Old Man's Child

Green Line


Born of the Flickering
1996 Century Media Records 

Born of the Flickering

  1. Demons of the Thorncastle 
  2. Swallowed by a Buried One 
  3. Born of the Flickering 
  4. King of the Dark Ages 
  5. Wounds from the Night of Magic 
  6. On Through the Desert Storm 
  7. Christian Death 
  8. Funeral, Swords, and Souls 
  9. The Last Chapter 
  10. Leads to Utopia/The Old Man's Dream

Line-Up

Grusom - Vocals,Lead Rhythm and Acoustic Guitars 
Gonde - Bass and Backing Vocals 
Tjodalv - Drums 
Jardar - Rhythm and Lead Guitars 
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Evan's View
 

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The Pagan Prosperity
1997 Century Media Records 

The Pagan Prosperity

  1. The Millennium King 
  2. Behind the Mask 
  3. Soul Possessed 
  4. My Demonic Figures 
  5. Doommaker 
  6. My Kingdom Will Come 
  7. Return of the Night Creatures 
  8. What Malice Embrace 

Line-Up

Galdar - Vocals,Lead Rhythm and Acoustic Guitars 
Gonde - Bass and Backing Vocals 
Tony - Drums 
Jardar - Rhythm and Lead Guitars 
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Evan's View
 
There is a story behind my buying this record, and I include it only to emphasize how much this band grew on me over time. The first thing that caught my attention on this record was that the drumming, especially the intro to Behind the Mask, was just insane! The songs were good, but I passed it up for another release. About a month later, I had the tunes I had heard humming in my head, so, I went and bought the album along with a couple other discs. Now, being the frugal ex-student that I am, I decided that 3 discs were too many, and never even opened this disc. Needless to say, I couldn't get the songs out of my head, and I re-bought the album. 
It is my good fortune that I did, because had I not, I would have missed out on some just killer death metal! I think part of what turned me off was the whole "black metal" image, which begins to annoy me after a while. Some of this stuff makes me feel like a bunch of angry tree sprites have invaded the wood in my speakers... I try not to be prejudiced, but unfortunately, with some stuff you can't help it. But, on to the review. These guys are incredibly tight, the drummer is just a monster on the kit! The guitar work is also kick ass, with some really cool bass licks thrown in. The keyboards add a pretty cool higher toned element, but the riffs are the meat of this, and that's what ends up hooking me 99% of the time. The vocals may be the only detraction, being the standard black metal wombat drowning in acid screams, but I don't know what else would really fit, so... Overall, man am I impressed! A serendipitous event indeed.
9 out of 10

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Ill-Natured Spiritual Invasion
1998 Century Media Records 

Ill-Natured Spiritual Invasion

  1. Toward Eternity
  2. The Dream Ghost
  3. Demoniacal Possession
  4. Fall of Man
  5. Captives of Humanity 
  6. God of Impiety
  7. My Evil Revelations
  8. Thy Servent 

Line-Up

Galdar - Vocals, Lead Rhythm and Acoustic Guitars, Bass guitar 
Gene Hoglan - Drums 
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Evan's View
 

Green Line

Revelation 666: Curse of Damnation
2000 Century Media Records 

Revelation 666: Curse of Damnation

  1. Phantoms of Mortem Tales
  2. Hominus Nocturna
  3. In Black Endless Void
  4. Unholy Vivid Innocence
  5. Passage to Pandemonium
  6. Obscure Divine Manifestation
  7. World Expiration
  8. Into Silence Embrace 

Line-Up

Galdar - Vocals,Lead Rhythm and Acoustic Guitars 
Memnoch - Bass
Tjoldalv - Drums
Grimar - Drums
Jardar - Rhythm and Lead Guitars 
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Evan's View
 
There have always been similarities between OMC and Dimmu Borgir, one of which being that sometimes skinsman Tjodalv manned the drum throne for Dimmu, but also due to the thrashy black riff/keyboard attack present on both band's early albums.  Take that as you will, for Revelation 666 closes the gap between these two larger than life groups even more.  After the last opus, which was basically a two man project between Galder and Gene Hoglan, a full band is enlisted again, with actually not one, but two capable drummers in tow, with Tjodalv handling the blastier material (which is blindingly fast) and the new recruit laying down a really solid foundation on the more mid-paced material.  I still hold The Pagan Prosperity as my favorite for this band so far, Revelation almost being a little too reminiscent of Spiritual Black Dimensions, but that's not to say this is a wholly unenjoyable listen!  There's so much here to appease the stalwart fans, and while this may be a tad too pristine for the true black metallers, the minions draped in dark fabrics and holding gothic tendencies will eat this up, I guarantee you.  For myself, yeah, I like the album, 
really appreciating the craft that went into this, but honestly, at this point it's a pretty forgettable listen, nothing really catching on or hooking in as TPP did. In the end, I'm left with another more than competent release from a strong group, but left a little cold by the icy perfectionist feel.
7 out of 10

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Links

A Land Forlorn - Old Man's Child
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All text copyright 2001 Evan Howell