supported by 8 fans who also own “V - Red Oak Wisdom (Amarok)”
it feels like something of great meaning broke and now there are pieces scattered all around. smoke and dust everywhere. there is a certain bitter beauty to this chaos that you can experience here.
this album is something i often deeply feel and can access through these tunes. thank you so much for that. coo__hoolio
supported by 7 fans who also own “V - Red Oak Wisdom (Amarok)”
With the first half epitomizing the full realization of loss after the fact and the second epitomizing the first wave of grief that follows, this LP acts as a continuation of Hell I, with the first act near identical in theme and composition as MSW's previous album and the second act marking the transition in MSW's sound to one that is a bit more emotional in nature and melodic at times. This album bridges the gap between Hell I and Hell III in terms of stylistic differences. MSW fans, buy this. Camelus Dromedarius
The debut full-length from Kenoma is full of spacious, haunting songs that steadily build to great rushes of sound. Bandcamp New & Notable Apr 29, 2017
Thunderous post-rock/post-metal from Thumos where every song feels gigantic, built around complex rhythms & arrangements. Bandcamp New & Notable Feb 26, 2023
supported by 5 fans who also own “V - Red Oak Wisdom (Amarok)”
At first, I was a bit disapointed with this split. I consider Hell and Primitive Man to be two of the most punishing bands in doom metal, and I was hoping this would be a contest of sheer crushing misanthropy. Hell's song was not anywhere near the standard of heaviness the band has set for itself, and it really didn't compare in that regard to Primitive Man's songs. I gave it some time, and I actually really love Hell's contribution now. It's more groovy and trad-doomy than his other stuff. maxlikesound