Metal Hammer (UK)

IMPERIAL TRIUMPHANT

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DEATH METAL’S ARTISTIC ascent in the early 90s and the avant-garde influence on black metal bands such as Sigh, Ved Buens Ende and Dødheimsga­rd helped pave the way for our modern understand­ing of complex, intense forms of metal. Thankfully, decades on, we’re still having our brains scrambled by truly progressiv­e acts across metal’s continuall­y expanding spectrum. Judging by the acclaim deservedly hyped upon astral

travellers such as Blood Incantatio­n, Cryptic Shift and Oranssi Pazuzu, we are now in the midst of a very exciting creative period – and NYC avant-black/death metallers Imperial Triumphant are another leading example.

On their 2018 LP, Vile Luxury, the trio manipulate­d the listener’s psyche and physical wellbeing through sonic axis-shifting and malevolent aesthetics. Its opening occult fanfare of a six-part horn chorale set a disorienta­ting, erudite and masterful tone for what was a claustroph­obic score of NYC life and its past and present corruption, criminalit­y and inequality. Metal didn’t often get that regal – or brutal – during the last decade, which is why Alphaville, named after Jean-luc Godard’s 1965 dystopian futureworl­d sci-fi film, is so highly anticipate­d amongst those who want artists to continue to push compositio­ns to radical limits.

By using Vile Luxury’s base headfuck style, as a launch pad for even more outlier, boundarybl­itzing aims, Imperial Triumphant have done just that on album four. At times, their noirjazz influences are so pronounced that it sounds as though Miles Davis’s troupe from 1971’s Live-evil are jamming maniacally inside Portal’s grandfathe­r clock. Rotted Futures sets the scene with its distorted violin wails descending into a sideways Voivod-ian groove, drummer Kenny Grohowski’s freefallin­g fills bouncing off the respective angular bass and

“A BENCHMARK FOR AVANTEXTRE­ME METAL”

guitar thrills of Steve Blanco and Ilya. Ilya’s demonic bellows act as an essential fulcrum from which the instrument­als swing, blast and morph, especially during Excelsior and the title track – not unlike a black/death extension of The Dillinger Escape Plan’s work with Mike Patton.

Starting with a damn barbershop quartet – surely a first for metal – Atomic Age incorporat­es composer Bernard Hermann’s use of heart-stopping tension, as heard on Hitchcock’s Psycho, into its off-kilter destructiv­e swarms. If that’s not odd enough, Meshuggah’s Tomas Haake turns up to track Japanese Taiko drums with the band. Those recordings are skilfully melded into the terrorscap­es by the production team of Trey Spruance (Mr. Bungle) and Colin Marston (Krallice/gorguts) in eyebrowrai­sing fashion, particular­ly prior to the midpoint industrial meltdown of City Swine. Impressive­ly, as best exemplifie­d by Transmissi­on To Mercury and its opening piano-and-sax lounge-jazz coda, there’s also an increased use of instrument­al space, so that when the trio do unleash hellfire, the impact has a heightened synapse-frying effect.

This exquisite record, which includes influence-highlighti­ng covers of Voivod and The Residents, is rife with atypical ideas and moments of groundbrea­king extremity, making Alphaville not only the finest, most daring and accomplish­ed Imperial Triumphant LP to date, but also a benchmark for metal’s avant-extreme sect to outdo going forward. If that’s even a realistic possibilit­y…

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FOR FANS OF: Sumac, Portal, Miles Davis DEAN BROWN

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Imperial Triumphant usher you into the nebulous realms of avant-metal
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