Aura Noir - Official Website


Hades Rise

Norway Country of Origin: Norway

1. Hades Rise
2. Gaping Grave Awaits
3. Unleash The Demon
4. Pestilent Streams
5. Schitzoid Paranoid
6. Death Mask
7. Shadows Of Death
8. Iron Night / Torment Storm
9. South American Death
10. The Stalker

Review by Felix on November 4, 2021.

Aura Noir - isn't that the band where the members look ugly even when they smile because their gap-toothed teeth are crooked to top it all off? Not to mention that when they call it smiling, their whole face contorts into a grimace? Well, their music certainly suggests that, and the 2008 album is no exception. The defenders of horridness Apollyon and Aggressor present ten pieces that have absolutely nothing to do with the beautiful things in life. Their black thrash sounds less angry than that of Condor and comparable fellows. Their piss-off attitude shows itself less in hateful outbursts, but in the nearly disinterested presentation of emphatically casual, routinely performed pieces of medium tempo. With this approach the band dances on the knife's edge, because if the riffs, which are essential in this sound picture, don't sit perfectly, everything remains rather unspectacular. All those who have heard 'Gaping Grave Awaits' know what I'm talking about. But there are also pieces like 'Unleash The Demon'. A minimalist riff carries the piece together with the driving rhythm and an eerie guitar in the middle part safely to the finish, not to mention the surprisingly catchy chorus.

The production stands shoulder to shoulder with the music. It is dirty without denying the professional level of the protagonists. It offers neither a high level of clarity nor technical details in abundance. Instead, it comes across as compact and muscular even without highly styled technology. The always nasty, slightly hoarse vocals and the puristic instrumentation are also in good proportion to one another and do not crowd each other out. In this respect, it's a bit of a shame that the band's compositional class only partially flashes here and a track like 'Shadows Of Death' remains relatively ineffective despite a good start.

Perhaps the duo themselves noticed during the recordings that they still have some room for improvement. In any case, the two worshippers of the unclean try to regain ground at the end of the track list. 'The Stalker', the final song of the disc, is driven by a restless riff, the speed picks up and the two-word chorus, as primitive as it is short, immediately sticks in the ear. But also 'Iron Night / Torment Storm' leaves the previously chosen paths and focuses more on speed - and as you might expect from a track with a double name, it has the most surprising break of the whole album up its sleeve. The rapid guitar lines here captivate with the somnambulist certainty of a sleepwalker on the roof gable, so that the long instrumental parts give the song a special charm. In between the two aforementioned tracks, there is still the rumbling 'South American Death', which, however, doesn't seem to be a homage to the South American extreme metal scene. In any case, Aura Noir sound here as Aura Noir always sound: poisonous, devious and dirty. Anyway. The main thing is that they try not to smile.

Rating: 7.4 out of 10

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