Metal Hammer (UK)

Vader IMMOLATION

- JONATHAN SELZER

Underworld, london

Camden Town celebrates the triumph of death

For all the handwringi­ng over what’s going to sustain the next generation of metal bands, it’s easy to turn your nose up at the acts offering a guideline, whose bare-knuckle dedication to the dark arts hasn’t wavered either in terms of potency or pulling power. With a collective experience of 65 years between them, tonight’s headline acts may have very different takes on death metal but they share a unifying spirit that’s packed the Underworld full of loyal, expectant fans, ready to lose their shit even when IMMOLATION [8] kick off with a new track, The Distorting Light. The New Yorkers may have a sleeves-rolled, blue-collar mentality typical of the East Coast, but there’s an inherent sense of supernatur­al oddness about them still. Their opening gambit pummels riffs until they squirm into an atonal ooze, all the rampaging parts fitting together in a fashion no rational mind could conceive while Ross Dolan’s vocals are an off-kilter incantatio­n, as though he’s moulding some misbegotte­n intelligen­ce from the evermutati­ng whorl around him.

The one-two punch of the classic Close To A World Below album openers Higher Coward and Father, You’re Not A Father send the crowd into raptures, all swirling miasmas and palpitatin­g rites as Robert Vigna swings his guitar stiffly like he’s tuning it into a host of unholy frequencie­s. If the triggered blasts threaten to override the spell, their resemblanc­e to a malfunctio­ning machine only adds to the oddness, as Immolation itself and closing Epiphany dig deep into the metal strata to draw out a potent and tempestuou­s power that makes fullest sense in the most ecstatic of states.

Polish veterans VADER [7] are more regular visitors to these shores, but that hasn’t thinned the crowd any, and if their less sulphur-mottled, more route-one approach doesn’t have quite the same bewilderin­g effect, songs new and old are greeted like eve-of-battle sermons. An opening Tempest and groove-laden Triumph Of Death, awash with monstrousl­y sawing riffs, are warped with riotous thrash DNA while Dark Age erupts with imperious, old-school abandon, but the Underworld is in full-on celebratio­n mode tonight, raising fists to charismati­c, leathercla­d frontman Piotr Wiwczarek as death metal’s abiding power gets charged up once more.

 ??  ?? Immolation: Ross Dolan whips up a death metal stormVader: Piotr Wiwczarek fans the death metal flamesSong­s new and old are greeted like eve-of-battle sermons
Immolation: Ross Dolan whips up a death metal stormVader: Piotr Wiwczarek fans the death metal flamesSong­s new and old are greeted like eve-of-battle sermons

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