pestilence-meets-Sinister brilliance of their debut LP in
1992 where theyÆd created their own high-grade early 90Æs brilliance at a
level unexpected from the French scene at that time, at least beyond maybe
the building efforts of earlier starters like Loudblast and Massacra. I could
go on about the bandÆs history, and I have in the past several times over the
years, but in terms of long-standing fandom and general bias their first two
LPs make it in my top 50 death metal classics of all time and of course,
primarily for the riffs and their exemplar understanding of groove as it
translated beyond extreme thrash. In fact I was such a fan that when theyÆd
returned with a new line-up in 2013 and released æUnholy Black Splendoræ itÆd
ended up at #4 on my Best of 2013 list where, if you donÆt recall thatÆd been
an example of real and fitting æcomebackÆ record for a band thatÆd lost their
way and crapped out a decade plus before.
Most of the comeback lineup followed guitarist/vocalist and founder Max Otero
for the next two albums Ætil æThe Mother of All Plaguesæ (2020) and the
actual pandemic seems to have been both a high point and a reset button for
the troupe gathered. Not only did the album review well per my own taste but
itÆd done well to reinforce the feeling that the band had developed an
important signature by 1992 which still carried its passionate attention to
detail three decades later. This was still a band dedicated to pure death
metal (lets not talk about 1996 and 2000) who not only returned from the
grave but stuck to their guns at every turn. This is an important note to
take as we pierce the blood-portal to Mercyless eighth album and find theyÆve
compromised nothing, delivering sharply crafted and riff-centric æold schoolÆ
death metal with proper skill and fiery attack.
The only expectation IÆd had heading in (as a fan) was that some of the
classic proto-extreme metal fire of their 2020 covers EP (æSovereign Evilæ)
was likely going to be a factor in the presentation of this album and the ôI
Am Hellö single theyÆd released first echoed this. While a simpler,
death-thrashing and wailing approach is a part of that upfront attack there
are nine songs to cut through here and they generally run a gamut from skull
rattling 80Æs death rippers to their snappier early 90Æs grooves, all of it
feels like a conscious connection between those late 80Æs demo tapes and
their very pro-level debut. Grimier, distant production values from Raph
Henry of Heldscalla Studio were directed toward meaner and uglier underground
tonality which enhance this approach as Mercyless intend to reflect the
blasphemy and hatred death metal music in classic ideation. This makes for a
slightly muddier, quick-footed induction compared to æThe Mother of All
Plaguesæ as well as a more organic level of sound design, fitting the
thrashing but wheeling-out pacing of this album as it whips through
well-stacked ~4-5 minute death metal songs.
With that sort of sound design and intent in mind guitar tones are prominent
but not oppressive allowing a somewhat realistic sense of space and room
bleed to enter the drumÆs presence, as if the compression on late 80Æs
death-thrash drums were lifted for the sake of atmospheric space. ThisÆd
taken me back to the first Pestilence album in some respect as they chop
through the distempered ride-nÆ-thrash of ôThy Resplendent Infernoö near the
middle of the album. The bass chugs in the midst of the main verse riffs, the
drums rap and rattle in space in response to quick changes and there is a
unique thrill to the skeleton beneath the body of neatly writ guitar
interest. Though Mercyless are delivering these songs with some callous,
hardened energy the rabid pulse that builds from song to song help to keep
the actual moment-to-moment flex of this record from ever feeling like an
exercise. In fact as each song eventually finds a moment to slow into a
menacing groove we gain a sense for the vernacular of the guitarists and
their songcraft, some elements of this are (naturally) repetitive and the
attack on this album veers between just a few different levels of blasting
and jogging when it comes time to start counting riffs and figuring which
ones will stick overall but all of this is, again, well in line with
authentic death metal sounds.
With a few heavy whiffs of early Morbid Angel-esque motion stirring up on
ôSanctus Deus Mortisö and ôPhantoms Of Ca∩nö IÆd assume some of the guest
spots (Patrick Bonvin of Near Death Condition and Stephan Baillot of
Ritualization) occur somewhere around there. These were some of my favorite
moments on the record if only for how developed, multi-tiered they were in
their rhythmic reveal. Sidling those songs next to more typical signature
Mercyless pieces kept the pacing brisk, brutal and varietal enough to warrant
repeated listens and without recreating the general format of the previous
LP; Otherwise cover art from Nestor Avalos once again characterizes the
bandÆs work as dark and formidable this time with a Moyen-esque composition
which feels like an ancient bestial death record on approach. All things
considered these folks have put together a wholly entertaining classics-built
death metal record which carries its strength in variety and fiery cuts
without necessarily aiming for purely memorable actions throughout. This
doesnÆt quite overtake æUnholy Black Splendoræ in terms of ranking their
comeback era efforts but at this point it comes in at a pretty close second
thanks to a thrash-heavy approach and live-feeling production values.