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Obscura

 
Album Review: Obscura
 

  • Artist: Gorguts
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: June 23, 1998
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

What's in a name? In the case of "Gorguts," not much -- at least by this stage in the game -- save for some preconceptions about what a band with "gore" and "guts" in its name should sound like. Obscura comes much closer to the mark, as this is simply one of the most challenging, difficult albums ever released within the metal genre. In terms of its towering complexity and unprecedented strangeness, Obscura has a lot more in common with Captain Beefheart's avant-rock monstrosity Trout Mask Replica than it does the latest Cannibal Corpse release. Not that Obscura isn't recognizably metal -- the guitar distortion, the double-bass drumming, and the blasting snare beats are all firmly rooted in death metal. What makes this album different is exactly how far Gorguts pushes this death metal foundation. The guitar/bass harmonies are extremely discordant, the guitar leads are full of alien harmonic squeals and other foreign noises (the title track, for example, features a recurring, legitimately atonal melody played via fingertapping), and the drums change tempos and time signatures in spastic, whiplash-inducing fashion. Frontman Luc Lemay's vocals are not standard death metal fare, either: he sounds like he's being put through a torture session, gasping and wheezing as he screams at the top of his lungs. The most agonizing track is the near ten-minute "Clouded," which crawls at a Melvins/Swans pace and has absolutely guttural bass playing to go along with the aforementioned dissonant guitars and painful vocals. As ugly and off-putting as Obscura may initially seem, though, it possesses an underlying sense of logic and structure that does reveal itself upon repeat listens. A number of memorable, if strange, guitar melodies emerge throughout the album and help provide a sense of order and thematic unity amidst the apparent chaos; "Earthly Love" and "Nostalgia" are especially strong examples of this. Obscura's appeal may not ultimately reach far beyond an underground niche audience, but those with the patience and curiosity to tackle this record will be rewarded with a work of great depth and vision. ~ William York, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Obscura Luc Lemay, Steeve Hurdle Gorguts (4:04)
Earthly Love Luc Lemay, Steve Cloutier, Steeve Hurdle Gorguts (4:04)
The Carnal State Luc Lemay, Steve Cloutier, Steeve Hurdle Gorguts (3:07)
Nostalgia Luc Lemay, Steve Cloutier, Steeve Hurdle Gorguts (6:10)
The Art of Sombre Ecstasy Luc Lemay, Steve Cloutier, Steeve Hurdle Gorguts (4:20)
Clouded Luc Lemay, Steeve Hurdle Gorguts (9:32)
Subtle Body Luc Lemay, Steve Cloutier, Steeve Hurdle Gorguts (3:23)
Rapturous Grief Luc Lemay, Steve Cloutier, Steeve Hurdle Gorguts (5:27)
La Vie Est Prelude... (La Mort, Orgasme) Luc Lemay, Steve Cloutier, Steeve Hurdle Gorguts (3:28)
Illuminatus Luc Lemay, Steve Cloutier, Steeve Hurdle Gorguts (6:15)
Faceless Ones Luc Lemay, Steve Cloutier, Steeve Hurdle Gorguts (3:50)
Sweet Silence Luc Lemay, Steve Cloutier, Steeve Hurdle Gorguts (6:45)

Credits

Gorguts (Producer), Gorguts (Main Performer), Luc Lemay (Guitar), Luc Lemay (Viola), Luc Lemay (Vocals), Luc Lemay (Lyricist), Luc Lemay (Artwork), Luc Lemay (Layout Design), Luc Lemay (Logo), Luc Lemay (Computer Graphics), Steve Cloutier (Bass), Steeve Hurdle (Guitar), Steeve Hurdle (Vocals), Steeve Hurdle (Lyricist), Pierre Rémillard (Producer), Pierre Rémillard (Engineer)
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Wikipedia: Obscura
Top
Obscura
Obscura cover
Studio album by Gorguts
Released 23 June 1998
Recorded Studio Victor in Montreal
Genre Technical death metal
Length 60:25
Label Olympic, Slipdisc
Producer Gorguts, Pierre Rémillard
Professional reviews
Gorguts chronology
The Erosion of Sanity
(1993)
Obscura
(1998)
From Wisdom to Hate
(2001)

Obscura is the third album by Gorguts. It is seen as one of the most technical and complex albums within the death metal genre, consisting of many experimental and dissonant melodies, and strange rhythms.

Contents

History

Following the release of their second full-length The Erosion of Sanity, the band did an European tour in 1993.[1] However, when Gorguts returned, coincided with the decline of death metal's popularity, and they were subsequently dropped from the Roadrunner roster.[2] Then, they "started writing material for Obscura."[1]

Critical reception

Obscura was defined by reviewers, as "complex" and "dissonant".[3][4][5][6][7] The album received praise for its production, with the reviewer of the webzine Chronicles of Chaos, saying that Obscura "has the power to take its listeners to other worlds of astounding beauty, dark mystery and intense complexity."[3] With a less broad vision and regarding only the production itself, a writer of the Dark Legions Archive stated:[5]

Powerful mixing technique went into this release to preserve the clarity of individual instruments despite their simultaneously divergent tonal and rhythmic properties, preserving both sound and timbre to a high degree.

Peter Pardo of Sea of Tranquility found similarities with Cryptopsy, and to a lesser extent The Dillinger Escape Plan on Calculating Infinity; complemented by 'Sound Delirium' reviewer Killa Bee:[4][8]

Take death metal riffs, but make them schizophrenic beyond any music that is psychotic and does not fall completely into the spaces that some might call "noise", "free", "improvisations", or just "cacophonous".

Pardo—along with William York of Allmusic—compared Obscura with the free-form jazz of Captain Beefheart, stating that the album "takes all conventional ideas of what extreme metal should sound like and throws them out the window."[4][6] York categorized Obscura, as "one of the most challenging, difficult albums ever released within the metal genre."[6] Others reviewers concluded that Obscura is "very difficult to make comparisons", and even those who did, reached the same conclusion.[3][4]

In terms of its towering complexity and unprecedented strangeness, Obscura has a lot more in common with Captain Beefheart's avant-rock monstrosity Trout Mask Replica than it does the latest Cannibal Corpse release.

Track listing

All lyrics written by Luc Lemay, Steeve Hurdle. 

# Title Music Length
1. "Obscura"   Lemay 4:04
2. "Earthly Love"   Hurdle, Lemay, Steve Cloutier 4:04
3. "The Carnal State"   Cloutier, Hurdle 3:08
4. "Nostalgia"   Cloutier, Hurdle 6:10
5. "The Art of Sombre Ecstasy"   Cloutier, Hurdle, Lemay 4:20
6. "Clouded"   Lemay 9:32
7. "Subtle Body"   Cloutier, Hurdle, Lemay 3:23
8. "Rapturous Grief"   Cloutier, Hurdle, Lemay 5:27
9. "La Vie Est Prélude..."   Cloutier, Hurdle, Lemay 3:28
10. "Illuminatus"   Cloutier, Hurdle, Lemay 6:15
11. "Faceless Ones"   Cloutier, Hurdle 3:50
12. "Sweet Silence" (Instrumental) Cloutier, Hurdle, Lemay 6:45

Personnel

References

  1. ^ a b "Interview with Gorguts and Withered Earth". Smother. Archived from the original on 19 June 2002. http://web.archive.org/web/20020619053005/http://www.smother.net/interviews/gorguts.php3. Retrieved on 12 March 2009. 
  2. ^ York, William. "Gorguts > Biography". Allmusic. Macrovision. http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:d9fuxqw5ld6e~T10. Retrieved on 12 March 2009. 
  3. ^ a b c Schwarz, Paul (9 January 1998). "Obscura review". Chronicles of Chaos. http://www.chroniclesofchaos.com/reviews/albums/2-915_gorguts_obscura.aspx. Retrieved on 12 March 2009. 
  4. ^ a b c d Pardo, Peter (5 February 2007). "Obscura review". Sea of Tranquility. http://www.seaoftranquility.org/reviews.php?op=showcontent&id=4738. Retrieved on 12 March 2009. 
  5. ^ a b "Gorguts". The Dark Legions Archive. http://www.anus.com/metal/gorguts.html. Retrieved on 12 March 2009. 
  6. ^ a b c York, William. "Obscura > Review". Allmusic. Macrovision. http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:hcfwxqrjldae~T10. Retrieved on 12 March 2009. 
  7. ^ Wu, Brandon (26 August 2004). "Obscura review". Ground & Sky. http://www.progreviews.com/reviews/display.php?rev=gor-obs. Retrieved on 12 March 2009. 
  8. ^ Bee, Killa. "Obscura review". Sound Delirium. http://harum.scarum.net/sound.delirium/reviews/gorguts_obscura.php. Retrieved on 12 March 2009. 

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Obscura" Read more

 

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