The brain is a terrible thing to waste. Or to enrich for the matter that concerns us.
Underground headz that were already around in the 90s might recall the existence of Death
Metal act
Necrosanct. Hailing from Britain, the band garnered positive reviews and gathered a solid cult following mostly because they were Death dealers of the simplest kind. In your face, old school Death
Metal and that’s what they got praised for.
When the band finally split up after three albums, Cal Scott, at the time, lead guitar in
Necrosanct, went on to create his own personal project.
And here is
Umbah.
Umbah, which is defined in ATMF's bio as avant-garde atmospheric Death
Metal. Well, well, well, what a nice combination of words.
Trilobeth is
Umbah's eleventh record. Quite frankly, I didn't get to know the first ten so it may be difficult for me to tell you if
Umbah's music evolved over the years or if it's always been the same. It's hard for me to find anything that comes close to being labeled Death
Metal in this record. Maybe on the track "
Blessed Be All Wars” the riffing may be though as Death
Metal and you get some occasional growling on “A Happy Story” notably but I know plenty of bands that use Death
Metal vocals and yet do not play Death
Metal per se.
Umbah's music is very much what you’d label Industrial music. Vocals even made me think of
Marilyn Manson on most songs even though the music is rather different. The most obvious references for me musically are bands like
Scorn or GGFH. There's something really "fucked up" (pardon my French) about how all songs are (de)constructed and it makes for a harsh “noise” experience which will definitely not leave you untouched.
While this is arguably anything close to Death
Metal, songs have their own momentum and have some catchy parts which even lean on the “pop” side. This is an interesting Industrial record but the overabundance of variety makes it hard to grasp at first and will rebuke most listeners at first.
That is unless you’re a fan of bands such like
Pigface which revel in the de-structuration of music.
Which brings us back to my first statement. Too much in too little time.
Umbah’s music is like rich food. The first bite is like explosions in your mouth and you find yourself wanting to get all the tastes at once however varied they may be. The second bite, you start to acquire the differences but at the same time, something unpleasant develops around your taste buds. On third bite, you’re just fed up. What tasted like a kaleidoscope of savors is just too many ingredients at the same time.
Which makes me wonder how Cal Scott apprehended this whole project. Was
Necrosanct just too plain simple and dull for him that he found himself wanting to spice things up to the extent of "tolerance"? Maybe.
I don’t think I’ll mind playing
Trilobeth again but just not the whole thing at once because it is too overwhelming. Each song taken separately displays some avalanche of ideas, but damn, 13 songs…
That’s like a fucking maelstrom and quite frankly, I can't take it.
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