Album Review

Score 8.8
Written by Dan Obstkrieg
Published on 2/15/2011
Neurosis fans tend to be an all-or-nothing bunch: You worship the band or you don’t; you “get it” or you’re a fool; you’ve followed the hallowed path into the wilderness and drunk deep your mystic initiatory rite, or you’re a piteous dilettante. Debating the relative merits of such a revered pantheon of albums is a right tricky business, then. Far be it from me, of course, to deny the band’s slavering fanbase (of which yours truly is, in all likelihood, a card-carrying member) its reverence, but obviously such unstinting, unquestioned praise is entirely at odds with the necessary “kill your idols” thrust of the best of extreme music’s raw, festering underground. So, the question is, nearly twenty years on, how does Souls At Zero hold up?
 
Souls At Zero was a relentlessly evolutionary album for Neurosis. Although 1991’s The Word As Law had shown definite steps away from the band’s crust/hardcore past, 1992 saw Neurosis on a new label (Jello Biafra’s Alternative Tentacles) with a decided turn to metal. 1993’s Enemy Of The Sun is rightly privileged as the band’s first true masterpiece, but Souls At Zero is no mere warm-up act. In fact, its sprawling sonics might in fact represent the band at the height of its aural expansionism, sucking in all and sundry sounds as it learns to speak in its new voice. Later albums will work at honing these components to their sheerest, most elemental nature; this, friends, is the sound of the spreading of deep roots.
 
If I can step into meta-critic mode for just a moment here: The lazy genre-fucked tags of “post-metal” or “NeurIsis” are neat little shorthands, I suppose, except that, at least in regards to this album, they completely miss the point. These tags often denote a band utilizing a generic quiet-LOUD-quiet structure in its songs (and suggest that some indie/post-rock dipshits invented the tension-and-release game of, y’know, like actual dynamic composition…). Thus, where the myriad less-talented descendents and acolytes think they are paying homage to Neurosis by playing a widdly quiet part and then stomping on the ol’ distortion for a few bars of limp caveman puppetry, they have in fact completely misread the genius they intend to ape. To put it roughly, Neurosis isn’t doing the Explosions In The Sky thing. These songs are all about slipping into rhythms and grooves that sound as though they have always been there, and about riding the sinews and connective tissues between.
 
“Flight,” for example, would be an essentially brilliant introduction to the band, as it manages to pack just about all the attributes of prime Neurosis into a tidy little four-minute burst of near-impossible brilliance. “To Crawl Under One’s Skin” builds its stalking tension for nearly four minutes before exploding into massive vocal exhortations, after which the guitar squeals and squalls backing the verses are something like cracking open a giant concrete orb only to find elemental fires burning within. Dudes don’t even need riffs here to crack your fucking head. Meanwhile, another textural triumph is the frequent use of violin to back up the slow-churning guitar chords (see “Flight” and “Sterile Vision”). It’s never pushed too far to the front, leaving it to hover mysteriously atop the overall sound. The trumpet on “Sterile Vision” is also used in a sufficiently regal, understated fashion. But if ‘regal’ and ‘mysterious’ straight-up bum you out, check out the gonzo shit going on in “Stripped,” with the full-on chimes backed up by that wonderful staccato synth bit that sounds like it could have given birth to the genres of martial ambient (see Puissance and the like) and rudimentary black/industrial (à la Samael’s Passage) all in one go.
 
With three different vocalists trading off fluidly, the album sounds like an emanation from an organic collective rather than the work of individuals collaborating. This has always been one of Neurosis’s greatest strengths: to transcend the worldly connotations of being a “band.”  A Neurosis album never feels like the product of months of hard work (though it assuredly requires that), but more like a channeling of geological fissures. None of the labels used have ever fit the band, so why not just call them ‘tectonic metal’ and be done with it?  The title track, “A Chronology for Survival,” and “Takeahnase” together seem to point the direction forward for Neurosis, from Enemy Of The Sun to Through Silver In Blood and beyond: alternating between contemplation and ferocity, deep, hypnotic drum grooves (there is a particular word usually tossed around that I am avoiding because it is frankly racist) and wide open spaces. That main melodic figure of “Souls At Zero” will be stuck in your head for days, with its two guitar lines underwritten by the vaguely unsettling trilled piano. Plus, that section’s done up in the 6/8 time so beloved of black/folk metallers all the (revisionist-ly pre-Christian and defiantly no-fun) world over. Plus, you’ve got to just melt at the false ending that reintroduces the theme as a coda. This is, like, some real “Strawberry Fields” shit here, folks.
 
The voice of critical moderation has failed: This is a great record, end of goddamn story. Still, although Neurosis inspires more fits of impassioned naturalistic metaphor than any other band, their albums are never quite centered around anything as linear as clawing one’s way to the summit of a vast mountain, or rowing the breadth of murmuring oceans, or warping the fabric of the cosmos with the pure force of one’s will and bounding off through the galaxy’s deathless eons. At their best, these albums are a halting, imperfect journey to the center of something – not the earth, per se, but a journey to the center of the earthen self. Inwards, always, but with the most quietly tenacious thought of maybe, one fine day, pushing through to the other side, and of what strident terrors of beauty beyond none can speak. Neurosis is no more Dante the Pilgrim than Dante the Poet, but this band might just be your Virgil.

And anyway, if you’re not down with my desperate, flailing prose, it’s some great fucking heavy metal, so dive in and taste the first ashes of the end times, just like it’s the first time.



thetrooper's Avatar
thetrooper | posted on 3/2012 | Reply
my favorite. been trying to spin through silver, but it just hasn't clicked yet.
Anonymous's Avatar
Anonymous | posted on 3/2012 | Reply
Great review! Been a long time Neurosis fan but started with Enemy of the Sun. I heard a few tracks of the early material and it simply wasn't EOTS of TSIB so I didn't bother. I did however have those tracks and have recently been on a massive neurosis kick. Put all I have on shuffle and find myself more and more going, "Wow, that's a badass song. What album is that from?" And more ofter than not, it is off this beauty. It is almost like hearing a new Neurosis album, just one that happened to be released 20+ years ago.
Anonymous's Avatar
Anonymous | posted on 2/2011 | Reply
Best. Album. Ever. Dont hate.
Phantom Green's Avatar
Phantom Green | posted on 2/2011 | Reply
Beautiful review man. If you guys do decide to buy it, get it from their website, avoid the amazon's and end records...The people at Neurot are very helpful and friendly and deserve your money.
Danhammer Obstkrieg's Avatar
Danhammer Obstkrieg  | posted on 2/2011
Agreed x10. I didn't buy the reissue, but I did get myself a snappy t-shirt with this updated 'Souls At Zero' artwork back when the 'Live at Roadburn' disc came out.
GDubya's Avatar
GDubya | posted on 2/2011 | Reply
Great Review. Amazing album.
Anonymous's Avatar
Anonymous | posted on 2/2011 | Reply
Great review - I, for one, don't require any bonus material, esp. not on a bona fide classic like this one. Even the 3 bonus tracks on the last issue of this CD disrupted the continuity for new listeners, IMHO. What I would like to see, however, is a vinyl reissue!
PolarBear's Avatar
PolarBear | posted on 2/2011
For realz, I could care less about these cd reissues. That would have been cool when cds were relevant. I need a 180 gram, double gatefold, delux foldout, colored edition that costs atleast $30.
Munnin's Avatar
Munnin | posted on 2/2011
I'd love to see the Neurosis catalogue from Souls at Zero onward getting the deluxe vinyl treatment someday... one can only hope.
The Metal Mallet's Avatar
The Metal Mallet | posted on 2/2011 | Reply
Still need to pick this one up. Sounds like this version is perfectly fine to get. Awesome read, dude. Ya definitely fit in amongst the rest of these fellers.
Munnin's Avatar
Munnin | posted on 2/2011 | Reply
Great review. I already have this album, the Neurot pressing with the three bonus tracks. Does this reissue have a noticeably better sound that would justify purchasing it again?
Danhammer Obstkrieg's Avatar
Danhammer Obstkrieg  | posted on 2/2011
My bad - probably should have addressed this in the review. This is just a reissue, not a remastering, so far as I can tell. I've only got the digital promo to go by, but there's no information about remastering. Plus, comparing it to the original 10-track CD release that I've had for years, I can't discern any differences. So yeah, if you've already got the '99 Neurot version with the three bonus tracks, near as I can tell the only thing you'd get out of this reissue is updated artwork. It was the same story with the "Enemy of the Sun" reissue from last year. Somewhat dubious marketing strategies aside, that's why I was trying to just focus on the music, 'cause man, it's a trip.
Munnin's Avatar
Munnin | posted on 2/2011
Thanks for the info, I'll probably buy the reissue anyway just for the artwork if I have a chance. :)
Matt McMadden's Avatar
Matt McMadden | posted on 2/2011 | Reply
Don't care for this band, but that was a FANTASTIC review, Mr. Obstkrieg.
zach's Avatar
zach  | posted on 2/2011 | Reply
Dude, SERIOUS review. Catches the album perfectly and hopefully it'll lead more people to think of this right along with everything that came after.
tanknitrous's Avatar
tanknitrous | posted on 2/2011 | Reply
One of my favorite Neurosis albums! Still love it.
Anonymous's Avatar
Anonymous | posted on 1/2011 | Reply
I'm currently listening to the original but am still excited by the reissue just to see what the extras are!!!
Danhammer Obstkrieg's Avatar
Danhammer Obstkrieg  | posted on 1/2011
Sorry to disappoint, but there ain't no real extras to speak of - redesigned artwork and 3 bonus tracks, but those tracks are the same ones that have been on the first reissue on Neurot from back in 1999.