Genre | Metal |
---|---|
Date (CEST) | 2025-06-17 18:41:00 |
Group | BLEEDiNG |
Size | 106 MB |
Files | 10 |
M3U / SFV / NFO |
Stellar_Blight-EVENTIDE_Synod_of_the_Dying_Stars-WEB-2025-BLEEDiNG
Infos
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Tracklist (M3U)
# | Filename | Artist | Songname | Bitrate | BPM |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 01-stellar_blight-the_portent.mp3 | Stellar Blight | The Portent | 320 | Unknown |
2 | 02-stellar_blight-doves_into_serpents.mp3 | Stellar Blight | Doves Into Serpents | 320 | Unknown |
3 | 03-stellar_blight-second_death.mp3 | Stellar Blight | Second Death | 320 | Unknown |
4 | 04-stellar_blight-world_wide_woe.mp3 | Stellar Blight | World Wide Woe | 320 | Unknown |
5 | 05-stellar_blight-stellar_blight.mp3 | Stellar Blight | Stellar Blight | 320 | Unknown |
6 | 06-stellar_blight-maggots_in_awe.mp3 | Stellar Blight | Maggots in Awe | 320 | Unknown |
7 | 07-stellar_blight-unsung.mp3 | Stellar Blight | Unsung | 320 | Unknown |
8 | 08-stellar_blight-sisyphean_prestige.mp3 | Stellar Blight | Sisyphean Prestige | 320 | Unknown |
9 | 09-stellar_blight-eventide.mp3 | Stellar Blight | Eventide | 320 | Unknown |
10 | 10-stellar_blight-weaponized_compassion.mp3 | Stellar Blight | Weaponized Compassion | 320 | Unknown |
NFO
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\______ \ | \_ _____/\_ _____/\______ \ |__|\ \ / _____/
| | _/ | | __)_ | __)_ | | \| |/ | \/ \ ___
| | \ |___ | \ | \ | ` \ / | \ \_\ \
|______ /_______ \/_______ //_______ //_______ /__\____|__ /\______ /
\/ \/ \/ \/ \/ \/ \/
artist: Stellar Blight
title: EVENTIDE: Synod of the Dying Stars
year: 2025
genre: Metal
type: Album
label: Malignant Voices
language: English
rel. date: 2025-06-13
source: WEB/MP3
quality: CBR 320kbps / 44.1 kHz / Full Stereo
runtime: 00:43:14
size: 110.75MB
rip date: 2025-06-17
source url: https://www.deezer.com/album/768044831
tracklist:
1. The Portent 1:25
2. Doves Into Serpents 5:01
3. Second Death 4:44
4. World Wide Woe 4:55
5. Stellar Blight 3:59
6. Maggots in Awe 6:00
7. Unsung 5:01
8. Sisyphean Prestige 4:34
9. Eventide 2:43
10. Weaponized Compassion 4:52
release notes:
Death Driven Heavy Metal from Poland.
Comprised of the vocalist from Manbryne (and Blaze of Perdition); the
guitarist from Shodan; and the drummer from Owls Woods Graves, the trio
have plenty of experience. With their debut, Eventide: Synod of the
Dying Stars, they blend each of their primary styles: taking mystique,
progressiveness, and punky energy from them, respectively, and creating
a dynamic, raucous, and characterful blackened heavy metal that's hard
to forget.
Eventide is defined by its spiritedness; something that hits all the
harder for the way Stellar Blight set the scene. First track "The
Portent," uses its time to create genuine anticipation for the rest of
the album with a gallant melody that gives way to rolling drumbeats and
chants. The smoke has barely cleared before the band launch into
white-hot ripper and instant Heavy Moves Heavy frontrunner "Doves into
Serpents". This dynamic opening duo provide a taste of the flavours to
come, elements and quirks that will recur over the remaining runtime.
Riffs that enter with a satisfying slide and croon with assuredness
("Second Death," "Stellar Blight"); group chants ("World Wide Woe") and
call-response lyric delivery ("Second Death") black 'n' roll swagger
meeting coercively snappy d-beats ("Weaponised Compassion"), and sulky
black metal sway ("Maggots in Awe," "Unsung"). Throughout it all,
Stellar Blight maintain their identity, whether snarling in defiance or
murmuring in brooding black moods-always consistently fierce, and with
barely a shred of atmosphere anywhere in sight.
This ferocity peaks at moments on Eventide when the band pull the most
electric aspects of their stylistic pool into one thrilling package.
Wailing leads, soaked in a heavy metal richness, warbling alongside a
tempo you feel in your bones, all three members roaring in unison and
you grinning like a maniac ("Doves into Serpents," "Second Death,"
"Stellar Blight"). Or, taking it down a gear, folky-acoustic
even-strumming weaving through ballad-like steadiness, chants backing up
the blackened narration of a beautiful, but very trve sort of ballad
("Maggots in Awe"). And even outside of these passages, Stellar Blight
sprinkles in spiky off-beats, smooth, slidy solos, and infectiously fun
gang vocals into an ostensibly black metal template, much like fruit,
nuts, and chocolate chips in the generously filled brownie batter of
addictive heavy music they have crafted.1 It culminates in a viciousness
devoid of malevolence, a brazenness entirely unpretentious, which
carries the spirit, if not the letter of traditional black and heavy
metal, and all while feeling fresh, thanks to Stellar Blight's creative
interpretation and execution.
If Stellar Blight could sustain their highest quality, they would be
unstoppable, but as it is, they stumble a little. The overall pace
literally begins to slow over the album's back half, beyond the sinister
and mournful "Maggots in Awe," which justifies its tone change with an
anthemic feel that sounds like Seth and Manbryne mashed together. The
weakest cuts, "Unsung," and "Sisyphean Prestige," follow back-to-back,
and eat away at the exhilaration created by the prior material. Their
melodies are comparatively unsubstantial, and disconcertingly major in
key; the bite of the snarls weaker, and the chanting less inspiring; the
tempos milder. Closer "Weaponised Compassion" makes up for some of this
deficit, but it lacks the commanding presence highlights like "Stellar
Blight" or "Doves into Serpents" have in droves, and its movements are
less interesting versions of the better songs' themes. There's also
instrumental "Eventide" sitting between it and "Sisyphean Prestige,"
which is in itself good, and probably contains the best solo guitar of
the lot, but at this point, it's hard not to resent what feels like
stalling before Stellar Blight get back on their game.
Gripes aside, there's no denying that Stellar Blight are working with
something very cool. It might need some refining, but the way they are
already integrating black and heavy metal is distinctive and dynamic.
With a consistent voice, the delivery of an all-around fun listening
experience (even at the lower points), and two songs in contention for
Heavy Moves Heavy, Eventide was a high-reward choice for me. Now we just
have to wait and see what Stellar Blight do next.