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The Karelian Isthmus |
Finland
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Review by Stellarium on March 23, 2024.
The History / Concept of the Album:
“The Karelian Isthmus” is a section of land in South East Finland that shares a border (and territorial disputes) with Russia. Historically, this was considered part of Finnish Karelia, until the Russian Empire conquered it during the Great Northern War of 1712. When Finland achieved independence from Russia in 1917, the majority of the Isthmus remained Finnish. The area has been witness to many a battle and power struggle over the centuries, up to and including the events of WWII.
The Karelian Isthmus:
One of the tropes that Amorphis are best known for is their use of local and world literature and mythology. Before heavily featuring the Karevela (Epic collection of tales from Finnish folklore) as the bulk of their lyrical output, the group mixed a lot of Celtic and Arthurian references to form the general milieu of the group’s trope. Despite numerous departures, arrivals, and re-arrivals to the line-up, this is the only album to have the original Amorphis line-up of Tomi, Esa, Olli and Jan.
The record opens with “Karelia” which is a mood-setting intro track, (which at forty-two seconds is the shortest Amorphis song recorded). A melodic motif plays 16 times, slowing as it reaches its climax. You can imagine the warriors sailing on a Drakar as land appears on the Horizon. As the ship pulls in to dock, the track concludes, and the happiest part of the story comes to a swift end, as they know their lives (or what remains of them) will be irreparably changed forever.
“The Gathering” tells of the moment that the longboat disembarks, arriving at the battlefield. The piece is a slow melodic death composition, draped heavily in doom influences, marking a powerful contract to the previous piece - composing a poignant analogy between carefree life and imminent demise. Lyrically, this track veers very closely towards pagan metal. The song benefits from the light use of keyboards and synths, as they are discreetly used to add a layer of reflectiveness to the misery of the scene. The track ends extremely abruptly, as if an arrow has suddenly struck the poor narrator mid-flow. Powerful stuff.
"The Exile of the Sons of Uisliu" (Oosh-lyoo) is the best song on the album by an absolute landslide. Highly referencing Irish Mythology, this track refers to the consequences up to and surrounding the assassination of Noisiu. (Neesha) – who was the nephew of the King of Ulster. As the song develops, the music becomes heavier and more frantic before the vocals ascend into the deepest metal growls on the record. The story is lifted from the epic Celtic myth found in (Tahn Bo Coolnyeh) (The Cattle Raid of Cooley), which themselves are a part of the wider Ulster Cycle legends.
"Sign from the North Side" once again discusses Celtic Pride and references the region of Kernow (modern day "Cornwall") in the United Kingdom. It's a song about defending your land, and how your purpose is to do so. “I am the unburied child without a name, without a fate, fighting for peace and love… I am reborn…”
"Vulgar Necrolatry" is another track worth mentioning and is a cover of a track written by Finland’s Abhorrence (of which members of Amorphis were previously involved, so they’ve covered their own material in a roundabout way.) The track is a brutal piece that has synergy with the themes from the album and is a clever addition to closing off the release. It discusses death, the stench of rot, and the ambition to bring back the dead – with whatever means are necessary. This therefore completes the cycle of life and death, fighting and dying for gods that you don’t know if they exist or not, as in your dying moments, you find yourself swollen with pride and bruised with fear and doubt, knowing that whatever happens, you will live on, and history will be doomed to repeat itself for as long as man is flawed…
This is exactly why this album is a special, spiritual experience. The tracks and their meanings are ordered so beautifully and deliberately, the album creates an ouroboros of all the stages of life, death, and afterlife. The band also uses the music to great effect to reinforce this point. The tracks are designed to flow together and play on a near endless loop – no track stands out massively over any other, and despite their own complexities, the album sounds very samey throughout. The same sombre mood is used regardless of the composition, and it seems to genuinely suit the theme of the recording. It isn’t a story put to music – it is music put to a story and compressed to match it’s mood. It sits second to the tale of the warriors and their conflicts, never stealing away from the protagonist. There are no guitar solos, no examples of instruments breaking out and stealing the show – just a steady collection of melodic death metal that comfortably acts as a supporting character – much like the weaponry in the hands of the skilled Berserkers.
Rating: 8.4 out of 10
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