Album Review

Score 6.3
Written by Erik Thomas
Published on 9/10/2009
What got my attention for the debut of this English black metal act was not only the quality of some recent British, atmospheric black metal such as Winterfylleth, Altar of Plagues (Ireland I know), Fen and such, but that A Forest of Stars’ The Corpse of Rebirth features violinist Kate stone, before she appeared on My Dying Bride’s most recent effort, For Lies I Sire. Organic, mystical and atmospheric black metal (from the UK) with violins? Bring it.

However, my expectations were not entirely satiated. With 5 tracks clocking in at over an hour, this album will have some appeal to the aforementioned acts as well as icons Wolves in the Throne Room, but the lengthy, sprawling nature of the album has a lot of droning, ambient, moments that come across as either dreamy well done tangents or filler between the enthralling violin and the often underwhelming and vocally grating, primal black metal.

Still, there are indeed some solid moments on display, namely the ones featuring Stone and her haunting violin lines that fill impressive opening 11 minute track “God.” With this track A Forest of Stars deliver everything positive and negative about the band's delivery, from the ebb and build of the intro to some steady black metal, to supine violins and flutes, to some down right odd vocals and time changes and wasted ambience. And thus goes the rest of the slightly overdrawn but at times mesmerizing album.

Second track, “Female” cranks up the intensity a little bit, but even with Stone's evocative hues, it has a needless grating section about 9 minutes in, and lots of warbling, grating the vocals, which moan and shriek with mood ruining affinity. However, Stone sets things right with some sultry female vocals to start the moody and psychedelic “Male,” where A Forest of Stars show a more experimental and impressive side of their sound that imbues a more acoustic based, blackened, almost Amber Asylum-ish melancholy, that should definitely be the focus of future releases as the band's attempted injections of nihilistic, raw black metal are less than effective (start of “Earth an Matter” though the tribal mid song break is ambience done right). Closer “Microcosm” starts as a downright mess of elements but once Stone takes over vocal duties and the song takes a 70's prog /Pink Floyd tone, it actually sounds rather breathtaking.

There is a ton of potential for this act to be the UK’s answer to Wolves in the Throne Room, and with Stone’s elegant violins there’s an extra element there to elevate them. However, they need to trim down their sound a tad and either develop the experimentation or tighten the black metal (or both), as right now they clash a bit. First though, they need a new main vocalist as ‘Mister Curse’ derails most of the positives that the band has.



titmo71's Avatar
titmo71 | posted on 6/2011 | Reply
I'll agree there is alot of meandering ambience here, but still.... is very nice. (and way better than a 6.3)
Wolf in the throne room's Avatar
Wolf in the throne room | posted on 9/2009 | Reply
Love the record, yes :)
Wolf in the throne room's Avatar
Wolf in the throne room | posted on 9/2009 | Reply
Disagree with scores: I think production can be a 4 considering this is black metal (and they didn't go all necro on our asses), songwriting would be a 5 and musicianship a 4. My opinion anyway.
Sputmetaller's Avatar
Sputmetaller | posted on 9/2009 | Reply
This cd rules. Good review though.
Deke''s Avatar
Deke' | posted on 9/2009 | Reply
This is a really fascinating band/album, and hopefully they'll grow into their sound a little more with upcoming releases. A little tweaking with the structures and increased bottom end could do wonders for their sound. I'd give it about a 4.5 overall, not bad, just a little grating at times.
konradkantor's Avatar
konradkantor  | posted on 9/2009 | Reply
I think the review is very analytical and fair. I disagree only with the claim that Mister Curse is a shitty vocalist. I think he brings something unique and well, british to the table. They should probably have more female vocals though...
Cantona's Avatar
Cantona | posted on 8/2009 | Reply
Well the 2nd half of God is great
konradkantor's Avatar
konradkantor  | posted on 8/2009 | Reply
This album was my favorite debut of 2008, and I'm glad it made it to metalreview. The song God is the highlight for me...I'm looking forward to the review.