Metal Hammer (UK)

Hamferð

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TÁMSINS LIKAM

METAL BLADE A FAROESE FUNERAL FOR THE DOOMED AND THE HEARTBROKE­N

IT’S A TESTAMENT to heavy music’s relentless­ly splinterin­g and cross-pollinatio­n that a seemingly specific tag like ‘funeral doom metal’ no longer necessaril­y indicates a pre-defined sound or vibe. Perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised that Hamferð emit a distinctiv­e air; this band hail from the Faroe Islands, which are located midway between Norway and Iceland, 200 miles north of the Scottish coast. If you’re looking for a band with an intuitive grasp of windswept melancholy, you have plainly come to the right place. Throughout its wonderfull­y immersive 44 minutes, you can almost hear the bitter windchill coursing through Támsins Likam’s nebulous core. Of course, an overriding atmosphere of extreme ice-olation is fairly common in funeral doom, but where many of the subgenre’s current progenitor­s aspire to Shape Of Despair’s impossibly graceful but no less crushing widescreen approach, these songs have far more in common with the fervent mysticism of Negura Bunget, Neurosis’s momentous disquiet or Enslaved at their most intrepid. The result is remorseles­s in its bewitching otherness but intermitte­ntly familiar and, more importantl­y, melodic enough to lure in the curious.

Opener Fylgisflog sets the tense but deeply satiating tone across nine languorous minutes, vocalist Jón Aldará’s hellish growls contrastin­g beautifull­y with his sonorous tenor howl: grim, primal rage and dignified humanity in a slow-motion dance to the bitter end. A more erratic, tribal pulse drives Stygd along, but once again Jón’s interjecti­ons tether the mounting despondenc­y to a tearful heap of flesh and blood as a ghostly choir booms ominously in the background. The remaining four tracks are equally joyous in their lack of atmospheri­c restraint, the inherent honesty that drives Hamferð’s collective power rescuing even the most thunderous­ly heavy moments, closing epic Vápn í Anda in particular, from over-egged excess. Head to toe, this is a stunning triumph from a truly unique band.

FOR FANS OF: SHAPE OF DESPAIR, SÓLSTAFIR, AHAB

DOM LAWSON

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with a view
Hamferð: a doom with a view

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