MySpace
myspace music


DEAD EYED SLEEPER



Last Updated: 11/25/2009

Send Message
Instant Message
Email to a Friend
Subscribe

Status: Single
City: HD/MA/ODW
State: Baden-Württemberg
Country: DE
Signup Date: 1/12/2007

Who Gives Kudos:


Monday, July 06, 2009 
DEAD EYED SLEEPER – Through Forests of Nonentities
Published: 2009.06.03
Supreme Chaos Records (2009)
When I first listened to this album I was irritated by its progressiveness. Yet I came back again and the second time I saw visions before my inner eye, of empty forests, a cabin deep in the woods, cursed, where the evil dead lie. The feeling you have when standing in the middle of nature, watching a lake, noticing the insects swirling, movement under the fir needles covering the ground. My vision corresponds with the vision of the artist responsible for the album artwork. The cover shows a forest populated by the faceless, other pieces of work depict a lonely cabin, a scarecrow at a rotten fence, and plantlife, all heavily distorted and presented in a brownish and bleak fashion.
The music itself could be described as progressive death metal, the vocals range from screaming to deep growls, staccato and legato. At first I could not handle the sometimes abrupt changes in speed and weird vocal patterns. I would wait for the few brutal parts you could headbang to and maybe for the epic and slow, guitar solos. Slowly I would also notice the subtle use of keyboards or rather their meaning within the song structure. All in all, I drew comparisons to Nile for the death metal, Enslaved for the progressive and late Emperor for some of the vocals. Though, to be fair, as this music is unique, yet somehow intimately familiar, I could just have been naming bands that evoke similar emotions within myself.
What really made me connect to the music though were the lyrics. The album is divided into three parts, where the first, “Enclosure”, depicts a depressing vision of living in our age. The first track, “Of Wires and Lenses”, tells us about the motivations and implications of today's rush to monitor every aspect of life. “Cage of Immaturity”, the most interesting track of this first part defines the human condition as living behind masks, caged, reminding of C.G. Jung's concept of ego versus persona (which is only the modern expression knowledge present in various traditions) and how this relates to the objective world. While pretty depressing, the last verse offers a taste of the possibility to free ourselves from this cage. “The Savage Plague” illustrates another aspect of today’s western world, its sexual bigotry and the hypocrisy of the clergy and the moral majority.
The second chapter, “Transformation” is opened by an atmospheric instrumental piece called “Metamorfine”, which starts with few guitars and ends in piercing violins which lead to the crushing riffs of “Eye am glowing Pulse”. Here we learn how to escape from the cage, “see it rust and decay”, so we can become “bliss”, “illumination”, “the glowing haze” and “feel total belief in perfect peace” (!). However, we will only “reign the throne, until it will burn [us]”, because since there still is an “I” which can experience the transcendence, it remains to be devoured by the fire it has seen. This final resolution is accompanied by epic riffing and soloing, haunting us with the knowledge that the journey is not complete.
The realization that sometime we are at the end is explored in the next track, “The Sleep”. Motives from earlier in the album are recapitulated and put into an even more esoteric, and cryptic, context. All paired with brutal headbanging death metal that I so admire!
The third and last chapter seamlessly takes over with the song “Exit”. Musically, it starts out quite brutal but by the middle slows down considerably and offers enticing drumming and liberating soloing, which fits all too well lyrically. We are told of the final achievement, becoming “nothing”, acquiring “eyes that see” and the freedom and alienation this entails. “The Dead Eyed Sleeper Pt. 1 – The Undercurrent” warns of the path backwards, of lying down after learning how to fly. The final hypothesis is that existing itself means wearing the mask, which is communicated by smothering metal and chaotic structures.
The outro, “Outstripping The Meander” is worthy of any classic horror movie, violins reminding us that it is not over and maybe it will never be.
As you can see, “Through Forests of Nonentities” is an album that entices the willing listener not only with its masterful music, but also with the sometimes cryptic (but still coherent) lyrics. It is a pleasure for both the heart and the mind, it would be a shame to miss out on something so intricate and rare.
Composed by Bollverk
 


Quelle: www.imhotep.no/?did=9091014&aid=9069486

Cheerz,
Sam & Dead Eyed Sleeper










IGUANA STUDIOS

 
Ich habs ja gesagt! Who does not like that record ist ein verdammter Hurensohn *g* 
Cooles Review! Congratulazzionne!

 
Posted by IGUANA STUDIOS on Tuesday, July 07, 2009 - 10:30 AM
[Reply to this