The Call of the Wretched Sea seems to be the entry point for a lot of funeral doom fans (
Evoken for me); I guess this is understandable having a much cleaner production and being easier on the ears than the likes of
Worship whilst still portraying the main atmosphere and doing a very good job of it. The
Moby Dick theme might also be deemed attractive to those not wishing to indulge in the more suicidal of the genre. Although assuming it is any less depressive just because of that is foolish as
The Call of the Wretched Sea is one of the most bleak experiences I’ve had in a while. To call this music downbeat is a massive understatement, to think it won’t be brutal due to the
Moby Dick themes is foolish. Look at the leviathan on the cover, the music contained within
The Call of the Wretched Sea is just as heavy, musically as well as emotionally.
Ahab refer to themselves as Nautik
Funeral Doom and usually when a band creates a new genre for themselves it’s usually their own way of describing why they think their band is awesome *cough* Liturgy. But surprisingly the label fits no matter how ridiculous that sounds, the music here perfectly captures the image of the sea. Although don’t be fooled, this isn’t the same sea as that found in Spongebob Squarepants where it’s full of vibrant colors, this sea is dark, empty and vast where turbulent waters hide leviathans lurking in the deep.
So how does
Ahab stand out from the sea of other
Funeral Doom bands? In all fairness they don’t, well not really. The music here sticks close to the
Funeral Doom template, there’s nothing particularly ground breaking here but what is here is of a very high standard.
Despite being fairly typical
Funeral Doom the music is of such a high standard that I can easily look over the fact, well that and the
Moby Dick themes.
Endless waves of guitars and drawn out bass riffs give an eerie depth to the tracks. Mix this with some brutal gutturals and distant clean vocals and you’ve got an album that will carry you deep into the abyss. The sparse use of synths creates a haunting ambience throughout the album and the rare clean guitar interludes further elevates the atmosphere. The drum performance is nothing to write home about, neither adding nor detracting from the replay value.
The instrumental aspect may not seem that exciting on first glance but it serves as a catalyst to some of the most crushingly oppressive atmospheres I’ve heard in this genre since Last Tape Before
Doomsday. Nautik
Funeral Doom is a genre tag that is apt fitting. The atmosphere is brutal, it’s oppressive and above all it’s hopeless. From start to finish not one part of this album has a glimmer of light in it, nothing can penetrate the thick atmospheric veil of loneliness.
The production is crisp and clear creating a vast oceanic feel to the album. I’m really glad the production is this good because if it was on the same level of most Depressive Black
Metal bands then this album wouldn’t convey the atmosphere anywhere as good as it does now. To dismiss clear production as making an album sound too synthetic is ridiculous and The Call of the Wretches Sea proves that good production can sometimes be beneficial rather than harmful.
I would recommend this to any aspiring
Funeral Doom listener due to it being leagues ahead of most bands in terms of accessibility.
Despite this, it is still heavy as hell, the listener will feel drained of energy after it has finished and crushed under several hundred feet of dark water.
The Call of the Wretched Sea pushes the atmosphere to the extreme so that the listener can’t help but feel how the album dictates. Go out and acquire
The Call of the Wretched Sea and plunge yourself headfirst into the empty black waters.
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