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Country of origin:Slovakia
Location:Bratislava, Bratislava / Nitra, Nitra
Status:Split-up
Formed in:2006
Alatyr - Photo
 
Genre:Pagan/Ambient Black Metal
Lyrical themes:Nature, Emptiness, Solitude, Hate
Last label:Candarian Demon Productions
 
Name Type Year
Alatyr Full-length 2007
Zemou zabudnutia Full-length 2016

Good work with a fresh and distinctive style - 75%

NausikaDalazBlindaz, November 21st, 2013
Alatyr - Alatyr

Alaytr is one of too many bands whose potential was never realised and whose entire legacy is bound up in one or a couple of releases. In Alatyr's case, this is the self-titled debut album, a varied atmospheric / folk pagan black metal work dwelling on hate, anger, anguish and nature.

After a serene if bleak all-synth ambient beginning, the duo grow serious with "Burka" and a very powerful and distinctive song it is: at once incredibly icy and blizzard-like in texture, filled with bottomless despair and with spidery guitar melody veins and capillaries that work their way into quivering brain cells. The rhythm has all the subtlety of subterranean tunnelling, deep and ominous. Vocalist Striibog's screams echo in the mind long after he fades away. Streams of distorted BM guitar texture flash brightly and continuously like industrial torch flares. The song's pace is even and very melancholy.

"Popol" settles into a very grim rhythm and style not unlike early Burzum ("Aske" period) with more relentless and unbearable screeching. The programmed drumming and rhythms are actually good here, maintaining a steady sedate stroll while guitars and vocals fly about and do battle. The use of keyboards to delineate a cold and bleak atmosphere, redolent of bare forests in late autumn or early winter when skies are grey and mist obscures forms in the landscape, and all seems to be never-ending shades of dull grey, is effective: the tones are beyond doleful.

For a few brief moments, "Priepast' " experiments with solo guitar tones before going into the familiar format of medium-slow beat and rhythm around which guitars, keyboards and banshee phantom voice whirl and flail in a mix of helpless fury and deep sadness. The barrage of guitar riffs can be very electrifying and bitterly acid in sound. The mood is despairing throughout. "Hviezdy" features near-medieval folk melodies in an otherwise stodgy and unremarkable song. "Prazdnota" is a soulful instrumental of longing and quiet acceptance of life in all its sorrow and bleakness as well as its beauty. A cover of a Darkthrone song "Transilvanian Hunger" is included at the end of the album, revealing a faster side of the band; the song isn't necessary and spoils the generally morose mood and unity of the album. Perhaps the Alatyr musicians included the song because they felt that to gain attention outside Slovakia, they needed to show they were just as good as the Norwegian masters at the black metal game.

The album might flag in the middle a bit but on the whole this is a good work with a fresh and distinctive style that hasn't dated after nearly seven years. The musicians put in much care and thought into structuring and arranging the songs to suggest a gradually evolving narrative of depressive atmospheric black metal. This is the kind of recording that will leave listeners keen to hear more. Perhaps in the (hopefully) not too distant future the members will come together again and take up where they left off.

A hidden gem amongst a saturated scene - 93%

Daemonlord, June 30th, 2011

Hailing from Slovakia, Alatyr were the first band to be snapped up on the underground black metal label Candarian Demon Productions. Formed by Igric and Striibog, was the band's only official full length release, and what a hell of a trip down a misty moonlit path of top quality despondent, bleak and misanthropic black metal it is.

Kicking off with a bleak ambient introduction, things quickly become several shades greyer when the black metal par excellence begins to shiver from your speakers like some tortured, morbid spirit. There is a fair amount of well used ambient sections throughout the album, utilized very much in the vein Vinterriket, but with the deep seated morose chill of early Burzum and Wigrid. Vocally, it features horrific screams all the way, reminiscent of the shrill un-human scream of Nattramn from Swedish audio terrorists Silencer on quite a few occasions. However, rather than being a smoking riff-fest of a black metal album - this album is all about atmosphere, conjuring images of frozen haunted forests, vast monochromatic landscapes and sheer isolation through the medium of mid-paced fizzing guitar work, trudging programmed drums and throat stripping vocals telling tales of treachery, pain and hatred.

Apart from being grim, true and fantastically proficient for a band releasing their debut album, Alatyr were a entity who manage to hold your attention effortlessly with their strikingly dour vision upon first listen, with each further listen becoming more and more captivating, unfolding like a fantastic novel. If this sort of thing's up your street, take it from me that this is well worth your investigation.

Originally written for www.metalcrypt.com

Cunning Ambient Black Metal. - 80%

Perplexed_Sjel, March 4th, 2010

I assume there might be a temptation for some to misleading label Alatyr’s self-titled debut as being of the depressive mould, but there are definitely qualities from other sub-genres within the delicate ambiance of the record that disassociate itself from that particular movement within the black metal scene. Alatyr are adept at creating a wide ranging style of black metal that touches upon several styles, including ambient, atmospheric and even pagan forms. When judging what characteristics make this debut a hit amongst the fans it is easy to look towards the repetitious dirges of the guitars and the fierce rasps of vocalist Striibog when, in actual fact, it is that and much, much more. Although Alatyr have their sound divulge into several different takes on black metal, I still find myself able to make references to depressive bands without wanting to send out the message that this itself is of that nature, too, when it clearly isn’t if one takes the time to fully explore the simplistic structures more carefully. I myself consider this one of the hidden gems of European ambient black metal considering its use of divine keyboards to conjure up an imperative epic feeling in the soundscapes. However, this record isn’t without its problems.

The eclectic cover of Darkthrone’s classic, ‘Transilvanian Hunger’ and the opening two songs, of which one is a fully instrumental song, do hint at a few issues with which Alatyr need to address but, overall, this record establishes a theme of ambiance and epic attributes that qualify it as an obscure gem of the underground. To my ears, I hear a resemblance to fellow European bands like Trist and, to a lesser extent, Hypothermia. Trist are primarily the example I would like to use when comparing this self-titled piece to any other. I don’t fool myself and I hope not to fool anyone else into believing that Alatyr are a carbon copy of Trist because they’re not. In fact, the pagan themes wouldn’t allow such an occurrence to happen and forcibly shunt the records mannerisms away from that of any other band, making this an individualistic effort with several possible influences and no overriding influence which forces the listener to believe this is a direct result of one particular band, or record made in the past. The use of keyboards, in particular, is pivotal to the success of Alatyr and is the sole reason that they do not become just another face in the bustling crowd.

I have come to expect keyboards to be used on outfits that revolve around issues of a pagan nature, but not to the same affect as Alatyr. Striibog cleverly pieces together an impressive epic atmosphere on most of the songs through the use of keyboards alone, although he also provides the buzzing, rasping vocals with which we’re probably all accustomed to hearing on a record of this type. Normally, pagan and folk music intertwine and sometimes, the conclusions can be lost in translation with much of the instrumentation yielding a poor outcome, but the experimentation of this self-titled piece is cleverly weaved in and around the modernity in such a way that no form of hybrid sounds will disrupt the harmony. For example, ‘Prazdnota’, another instrumental song, is wonderfully juxtaposed with the brilliant ‘Hviezdy’, a song which exudes the true qualities of the band. ‘Prazdnota’ is unlike any of the songs before, or after it. Composing mainly of Striibog’s pivotal keyboards and slow percussion, this song reflects a beauty that isn’t seen in most bands of this nature. To me, there is a desire to reference such artists as Burzum given Varg’s experimentation with folksy keyboard based songs and long instrumentals such as the thought provoking ‘Tomhet’ on the classic ‘Hvis Lyset Tar Oss’.

‘Tomhet’ is a song that made slow, beautiful ambiance a key feature on most atmospheric black metal records of this kind. Alatyr take Varg’s prison work and give it an extra sense of credibility due to the superior production values and better quality of the instruments being used. A traditional feeling isn’t unheard of within Alatyr’s record, though it certainly harbours a modernity through the use of slow, repetitious riffs akin to bands like Trist, with a surprising emphasis on cleaner instrumentation, as shown perfectly on the stunning ‘Hviezdy’, which isn’t without its typical distorted guitars also (making for wonderful juxtaposition). As previously stated, there are traditional aspects to this piece, too. The cover of Darkthrone’s classic, for example, is one song where these hints come to life in surreal fashion. I must admit that I was taken aback by the cover since it varies from the original in key places, whilst maintaining the sense of keyboards on the record by intertwining them into Darkthrone’s grim classic and making it more colourful and bright even. The true essence of the song is the same with emphasis on repetitious blast beast and cutting guitar riffs, but the vocals feel TOO buried and the tone of the song too sloppy to consider it a worthwhile element of the record. For me, the cover shouldn’t have been included. It has no real place and doesn’t move in the same direction as the rest of the material. Despite this, Alatyr still end with their heads held high and onto a potentially successful future in ambient/atmospheric black metal.

 

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