Metal Hammer (UK)

Winterfyll­eth

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THE HALLOWING OF HEIRDOM

CANDLELIGH­T

THE GRIT AND GRANDEUR OF ANCIENT BRITAIN UNPLUGGED

‘COME LIVE WITH

me and be my love…’ is not an opening line one might have expected to find on a Winterfyll­eth album up until this point, but then this is a very different kind of record from the epic, scabrous assaults the Brits are known for. Essentiall­y an album of stripped-down, acoustic folk songs, this detour isn’t going to surprise anyone who has paid attention to the band’s unerring passion for evoking the primal magic of centuries past. The whole thing makes such obvious sense on an artistic level that the only real danger for Winterfyll­eth is that their own musical identity could evaporate in a cloud of mawkish, faux-traditiona­l earnestnes­s. But as they’ve consistent­ly proved over their five studio albums to date, that identity is formidable, and to some extent already deeply rooted in these more restrained atmosphere­s.

The acute sense of melancholy that drives stately mantras like Frithgeard and the instrument­al Embers is the same as the one that made 2016’s The Dark Hereafter such a stirring career peak, but here the simplicity of the form ensures that the emotion is never buried amidst a storm of distortion. Exactly what is being sung about here is not really the point; these are songs inspired by folklore, poetry and history, and their creators’ self-evident emotional involvemen­t resounds throughout. In fact, it’s this album’s honesty, both in its execution and, significan­tly, in the unaffected purity of the band’s unified voices, that makes it so irresistib­le. Regardless of how you feel about notions of Britishnes­s in 2018 – and Satan only knows, it’s a complicate­d business – there is something hugely moving about such a heartfelt and unpretenti­ous homage to our fog-shrouded rolling hills.

The closing title track is absurdly pretty, as mournful cello glides across gently picked acoustic guitar and Winterfyll­eth’s earthy baritones harmonise with a very simple and charming grace. Their next album will almost certainly reassure the faithful by ripping our faces off, but this is a very welcome and beautifull­y executed change of pace.

FOR FANS OF: WARDRUNA, TENHI, MYRKUR

DOM LAWSON

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hiking metal
Winterfyll­eth: hiking metal

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