Monotheist

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  • Artist: Celtic Frost
  • Rating: StarStarStar
  • Release Date: May 30, 2006
  • Total Time: 68:17
  • Type: Contains explicit content, Lyrics are included with the album, Enhanced CD-ROM
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Celtic Frost's much anticipated 2006 comeback album, Monotheist, is everything you'd expect from the band who managed to attach the term avant-garde to ugly ol' heavy metal. It's unconventional, unpredictable, challenging to a fault, head-scratchingly weird at times, frequently brilliant, and anything but perfect. A simplified stylistic description would have it pegged as some sort of modern gothic doom album, but simple descriptions have never really fit the bill with Celtic Frost -- whether relating to their greatest triumphs, To Mega Therion and Into the Pandemonium, or abject disasters, like the infamous Cold Lake. The inherently complex Monotheist is no different, and the shared weight of the band's hallowed legacy and inevitably tall expectations don't exactly help the album's inauspicious start, either. Despite an energetic burst of old-school blackened thrash, opener "Progeny" stands out mostly thanks to those recognizable CF qualities: Thomas Gabriel Warrior's muscular rasp, crusty and brutal guitar tone; and the ensuing "Ground" bores down on interminably ponderous riffs and tediously repetitive lyrics ("Oh, God, why have you forsaken me!") just long enough to leave one seriously worried. Luckily what the trio (currently comprising founding members Warrior and Martin Eric Ain, plus new drummer Franco Sesa) can't quite realize through brute, stultifying force, they ultimately accomplish via subtler means. A foreboding, instantaneously infectious melody threads its way through even the heaviest portions of "A Dying God Coming into Human Flesh," and haunting female voices duet with Warrior's alternately deadpan and surprisingly fragile, quavering tones over gothic stunners like "Drown in Ashes" (featuring well-placed synthesizers) and the very unusual (even for this album, even for Celtic Frost) "Obscured," where a semi-industrial ambience actually recalls Berlin-era Bowie! Several subsequent tracks carry on suffering from excessively tiresome doom droning, but almost invariably contain that unexpected twist (like the clanging of rusty bells that introduce "Os Abysmi Vel Daath") or clever bridge ("Domain of Decay") to make them special, or at the very least interesting. And with the ambitious closing triptych comprising the cyclopean vistas and terrifying shrieks of "Totengott," the marriage of harmony and feedback across the 14 minute "Synagoga Satanae," and the elegant symphonic denouement (there, the classical music angle, at last) of "Winter," Celtic Frost's return should satisfy even the biggest cynics with the scope of its imagination and sheer audacity. Those qualities, as much as great music, have always represented the cornerstone of Frost's unique body of work, and Monotheist -- unrealistic listener expectations or not -- is a more than worthy addition to it. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia, Rovi

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Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Monotheist (album)

Top
Monotheist
Studio album by Celtic Frost
Released May 29, 2006
Recorded 2002–2005
Genre Doom metal, gothic metal, thrash metal, black metal, death metal
Length 68:16
Label Century Media Records
Producer Celtic Frost and Peter Tägtgren
Celtic Frost chronology
Parched With Thirst Am I and Dying
(1992)
Monotheist
(2006)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 3.5/5 stars[1]

Monotheist is the sixth and final album by the Swiss heavy metal band Celtic Frost. The album was released in May 2006 and was the first new recording released by the band for fourteen years.

Contents

Development

Preparation and development work for the project had been ongoing since 2000. The first recording sessions for the album started in late October 2002. The band consisted of founding members Martin Eric Ain (bass/vocals) and Tom Gabriel Fischer (voice/guitars/keyboards), along with guitarist/producer Erol Unala, Fischer's long-time songwriting partner. Unala became an increasingly significant part of Celtic Frost during the songwriting.

Working titles for the album included Probe and Dark Matter Manifest.

Music

Celtic Frost's earlier work melded elements of thrash metal and black metal. However, the sound of Monotheist has been described as heavier and darker, more akin to doom metal and gothic metal.

According to the band's bassist, Martin Eric Ain, some of the lyrics were influenced by the writings of the English occultist Aleister Crowley. This influence manifests itself in tracks such as "Os Abysmi Vel Daath", which is partially a name of one of Crowley’s books.

Release

Monotheist was released on CD, LP and as a digipak with a bonus track called "Temple of Depression". Both the vinyl LP version and the Japanese CD release of Monotheist feature the bonus track "Incantation Against You".

A video was made for the song "A Dying God Coming into Human Flesh"

The album was ranked number 2 on Terrorizer's list of the best albums of the decade.

Track listing

No. Title Lyrics Music Length
1. "Progeny"   Fischer Ain, Fischer, Sesa 5:01
2. "Ground"   Fischer Fischer, Unala 3:55
3. "A Dying God Coming into Human Flesh"   Ain Ain, Fischer, Unala 5:39
4. "Drown In Ashes"   Fischer Fischer 4:23
5. "Os Abysmi Vel Daath"   Ain, Fischer Ain, Fischer, Sesa, Unala 6:41
6. "Temple of Depression" (Limited edition digipack bonus track) Fischer Ain, Fischer, Unala 4:59
7. "Obscured"   Ain, Fischer, Unala Ain, Fischer, Unala 7:04
8. "Incantation Against You" (Japanese version and vinyl LP bonus track) Ain Ain, Vollenweider 5:06
9. "Domain of Decay"   Fischer Ain, Fischer, Unala 4:38
10. "Ain Elohim"   Ain Ain, Fischer, Sesa, Unala 7:33
11. "Triptych: I. Totengott"   Ain Fischer 4:27
12. "Triptych: II. Synagoga Satanae"   Ain Ain, Fischer, Sesa 14:24
13. "Triptych: III. Winter (Requiem, Chapter Three: Finale)"   (instrumental) Fischer 4:32

Credits

  • Tom Gabriel "Warrior" Fischer: voice, guitars, arrangements, programming
  • Martin Eric Ain: bass, lead and backing vocals (most vocals on "A Dying God Coming Into Human Flesh", all vocals on "Triptych I: Totengott", and spoken parts on "Triptych II: Synagoga Satanae"), and executive producer of album
  • Erol Unala: guitars, engineer, additional programming on "Temple Of Depression"
  • Franco Sesa: drums
  • Lisa Middelhauve (Xandria): guest vocals on “Drown In Ashes”
  • Ravn (1349): backing vocals in final chorus of “Temple Of Depression”
  • Simone Vollenweider: guest backing vocals on “Temple Of Depression”, additional vocals on “Obscured”, and lead vocals on “Incantation Against You”
  • Satyr (Satyricon): brief segment of lead vocals on "Triptych II: Synagoga Satanae"
  • Peter Tägtgren: backing vocals on “Triptych II: Synagoga Satanae” and co-producer of album
  • Walter J.W. Schmid: Engineering, Mixing, Mastering
  • Phillip Schweidler: Engineering, Mixing

References

  1. ^ http://www.allmusic.com/album/r828596

External links


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Monotheist [Bonus Track] (2006 Album by Celtic Frost)