Album Review

Score 7.5
Written by Jordan Campbell
Published on 7/8/2008
As of late, the mere mention of Nachtmystium seems to illicit a predictable handful of conjurations. Debates over black metal scene politics, ham-handed proclaimations of genre revitalization, and abuse of the word "psychedelia" are all bogey golf right now. So, in the spirit of keeping the bullshit to a minimum, I'd like to conjure a few proclaimations of my own.

1) Black metal scene politics mean fuckall

2) If, in fact, black metal were actually in need of any type of reviltalization, it sure as hell wouldn't come from one band. From Illinois.

3) The term "psychedelic black metal" has all the appeal of smoking meth with Corey Haim.

Truthfully, however, there's no other way to describe the sonic headfuck that these dudes have put forth here, and there's no doubt that they've played their hand admirably.

Assassins: Black Meddle Part 1 (gotta love that title) is their fourth full-length amid a prolific career, but oddly enough, carries the vitality and excitement of a debut. Blake Judd and Co. have taken the full-on turn toward reinvention here, fully capitalizing on the influences and quirks that they've been cultivating for the past few years. Assassins is their long-brewing cashcrop, a violently potent bathtub gin made of ingredients that, on paper, seemingly go together like machetes and infants. Fortunately for all of us, it works astonishingly well. This harvest signals their first foray into crafting truly original music. Granted, it is by way of the direct influence of their forebears, but such is the game, friends...such is the game. 

Assassins carries a strange vibe to shake, a shaky vein to tap; the tracks that comprise this amorphous mass bob and flow by the time of an unpredicable pulse. While it is truly a beast to be tackled in whole, there's no doubt that the strongest offering is the title track, which is a straight-up cool-as-shit primer for the alien cynicism that subsequently unfolds. Nihilistic, cagey, and drenched in spit-splitting, frantic gang vocals, this song blasts and steamrolls before shoving its (and your) head underneath the waves.  The 3:06 mark of this song is where Nachtmystium truly find their hearts, dig their fingers into the valves, and split them in half for all to see. Swerving, sinking, diving, dirging...the band troll the depths of mind n' matter with full psyched-out furor, fucking with fire while doused in water. Chilled vibrations collide with precise blasting (*cough*Tony Laureano*cough*), creating the second of many subtle and not-so-subtle nods to Floydian oddity on here. Should this be a red flag to metalheads who can't get down with throwback pretense? Absolutely not. This vibe --this frost/fire LSD trip into death's maw-- is so tastefully woven throughout this disc that even metalheads that detest Pink Floyd and their spawn (there are undoubtedly many) will not be left with the bitter taste of meddle in their mouths. 

And lo, the new journey has begun, the band stomping hard, alternating Darkthroned fervor with dirgelike, ethereal recoils. Highlighted by the absoultely ferocious "Your True Enemy", the airy, melodic blackness of "Ghosts of Grace", and the anchor of the Seasick Triptych, "II: Oceanborn", which features some fantastic saxophone work courtesy of Yakuza's Bruce Lamont, the album is truly a stretch of the creators' imaginations. Carrying both 80-proof, enamel-cracking anthems and stoned-out, bloodpooling bliss in the same hand, Assassins is unburded by neither...it just spikes a trail of goosebumps from fingertip to the spine. Treading its own path through known corridors, Assassins is a new, bold stake in the ground. Not necessarily an all-shadowing pillar of domination, mind you; moreso a multi-faceted totem of sights and sounds to come. 

This is no messianic work of musical prophets. 'Tis simply a really, really fucking cool record, a snapshot of a band that has seemingly just begun to find their true voice. If you're lurking downtown with the heavy metal goings-on, this is one of those "perk your ears up 'n take note" type-of-things.  Get on it.



hooter's Avatar
hooter | posted on 12/2010 | Reply
"3) The term "psychedelic black metal" has all the appeal of smoking meth with Corey Haim." - and that's why I love reading your reviews. Good album, I'm trying to rev myself up to tackle Part II. Remember that review?
TheSlayerM's Avatar
TheSlayerM  | posted on 11/2008 | Reply
This one's going in my top ten for the year. An excellent album and one helluva review Rev.
wolf in the throne room's Avatar
wolf in the throne room | posted on 11/2008 | Reply
I am enjoying this. A lot.
ethr's Avatar
ethr | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
I bought this one the day it came out from all the prelease hype here and elsewhere. Its good, not great. Nothing really grabs me. I hold out hope it will later.
brundlefly's Avatar
brundlefly | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
This is a good album, but by no means is it great. I was floored by Instinct: Decay and Eulogy IV, but Assassins just didn't hit the same sweet spot. I would give them a slightly higher musicianship score, but lower the songwriting down at least .5 points. Not trying to be a hater, but this album just will not click after repeat listens. Maybe Ihsahn has all of my attention lately...
funeralthirst7's Avatar
funeralthirst7 | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
great album. it's really nice to hear a band putting out something that doesn't sound like everything else, especially in a genre where many bands do sound the same. and the psychadelic elements actually work really well. listen to it before you write it off
chud's Avatar
chud | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
I think I like this one better than previous attempts. They seem to have cut down on the ultra slow ambient black metal the French love so much, but I hate. There's some kick ass grooves on this that I didn't expect, but I like.
Stu's Avatar
Stu | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Nice review, i'm looking forward to getting this. Pitchfork gave it an 8.5 which is massive, right trezevant?
Anxiety Hangover's Avatar
Anxiety Hangover | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
This belongs next to the Lurker of Chalice album as anavant black metal classic. It's nice to see bands challenging not only themselves, but the listener as well.
Reverend Campbell's Avatar
Reverend Campbell  | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
@ Devin: The scores aren't meant to reflect the text; they are separate tools. The numbers come from the skull, the words from the gut.
Bradination's Avatar
Bradination | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
They really broke out on this album. I had it set for a 5/5/5. They're really tilling their own soil now. Great to hear them pull themselves into their own unique sound and I think "psychdelic black metal", while silly, is totally appropriate. Great album.
asp1986's Avatar
asp1986 | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
This is a great, great great record! I love it!
Warhammer Battle Master's Avatar
Warhammer Battle Master | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
I've been spinning this for a few weeks now and I think I still prefer Instinct:Decay, if only for the grimmer production and vocals. Still, it's an interesting album if nothing else. At least their trying to define their own sound. Thats more than half the bands out there can say. If you still crave lo-fi black metal theres plenty lying around. No need to rip on poor Nachtmystium.
zach's Avatar
zach  | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Want to hear. Going to acquire tonight by unspecified means. Enjoyed their last a lot.
Reason's Voice's Avatar
Reason's Voice | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
I like psychedelic stuff, and I love black metal, and I see no problem with combining the two. Is it just the phrase "psychedelic black metal" that rubs the reviewer the wrong way? This album is fantastic. I think it would've been even better, near perfect, had they added one more rippin, upbeat song right before the spacey three part epic.
joukahainen's Avatar
joukahainen | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
if it's reviewed by pitchfork, i think that's all it takes to be "hipster black metal". their review for this album hit pfork this morning. really, really, really enjoying this album. perfect summer black(ened) metal record.
Devin's Avatar
Devin | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Am I missing something here? This is a glowing review, but the scores don't seem to reflect the immense amount of praise dished out. This should be about as close to a 6/6/6 as possible, I think -- EVERY aspect of this album works and works flawlessly.
trezevant's Avatar
trezevant  | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
I can't believe I just heard the term "hipster black metal" thrown out there. Ugh. Man, I KNEW that sax solo sounded familiar! That Yakuza album that came out last year was damn good too. Good review, good album.
PizzaClaus's Avatar
PizzaClaus | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Ahem... super fucking good.
xrybreadx's Avatar
xrybreadx | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
great album. one of my fav black metal releases this year without a doubt.
The Metal Mallet's Avatar
The Metal Mallet | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Definitely been enjoying this album. Very solid and I look forward to seeing what they do with the next album. I think they found a sound they can work with on this one.
PizzaClaus's Avatar
PizzaClaus | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
This album is super fuck good. It could of used I dunno lyrics in the insert... what is this hipster black metal you speak of?
vugelnox's Avatar
vugelnox | posted on 7/2008 | Reply
Very cool stuff. The inevitable backlash against the new school of "hipster" black metal is quite strong these days but fuck it because I'm totally on board with many of these bands. Deathspell Omega, WITTR, Dødheimsgard, Leviathan, Negura Bunget, even good ol' Mayhem all have been churning out some great, if untraditional, albums for years now.