In 1993, when I was still a rather young lad, I was eager to discover tons of new bands. My hunger for underground acts was never satiated.
And this is how I came acquainted with
Nordor, buying their
His Fictitious Grandeur demo from
Osmose Productions distro mail catalogue. In 2013, 20 years later, nothing has changed that much, I’m still on the lookout for the next interesting underground act and even though I may have put on a few pounds, I still crave new music as I did back then. So when the request to review
Nordor’s
Erga Omnes came in, I got at first very surprised since I thought the band was no more but also delighted to see that
Metal maniacs have such an enduring passion.
Endurance is the word. Though
Nordor released three demos in between 1991 and 1997, the world had to wait till 2008 for a proper debut to be released and another four years for this second record. For a band that was founded in 1989, you could say they like to take their time.
Coming from the glorious early 90s Greek scene,
Nordor was a band playing atypical and satanical
Death Metal where most of its contemporaries were exploring the realms of Black
Metal (
Rotting Christ,
Varathron,
Vorphalack, etc.). At their beginnings, the band was more versed in building ambiances, a Greek trademark, some 20 years later when people grow old and soft,
Nordor found the extra brutality needed to pep up their music. Maybe the resurgence of Hellenic
Death Metal bands aided by the recent positive development of
Dead Congregation helped shape a whole another new scene there with new horizons to discover.
Now onto the music. I won’t try to bullshit you here. Admittedly, if you take individual tracks from
Erga Omnes and play them “as is”, you will find good brutal
Death Metal, played the old way but adorning modern production. I guess you could think late
Behemoth for comparisons’ sake but then again you could complain it’s been heard a 1,000 times before and that it may sound a tad bit too generic.
And yes, you’d be right.
Nordor’s
Erga Omnes will not redefine the face of
Death Metal, they’re not particularly inventive either but they play honest and sincere
Death Metal.
Where
Erga Omnes really becomes interesting, it is ONLY when taken as a whole. Much like a concept album, it delivers its whole flavor when played from start to finish. This is so because most tracks are rather short, around 3 minutes and less, and the track listing features many interludes, be it classical music or movie excepts, that really disperse a satanic aura around this whole record. Think I’m wrong? Think again, Androniki from
Chaostar lends her beautiful voice and the grandiose album intro has been created by
Septicflesh’s own Christos. Not mentioning
Nightrage’s guitarist playing guest solo on Bow to Me. Maybe the mastering took some identity away (too many effects on vocals for once), maybe you like stuff that is rawer, more “blasphemous” but I see
Nordor’s own blasphemous message rather in essence than in form.
And each time I’ve played
Erga Omnes since I received it I find myself enjoying it more and more, which can’t be a bad thing.
So it’s not the best album out there but it’s a grower and the fact that because a band, the people behind it, has had such dedication and perseverance to go on and play the music they like is, in this very case, more valuable than the next big hit from whatever trendy label, which none will remember two months later. I will remember
Erga Omnes with all its defaults and all its qualities.
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