Monetized Pagan Gods IV

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Nom du groupe Jose Beausejour
Nom de l'album Monetized Pagan Gods IV
Type Album
Date de parution 01 Janvier 2014
Style MusicalBlack Death
Membres possèdant cet album0

Tracklist

1. Glaucus
2. Jaguar
3. Old Age
4. First Gate to the Netherworld
5. The Old Man and Death
6. The Man Who Was Weary of Life 3
7. Tears for Lesbia s Sparrow
8. Second Gate to the Netherworld
9. Refrain of the Harper
10. A Prayer to the Gods of the Night
11. Third Gate to the Netherworld
12. To Aphrodite 1-6
13. I Turn the Carriage Yoke and Set Off
14. I Will Kiss Your Mouth
15. Fourth Gate to the Netherworld
16. Satan Is Proud Imagination
17. Fifth Gate to the Netherworld
18. The Man Who Was Weary of Life
19. The Death of Lesbia s Sparrow
20. Sixth and Seventh Gate to the Netherworld
21. Fall Like Thunder
22. Cairo Love Song 21
23. Ave Maria

Acheter cet album

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Jose Beausejour



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Commentaire @ Mangeur2Chair

22 Fevrier 2014

Beausejour manages to stay well-away from slavish allegiance to formulaic output

Monetized Pagan Gods IV, by Jose Beausejour.

Black Metal devotees form a small but loyal and hard-core fan base, and anybody who has followed and enjoyed Jose Beausejour's Monetized Pagan Gods I, II, and III will probably go for number IV. Production values on this body of work are deliberately low-fidelity, an homage to pioneer Black Metal bands of the 1980s. "Vocals" and "lyrics" are almost separate entities; you need to read the lyrics because the vocals themselves are basically unintelligible, providing a true-to-the-genre marbles-in-the-mouth background that is swallowed whole by distorted guitar riffs and steamy percussion.

In terms of content, "IV" doesn't break a lot of new ground, but the "Pagan Gods" series trots out enough corpse-painted anti-everything feeling that Frenchman Beausejour's work won't be accused of any overt commercialism, as some critics complained was happening when he did his take of the Clash's "Rock the Casbah". Though the fidelity is garage-level, there are symphonic touches reminiscent of classic work from Emperor, and Beausejour manages to stay well-away from slavish allegiance to formulaic output of groups like the 1980's incarnation of Venom.

All-in-all, Monetized Pagan Gods IV should serve Beausejour's current fans well, with enough clever musicianship leftover to entice a few new fans.

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