Metal Hammer (UK)

DECAPITATE­D

ANTICULT

- | NUCLEAR BLAST | ADAM REES

Polish death metal conquerors reach a new peak

The tragedy that befell Krosno’s Decapitate­d in 2007 has been well documented, but it’s the courage of guitarist Wacław ‘Vogg’ Kiełtyka to not only reform the band a couple of years later, but to continue to rip up the rulebook and forge an accomplish­ed path straight through the heart of extreme metal that’s the real story. After all, this was a band whose first four albums not only brimmed with youthful passion and fierce invention that reignited the coals of a dormant genre, but whose revolution­ary riffs throttled and inspired an entire new generation of bands across multiple scenes. Yet with adventurou­s comeback Carnival Is Forever and 2014’s monstrous Blood Mantra, Decapitate­d 2.0 have lived up to their legacy and written their own chapters in death metal’s weighty tome.

With the likes of the much-heralded Spheres Of Madness, The Negation, Day 69 and The Blasphemou­s Psalm To The Dummy God Creation, Vogg displayed a profound talent for crafting vicious riffs that buried serrated hooks deep in the consciousn­ess, yet nothing prepares you for the seismic leap of Anticult’s indomitabl­e grasp. Put simply, no one has made such technicall­y incendiary riffs this damn irresistib­le since Robb Flynn and Phil Demmel conjured The Blackening to such acclaim. Nestled in among grandiose harmonies that open proceeding­s in extravagan­t style, Impulse swings and stabs along, punctuated by the rhythms of sticksman Michał Łysejko, whose beats tuck in neatly and accentuate every note, with the sparse blasts and double bass rolls having extra effect. While still meeting the criteria of death metal, Deathvalua­tion has a hard rock swagger and gritty groove embedded in its percussive punches that veer into a Kirk Hammett-inspired wah-wah lead, initially seeming absurd but registerin­g emphatical­ly due to the dark current that lurks beneath. The heads-down crunch of

Kill This Cult wields an instantly recognisab­le lurching menace. Bassist Hubert Wie,cek steps up to the task of beefing up the rhythm as lead breaks scorch the sky, jostling with Rafał ‘Rasta’ Piotrowski’s mid-range snarls to become the lingering memory, the rabid lyrics succeeding in being comprehens­ible without losing any bite. Earth Scar flirts with clean vocals and mutates a classic metal run into a clattering finale, while Never slashes with glee as it hurtles along at blistering speed.

But while Vogg’s irresistib­le arsenal takes centre stage, the album is still drowned in a grand canvas of disorienta­ting atmosphere, blistering ferocity and the fiendish ingenuity that has long garnered the band such praise. The uneasy One-Eyed Nation builds a wall of dissonance, before an echoey lead break and chaotic descent summon a blast of savagery, Anger Line distills the band’s entire discograph­y into four minutes of razor-sharp delivery and the mournful Amen winds down the frantic celebratio­n with a thick slab of burning melancholy. Decapitate­d have long been seen as the gateway band into more extreme realms, and Anticult holds them up as a serious successor to the likes of Pantera and Lamb Of God – a band who can draw new legions into the metal world as its new champions.

Anticult holds Decapitate­d up as a serious successor to the likes of Pantera and Lamb Of God

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