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CDアルバム

As Jerusalem Burns...Al'Intisar

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フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2018年02月22日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルVic
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 VICCD170
SKU 8717853801853

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00
Both historically and aesthetically, Melechesh's debut album, 1996's As Jerusalem Burns...Al'Intisar, never really meshed with the respected Israeli heavy metal band's remaining musical output and overall career vision -- a fusion of extreme heavy metal with the Israel-birthed group's Middle Eastern heritage, which only achieved truly life-changing fruition some five years later with the release of 2001's sophomore effort, Djinn. For now, Melechesh's songs were largely rooted in the European black metal aesthetic (see feverishly blastbeaten offerings like "Hymn to Gibil," "Baphomet's Lust," and "Devil's Night," as well as the more measured, melodic, Rotting Christ-recalling "Planetary Rites"), and even Al'Intisar`s subject matter (the title itself is Arabic for "the victory") followed suit by choosing religious confrontation over the more thought-provoking cultural and mythological studies still to come. Sure, Melechesh were already peppering exotic drum patterns and riff sequences across any number of songs contained here (including the opening "Sultan of Mischief," the progressively minded title track, and the instrumental "Dance of the Black Genii," with its native percussion instruments and haunting wailing), yet, ironically, these often sounded about as convincingly "Arabian" as the average Western band feigning the most obvious Eastern musical cliches. Regardless of all that, though, As Jerusalem Burns...Al'Intisar was already an impressively well-crafted and mature collection of songs, indicative of Melechesh's future blossoming into one of the extreme metal world's most intriguing and rewarding propositions. [Melechesh's first album has been the beneficiary of not one, not two, but three separate reissues (in 2002, 2004, and 2005), some featuring a few bonus tracks, but all of them printed in such limited quantities that copies are extremely hard to come by even today.] ~ Eduardo Rivadavia

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Intro

      アーティスト: Melechesh

    2. 2.
      Sultan of Mischief

      アーティスト: Melechesh

    3. 3.
      Assyrian Spirit

      アーティスト: Melechesh

    4. 4.
      Planetary Rites

      アーティスト: Melechesh

    5. 5.
      Hymn to Gibil

      アーティスト: Melechesh

    6. 6.
      The Sorcerers of Melechesh

      アーティスト: Melechesh

    7. 7.
      Dance of the Black Genii

      アーティスト: Melechesh

    8. 8.
      Baphomet's Lust

      アーティスト: Melechesh

    9. 9.
      Devil Night

      アーティスト: Melechesh

    10. 10.
      As Jerusalem Burns... Al Intisar

      アーティスト: Melechesh

    11. 11.
      The Siege of Lachish

      アーティスト: Melechesh

    12. 12.
      Malek Al Nar

      アーティスト: Melechesh

    13. 13.
      Planetary Rites

      アーティスト: Melechesh

    14. 14.
      Assyrian Spirit

      アーティスト: Melechesh

    15. 15.
      Sultan of Mischief

      アーティスト: Melechesh

    16. 16.
      The Sorcerers of Melechesh

      アーティスト: Melechesh

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Melechesh

オリジナル発売日:1996年

商品の紹介

Both historically and aesthetically, Melechesh's debut album, 1996's As Jerusalem Burns...Al'Intisar, never really meshed with the respected Israeli heavy metal band's remaining musical output and overall career vision -- a fusion of extreme heavy metal with the Israel-birthed group's Middle Eastern heritage, which only achieved truly life-changing fruition some five years later with the release of 2001's sophomore effort, Djinn. For now, Melechesh's songs were largely rooted in the European black metal aesthetic (see feverishly blastbeaten offerings like "Hymn to Gibil," "Baphomet's Lust," and "Devil's Night," as well as the more measured, melodic, Rotting Christ-recalling "Planetary Rites"), and even Al'Intisar's subject matter (the title itself is Arabic for "the victory") followed suit by choosing religious confrontation over the more thought-provoking cultural and mythological studies still to come. Sure, Melechesh were already peppering exotic drum patterns and riff sequences across any number of songs contained here (including the opening "Sultan of Mischief," the progressively minded title track, and the instrumental "Dance of the Black Genii," with its native percussion instruments and haunting wailing), yet, ironically, these often sounded about as convincingly "Arabian" as the average Western band feigning the most obvious Eastern musical cliches. Regardless of all that, though, As Jerusalem Burns...Al'Intisar was already an impressively well-crafted and mature collection of songs, indicative of Melechesh's future blossoming into one of the extreme metal world's most intriguing and rewarding propositions. [Melechesh's first album has been the beneficiary of not one, not two, but three separate reissues (in 2002, 2004, and 2005), some featuring a few bonus tracks, but all of them printed in such limited quantities that copies are extremely hard to come by even today.] ~ Eduardo Rivadavia|
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