Feel the Blues with all that Jazz
English (United Kingdom)Polish (Poland)
Home Polish Music Behemoth Behemoth – Evangelion (2009)

Behemoth – Evangelion (2009)

User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 

Behemoth – Evangelion (2009)

Image could not be displayed. Check browser for compatibility.


1. Daimonos 5:22
2. Shemaforash 3:45
3. Ov Fire And The Void 6:02
4. Transmigrating Beyond Realms Ov Amenti 5:33
5. He Who Breeds Pestilence 4:37
6. The Seed Ov I 2:16
7. Alas, Lord Is Upon Me 3:45
8. Defiling Morality Ov Black God 5:44
9. Lucifer 6:33
Personnel: Adam "Nergal" Darski – lead vocals, lead guitar Tomasz "Orion" Wróblewski – bass guitar, samples arrangement, additional vocals Zbigniew Robert "Inferno" Promiński – drums and percussion, backing vocals on Daimonos Patryk Dominik "Seth" Sztyber – rhythm guitar, backing vocals + Krzysztof "Siegmar" Oloś – keyboards, arrangements Maciej Maleńczuk – spoken word on Lucifer Tomasz "Ragaboy" Osiecki – sitar Pawel Hulisz – trumpet Piotr Kowalkowski – trumpet Michal Szczerba – horn Bogdan Kwiatek – trombone Lukasz Gruba – tuba Boris "Hatefrost" Kalyuzhnyy – backing vocals on Daimonos Maciej "Manticore" Gruszka – backing vocals on Daimonos

 

Hide the bibles and hopelessly pray for salvation, because Behemoth has returned to wreck havoc on Christianity with their ninth studio album, Evangelion. Interpreting the words of God in the most blasphemous of fashion, the band has stuck to the blackened death metal sound that they have been heading towards in recent years. While Evangelion is not a revolutionary step forward, a few surprises abound, and age has not dampened Behemoth’s blind rage. Behemoth creates a world where Jerusalem is submerged in a sea of blood and cretins toast to the demise of the Holy Father. The music supporting this dark imagery is stripped-down and explosive. “Transmigrating Beyond Realms Ov Amenti” and “Defiling Morality Ov Black God” tear a hole through the listener’s jugular, sounding similar to the band’s previous material, yet doesn’t feel stale or repetitive. The bits of orchestration and progressive elements that Behemoth began to utilize on The Apostasy are expanded upon on several tracks. A sitar closes out “Shemhamforash,” while the horns and acoustic guitar on opener “Daimonos” acts as a stirring introduction to the album. The biggest surprise is with the eight-minute closer “Lucifer,” a slow-paced affair that shows great restraint from the band, while maintaining an uncompromising intensity. After almost two decades, Behemoth has found their niche and stuck largely to their guns. For some, the trademark machine-gun double bass drums, wild lead guitar work, and suffocating growls is more than sufficient enough. Others may find the treading of trodden ground to show a lack of creativity. At this point in their career, sticking to what works isn’t necessary a negative characteristic. Behemoth adds enough creative moments of experimentation on Evangelion to appeal to both die-hards and newer fans looking for their first bile taste of pure evil. --- Dan Marsicano, heavymetal.about.com

download: uploaded anonfiles yandex 4shared solidfiles mediafire mega filecloudio

back

Last Updated (Monday, 18 November 2013 14:00)

 

Before downloading any file you are required to read and accept the
Terms and Conditions.

If you are an artist or agent, and would like your music removed from this site,
please e-mail us on
abuse@theblues-thatjazz.com
and we will remove them as soon as possible.


Polls
What music genre would you like to find here the most?
 
Now onsite:
  • 1372 guests
Content View Hits : 253852591