Genre | Hardcore |
---|---|
Date (CEST) | 2021-07-09 18:54:38 |
Group | PMS |
Size | 90 MB |
Files | 5 |
M3U / SFV / NFO |
Amenra-De_Doorn-2021-PMS
Infos
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Tracklist (M3U)
# | Filename | Artist | Songname | Bitrate | BPM |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 01-amenra-ogentroost.mp3 | Amenra | Ogentroost | 269 | Unknown |
2 | 02-amenra-de_dood_in_bloei.mp3 | Amenra | De Dood In Bloei | 254 | Unknown |
3 | 03-amenra-de_evenmens.mp3 | Amenra | De Evenmens | 280 | Unknown |
4 | 04-amenra-het_gloren.mp3 | Amenra | Het Gloren | 271 | Unknown |
5 | 05-amenra-voor_immer.mp3 | Amenra | Voor Immer | 256 | Unknown |
NFO
Amenra - De Doorn
ARTIST........: Amenra
TITLE.........: De Doorn
LABEL.........: Relapse Records
URL...........: http://amenra.bandcamp.com
GENRE.........: Hardcore
QUALITY:......: 266 kbps avg/ 44100Hz / Joint Stereo
RIP DATE......: 2021-07-09
RELEASE DATE..: 2021-06-25
Tracklist:
----------
01. Ogentroost 10:01
02. De Dood In Bloei 4:38
03. De Evenmens 8:01
04. Het Gloren 11:30
05. Voor Immer 12:42
Total 46:52
Release Notes:
AMENRAÆs first release for Relapse Records is at once a departure and a
momentous act of deliverance. Stepping outside the run of albums titled Mass
I-VI, De Doorn casts a 21-year journey from the heart of BelgiumÆs crusading
hardcore scene to world-renowned, spiritually guided innovators in an
enthralling new light.
Ritual, remembrance and hard-won rebirth have always been at the heart of
AmenraÆs colossal, soul-purging approach. Centered around frontman Colin H. Van
Eeckhout, but marked out by a transcendent unity of purpose, their albums have
acted as totemic, personal marker points, a means to process individual grief as
a shared, cathartic experience. Their live shows are acts of incendiary,
communal exorcism that reach a cusp of sublime, out-of-body experience. A
closely knit collective, they transport you to a febrile state where
confrontation of pain, transformation and true healing can occur.
Amenra have always been profoundly bound to their hometowns around Flanders, the
weight of that areaÆs war-torn history. The sacrifice and sense of a larger
purpose that bridges the fragility of humanity and the pull of an immaculate
ideal is carried as an ever-present resonance. No more is this apparent than in
the spectacular, commemorative events the band have performed in recent years û
to mark ending of the First World War; the bandÆs 20th anniversary; and the
departure of long-time band member Levy Seynaeve. At the SMAK Museum Of
Contemporary Art in GhentÆs 19th-century, monument-strewn Citadelpark in May
2019, they offered a communal recognition of loss and letting go. Here, audience
members were invited to make their own offerings, placing personal notes of
acknowledgment in wooden structures created by Indonesian artist Toni Kanwa
Adikusumah, before they were brought out into the park and set alight as an act
of recognition and release û a forging of hope from the flames.
Written for the purpose of that rite, De Doorn (æThe ThornÆ) occupies a place
between AmenraÆs recorded and live work, less a testimony to the bandÆs
individual bereavements, more an invitation for others to come forward, and to
pass through darkness into light. Where the Mass albums have taken the form of
solitary struggles whose fearless honesty has aligned itself to the most
intrinsically human of chords, the dynamics of De Doorn are as stricken by
destiny as ever, but sonically looser. Guided to a lesser extent by the bandÆs
characteristically immense, behind-the-beat traction, itÆs more lush, immersive,
steeped in sonorous, cathedral-echo ambiences amplified to the point of
static-infected instability and carrying passages of deeply intimate spoken-word
that feel like being drawn in to the most hallowed of confidences. Its themes of
dialogue and the passing of knowledge are echoed in the combined vocals of Colin
and OathbreakerÆs Caro Tanghe. Her spectral presence on the opening Ogentroost
acts as both counterpoint and complement to ColinÆs stricken howl as the song
cycles between enervation and helplessly compelled momentum. Their whispered
devotions in the following, vast, hallowed atmospheres of De Dood In Bloei leave
you feeling as though youÆre bearing witness to the most private of
conversations.
The first Amenra album to be sung entirely in Flemish, De Doorn imparts a
universal power by digging deep into local customs. Not just allowing for a
greater range of expression through the intimacy, allowances and layers of
meaning granted by your native tongue, it takes inspiration from Flemish forms
such as Kleinkunst, a folk-based musical wave driven by storytelling, and the
passing of wisdom through generations. Yet as with every Amenra release, De
Doorn is an act of observance that recognises the path travelled by fully
experiencing the moment, as a rite of consummation, reckoning and deliverance.
That state of transition is exemplified in the closing Vor Immer, a hushed,
plaintively wracked coda that bursts into newborn, world-in-your eyes
transfiguration where sheer, sense flooding experience becomes a blazing
threshold where rupture and rapture become one.
The thorn is the most potent of symbols û in religious terms, a reclamation and
an agony as a mark of transformation. ItÆs the nagging reminder of vulnerability
and itÆs the violent protector, without which beauty cannot thrive. For the
cover of De Doorn, itÆs been cast in bronze û a thing of value and a memorial,
each band member given their own piece to symbolise their own pain and their
belonging to the greater whole. In bronze, it is both nature and something else
û a mark of singularity and a portal to a continuity that we all share. As
Amenra have acknowledged once more, itÆs one that hears our call, even when we
feel we are at our most alone.
Recorded by Tim De Gieter at Much Luv Studio, Lembeke BE
Mastered by Frank Arkright, Abbey Road Studio, London UK
www.relapse.com
relapserecords.bandcamp.com