The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6

Somewhat fittingly, Volume 6 contains some of the most sinister, diabolical concoctions this decade has seen. This edition of the 100 Most Essential contains some wickedly twisted stuff, but tempers the assault with some calming sounds inspired by autumn winds, ocean waves, and...

...the smell of burning flesh. 

 

Lykathea Aflame - Elvenefris

For several years, Elvenefris was the ultimate album to impress your friends by knowing about. Released in a limited run with little recognition or potential for niche appeal, Lykathea Aflame’s mix of technical death metal with melodic peaks and Middle-Eastern atmospherics was something that the metal world wasn’t prepared for at the time. But anyone who has discovered this band’s work would be hard-pressed to argue that their sound was anything less than revolutionary. Blending head-spinning technicality and speed with genuinely beautiful melodies and atmospherics, Elvenefris is truly a lost gem.  [Obscene Productions, 2000]

 

 

 

IsisOceanic 

Never before had an album title been so appropriate. The heft of the riffs, flow of the songs, and overall “Weight” of the music come together as a beautiful and overwhelming image of mother ocean. By stripping away the noise from their Neurosis-influenced sound and realizing that the quiet parts only serve to make the waves crash harder, Isis fashioned a masterpiece--and simultaneously launched a thousand clones.Critics who pegged the band as imitators needed only to hear the crescendo of “Carry” to know that this bandwagon existed for a reason. It’s never too late to hop on. [Ipecac, 2002]

 

 

 

Agalloch - The Mantle

One of the rare projects that managed to pioneer an entirely novel sub-genre--though one difficult to define--Portland’s Agalloch graced the world with The Mantle in 2002. The album elegantly wedded the cold harshness of the black metal aesthetic with captivating melodic folk music, and executed it nearly perfectly. The result was one of the most provocative and effectively moving pieces of music created this decade. “You Were But A Ghost In My Arms” is a song for the ages. [The End, 2002]

 

 

 

 

Vital Remains - Dechristianize

Glen Benton's return from Deicide suckage was in part due to appearing on this watershed album that saw Benton elevate Vital Remains from the death metal underground elite to Century Media flagship. Throw in 10 minute songs like "Entwined by Vengeance,"  Dave Suzuki's opulent, epic solos, and Benton's reenergized demonic vocals, and you had an album that not only paved the way for Deicide's comeback a year later, but saw the words "epic" and "brutal death metal" paired with blasphemously grandiose results. [Century Media, 2003]

 

 

 

Deathspell Omega - Si Monumentum Requires, Circumspice

The definition of a “breakthrough” album, Si Monumentum Requires, Circumspice elevated the little-known Deathspell Omega from solid Darkthrone-worshippers to an entirely unexpected new force in black metal. Aside from their complex lyrical themes regarding the philosophy of man and religion, the sound that Deathspell Omega summoned went above and beyond what most black metal fans had heard at that point. With bone-chilling riffwork, ghastly vocals, and experimental excursions into disturbing ambience, the impressive scope of Si Monumentum is rivaled only by how riveting the album actually is to listen to.  [Norma Evangelium Diaboli, 2004]

 

 

 

Akercocke - Words That Go Unspoken, Deeds That Go Undone

It's unclear if this should be classified as "ahead of it's time," or just condescendingly deemed "too highbrow for mere mortal comprehension." What is clear is how astonishing (and under-appreciated) Akercocke's masterstoke truly is. Straddling (and erasing) the lines between crippling death metal, slicing black metal, and mindfuckingly progressive wing-stretching, Words... defines the word 'elite.' Likely to be viewed with extreme reverence in the forthcoming years--and not just in progressive DM circles--this shocking expulsion of high Satanic art cemented Akercocke's standing on an otherworldly plane.  [Earache, 2005]

 

 

 

Wolves in the Throne RoomDiadem of Twelve Stars

The black arts have a long history in the New World, but for many, this album announced the longstanding presence of a strong American black metal scene. Streamlining the epic formula established by Weakling and blending in some outside influences—post-rock crescendos, female vocals, and a unique Luddite attitude—Diadem of Twelve Stars both popularized an approach and reached across genre borders to a surprisingly broad variety of music fans. [Vendlus, 2006]

 

 

 

 

Negură BungetOm

At once hypnotic and disquieting, Om might be the perfect example of how to do progressive black metal. Infinitely inventive and unpredictable, Negură Bunget seemingly forge new territory with every note on this album. Restless riffs wander but never get lost, and exquisite melodies are comfortably nestled amidst daunting, dark atmospherics. An ambitious journey, to be sure. Om is as rewarding as it is complex. [Code666, 2006]

 

 

 

 

Unexpect In a Flesh Aquarium

Plenty of modern metal bands like to borrow from other genres, but Unexpect take the interdisciplinary approach to another level. In A Flesh Aquarium throws every trick in the book at you--plus the book itself and some extra tactics too bizarre for publication. Crushing technical metal collides with Gypsy melodies, collapses into electronic paroxysm, and attempts daring neoclassical heights while a bizarre cast of vocalists chatter like deranged circus barkers. In A Flesh Aquarium constantly defies you to follow its improbable left turns—it’s essential listening for those who want a challenge. [The End/Ascendance, 2006]

 

 

 

Mithras - Behind The Shadows Lie Madness

Mithras are poised to shape the future of death metal as we know it. They had already proven their potential with Worlds Behind The Veil, but Behind The Shadows Lie Madness saw them streamline their sound, up the production quality, and deliver a record so epic and dizzyingly technical that it made all other death metal releases in 2007 feel tired and outdated. While their absurdly busy drumming and trademark outer-space solos were already introduced finely on Worlds, Behind... saw a notable growth in songwriting focus and lyrical storytelling, delivered by titanic production and some truly massive vocal work.  [Candlelight, 2007]

 

 

 

Thus far, 60 Essential Heavy Metal Albums from our quickly-closing decade have been revealed. Only four more lists of ten remain; check back next week for the next installment in this series. Until then, crank these albums 'til you bleed.


Posted 10-03-2009 8:08 AM by Rev

Comments

grunts67 wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-22-2009 5:37 PM

Nice list. Love to see Agalloch in here.

But how the hell only three more lsts of ten remain if only 60 album as been revealed (6 lists)....

Rev wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-22-2009 5:45 PM

Haha...good question. It's been a long day, man.

grunts67 wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-22-2009 5:53 PM

You are forgiven, I really enjoy your lists. Make me discover a tons of groups I never heards and actually enjoy.

Thanks and keep up the good work.

tunedtothedevil wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-22-2009 6:31 PM

great list, probably my fav so far. A little suprised to see that two hunters didnt get the nod, but diadem is still one hell of an album.

deathfreak wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-22-2009 6:40 PM

Hells yea

Isis

wolves in the throne room

vital remains

The Metal Mallet wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-22-2009 8:36 PM

I knew Isis was going to make the list, just wasn't sure if it was going to be Oceanic or Panopticon.  While I do like the latter more (probably because it was my first Isis album), I can certainly understand why Oceanic gets the nod.  Oceanic got them attention.

Anxiety Hangover wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-22-2009 8:59 PM

This is a pretty solid group.  I've been on the Isis band wagon since the Mosquito Control EP and Oceanic was almost overwhelming in its scope and ambition.  

Nice black metal picks too, Si Monumentum might be one of the single most evil albums I've ever heard.  I think it's actually difficult to listen to the entire thing straight through, and it amazes me how many people have taken a shine to it.

powerade wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-23-2009 12:51 AM

out of the albums on this list i have heard, i have to agree 100%. especially OM. why are you saving mastodon for the last list though?

RuySan wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-23-2009 4:01 AM

With Agalloch's "The Mantle" and Primordial's "The gathering wilderness" it's a shiny perfect list you have there.

slaytanic1 wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-23-2009 6:54 AM

Aha, I llike most of this list. Never quite got Isis but the rest is all good...especially Akercocke. I`m only really half aware of Mithras though, have to check this album out. I`m presuming there`s a Nevermore album to come...?

tanknitrous wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-23-2009 7:23 AM

Mithras=awesome. And, kind of surprised by the inclusion of Akercocke. Love that album, but didn't think they'd make it. Great choice.

JacksonDane wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-23-2009 8:33 AM

Best installment yet.

DolphinDude31 wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-23-2009 5:19 PM

I agree with most of these once again.  I think I'd pick Fas over Si for Deathspell, but certainly either one is deserving of the spot.

Just noticed recently how hard it seems to be for bands to make good tech-death.  Which is why Mithras, Anata, and Arsis all have/will be on this list.

I do need to listen to Akercocke and Allagoch, though.  I've heard too much praise of the bands to have still never heard their outputs.

Fatal_88 wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-23-2009 6:49 PM

best list so far.

corbin wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-23-2009 10:19 PM

Yeah, Mithras.  I really, really enjoyed that album.  "To fall from the heavens" is one of my favorite songs ever.

deltawing wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-24-2009 9:16 AM

This is definitely the best set of 10 yet, nice work

SlayerM wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-24-2009 11:05 AM

This is the sexiest list ever.

DeathMetalJesus wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-24-2009 11:51 AM

I just realised, I don't think Katatonia has been included yet. If they aren't I will NOT be a happy boy.

DeathHead wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-24-2009 6:48 PM

Wow, lots of good ones this time. "Words That Go Unspoken..." is a truly phenomenal album, one of my all-time favorites. I still haven't gotten tired of that one. Kudos also for Om, I've never heard anything else like it (too bad Negura Bunget split up - I'm surprised the drummer is keeping the band name).

Hell yes for Vital Remains - Dechristianize is another favorite of mine, and I loved The Mantle and Oceanic as well. Those are the albums I'd choose from all of these bands. So far I really haven't found much to disagree with on the overall list.

Bands I'd expect to see coming up: Opeth, Katatonia, Napalm Death to name a few.

ellipsis wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-24-2009 8:34 PM

Definitely my favorite list so far...Negura Bunget, Isis, WITTR, Agalloch, DsO, and fucking LYKATHEA AFLAME. Good show, I say.

Ciprian wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-25-2009 1:00 PM

Dechristianize is very good

Twilight Frost wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-26-2009 10:05 AM

This part of the list rules.

I_KILL_YOU_LOL wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-26-2009 11:41 AM

THE LIST IS LIFE

fuck yes...Lykathea Aflame is on here...Negura Bunget and Mithras on here fuck yeah!!!

what about Decrepit Birth? and at least ONE Nevermore album

Deke' wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-26-2009 5:55 PM

@DolphinDude31

I prefered Fas as well, because it's a badass disc, but after re-listening to Si, it was like "yeah, listen to Si first, THEN Fas." It made sense for the list in hindsight, for me anyway.

slaytanic1 wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 11-28-2009 4:59 AM

Napalm have already had an album...it was in the first list I think. I`d never heard Lykathea Aflame before, it`s impressive, thanks for the recommendation.

zloduh wrote re: The 100 Most Essential Albums of the Decade: Vol. 6
on 12-06-2009 12:03 PM

Negură Bunget and Deathspell Omega...as close to a peek in the Pandora's box as it get's