bio - INTERVIEWS
Country of origin:France
Location:Metz, Grand Est
Status:Active
Formed in:N/A
Genre:Atmospheric Black Metal
Lyrical themes:N/A
Current label:Specific Recordings
Years active:N/A
Additional label: Northern Silence Productions
DISCOGRAPHY
Loth Full-length 2016
Apocryphe Full-length 2017
Kien Kummweer / Warndt Split 2020
current line up
Loth All instruments
F.S. Vocals
Not quite the all-immersive epic debut it could be - 78%
Trust the French to keep on churning out black metal as if it was one of their long established industries, as French as Renault, TGVs and camembert cheese. The latest band off the assembly line is Loth from Metz, a city near the Belgian and Luxembourg borders, who issued their first album in June 2016. Not much is known about the band apart from the fact that it's a duo made up of Loth who plays all instruments and FS who concentrates on singing so there's the possibility that the band could be a solo project with a guest vocalist. I guess as time goes by and the band starts to attract some interest, there'll be interviews and reviews that will reveal something about the members' interests and motivations for forming Loth.
Four fairly long songs, all of them clocking in over 8 minutes with three going past 10 minutes, fill our time with flowing raw atmospheric black metal that boasts energy, fiery passion and aggression in abundance. Unfortunately the ragged vocals are very far back in the mix and are easily overpowered by the dramatic music - but if dramatic music is your cup of poison, then you're going to find it brimming over constantly. Each song has at least one riff or melody that is very impassioned and quickly concentrates your attention, even if by continuous repetition (and listeners probably won't mind the repetition either). As a result, every song also has majesty and a grand epic and tragic quality that continually builds throughout the music's duration. With each succeeding track, the recording builds on everything that comes before and by the end an incredible sound edifice stands tall and proud.
"Nemesis Mundane" introduces Loth's style of melodic atmospheric BM, strongly influenced by old school 1990s Norwegian and other Scandinavian BM, and from then on the minimal approach based on a guitars-n-drums set-up just goes hell-4-leather with raging music. It is militant and defiant with song titles suggesting an ongoing battle against evil forces. (With an album cover photograph of dense forest, I think these evil forces are those of current neoliberal Western culture menacing Nature and all it represents.) The guitars are grinding and raw yet the music's production is fairly clean and clear. The drumming can sometimes be thunderous but for the most part it sticks to basic time-keeping duties with occasional bursts of blast-beat frenzy. While all songs are good in their own way, the second half of the recording ("In Resilience" and "In Resistance") features the best music with intensely emotional instrumental music reminiscent of the best parts of the classic Burzum album "Filosofem" in full flight. Acoustic guitar melodies at the beginning of a couple of tracks hint at Cascadian BM inspiration as well and these can be deeply moving and powerful in the tragedy they hint at.
The musicianship here is excellent, given that it's all the work of one man who has hit a goldmine of incredible soaring riffs and melodies. The only niggling complaints I have (and MA readers are at liberty to ignore them) are that the music is a bit thin and tinny, and sometimes has a trashy sound, and the drumming isn't powerful enough. The vocals are limited in range and emotional expression to do the music the justice it deserves. In the last song especially, where the music soars into another emotionally heightened realm with dramatic swanky riffs and driving bass, the synth backing melody is too low in volume to round out the soundscape fully and add what I think might be a necessary dark and all-immersive psychedelic doom effect that would finish the album on a high note and leave its listeners exhausted but happy. There is also a lead guitar solo going on somewhere in there but you would not know unless you were playing the album loudly enough that the noise distortion blocks it all.
So in some ways the debut is a bit disappointing and falls short of what it could have been, but it puts Loth on the map as a band to watch. I'm already expecting better things of the duo's second release.