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Country of origin:United States
Location:Washington, D.C.
Status:Active
Formed in:2015
Genre:Progressive Black/Death Metal
Lyrical themes:Instrumental
Current label:Unsigned/independent
Years active:2015-present

Shroud Ritual - Photo

DISCOGRAPHY

Five Suns Full-length 2017

current line up

Patrick H. Everything

REVIEWS

A Staggering Scale - 95%

Five_Nails, January 18th, 2018 

A bedroom instrumental progressive blackened death metal band from Washington D.C., Shroud Ritual may seem like a handful with such an overwhelmingly wordy description. However, encapsulated within 'Five Suns' is a smooth and well-rounded product that contributes to the variation found in many progressive passages and compliments the sensibilities of fans of Immortal and Animals as Leaders alike while venturing into the groovy pedigree of heavy metal's progenitors and rock outliers in subtler introspective measures.

Shroud Ritual's mischievous and adroit tour de force pangs of Akercocke and Behemoth. Sweeping through great scales in “Lightless”, this sort of multifaceted journey brings enough of that heavy death metal chugging edge and black metal screech to subvert even the bounciest moments with a hurried scramble before darting down prog's perplexing passageways. A tilted path of unusual time signatures and wonky guitars pulls you further into this distorted fun house mirror world where calming atmosphere dissipates, despite hints of flowery progressive metal along the lines of Canvas Solaris or Scale the Summit and the stringed crooning popularized by the likes of Petrucci, Vai, and Satriani. 

Patrick H. creates a labyrinthine network of grim imagery while maintaining the adventurous ambition necessary to honor the “Ancestral”. Voluminous guitar riffs seize fluid progressions and, through a wander from chug city, travels into the twisted and disorienting wilderness where a breath of atmosphere calls forth to outfits of leather-clad shredders as a satisfying blasting apex draws sheer cliffs and meandering fjords into an outstretched hand of malice. Where many a cold and cascading black metal song may strip its atmosphere down to frightfully empty remains, “Ancestral” grows and expands its amorphous approach into an assertion of allegiance to the darker side of this genre designation as it demonstrates the breadth of this band's aspirations.

Reaching beyond dark forests, “Celestial Dome” is initially wrapped in an Akercocke cloak of ruthlessness, intermixed with jazz while another leg of this ethereal album's journey finds itself in the quivering embrace of an echoing synth reminiscent of Led Zeppelin's “No Quarter”. A twirl of harmonious strings steps out into an airy meadow, slicked by a dewy layer of bass, and captivatingly curls into a monstrous fist of stone, malforming the main riff as it ascends to its percussive plateau, a destination long removed from its “Verdant” origin. This betrayal of the earlier calm finds its place in slightly sinister tones yet remains about as casually unsettling as the closing of Pelican's “Taraxis”. The journey completed, Shroud Ritual's after party turns into too quick a flow of ale, but tomorrow's hangover is not leaving this next day lost to progress.

Swinging by their tails like dead cats being tenderized in preparation for a succulent Chinese meal, “Sleep & Oblivion” whips its riffs in keen death metal fashion and manages to build a plethora of compelling and fluid structures. An energetic and restless guitar spits at a small piano before getting beaten into shape by some punishing percussion. Training the tempo, this twisted theater culminates in a simultaneously sappy and snappy harmony. Feline spines split and furry nunchucks send innards flying into an opaque abstraction of the blissfully baroque, beating beautiful notes into improvised ventricles. Throughout this song is the culmination of Patrick H.'s effort in arranging guitars to perfectly provide lyrical licks throughout their already meaty riffs and such an accomplishment is so quickly consumed and digested that it easily keeps you coming back for more helpings, no matter how horrible a punishment the porcelain is due to receive.

Throughout this meaty forty-five minutes of unique transitions and approaches, Patrick H. takes Shroud Ritual into an expansive exploration of the universality of heavy metal and its abundant subsets. While there are such clear and concise passages that easily exhibit individual agency, I would be remiss if I did not point out one moment in this album that veers very closely to a preexisting structure built by Devildriver in 'The Fury of Our Maker's Hand'. In the second minute of the closing song, “The Tangled Web” bleeds a black metal blast into an approach very similar to the breakdown of Devildriver's “Just Run”. This moment is taken in the opposite direction however, as it ups the ante of this transition with a more aggressive push into that initial riff. Where many moments throughout 'Five Suns' amble down similar paths to some of the best known albums in the style, this small moment of parallel thinking nearly fills each shoe-print identically, groove and all. Even so, the main mollification of this small concern is in considering just how many gaps are bridged throughout this astonishingly adept album and its incredible closer. Throughout this piece, Spanish sounding acoustic meets the unusual clash of time signatures in jazz, embraces an Animals as Leaders bit of djent, taps to the tapestry of F.C.P.R.E.M.I.X., and builds that loosey-goosey Tool tambour of vibrating bass rumble throughout a nasty solo. These moments are just a taste of an apt and artful binding that amorously adjoins all aspects. Clearly the above moment was a reference or a parallel piece for the content of this collection shows a very conscious and forthright effort unlikely to stumble into such a trap where it could instead pay its homage honestly to many members of metal's massive milieu.

Though an initial glance at this bedroom band's designation may bring some apprehension, Patrick H. has found a great balance of heavy and light, reverential and unique, and achieved a numinous nature to compliment his Shroud Ritual. No moment in this album leaves a listener out in the cold too long. Through this engaging enterprise comes the satisfaction of meeting musical heritage in “Ancestral”, traversing enormous expanse in “Celestial Dome”, accomplishing a distant goal in “Verdant”, and knitting together worlds of sound, shrinking it into a stream of consciousness in “The Tangled Web”. Shroud Ritual knows no bounds between 'Five Suns' and throws down a new gauntlet to honorably challenge the quality and ambitions of abstract approaches.

This right here, is an incredible surprise. If you like instrumental metal of any kind, you need to click play on this album. Trust me.

The man behind Shroud Ritual has decided to start the Bandcamp embed on the third track because he believes it best represents the album overall. And for once, I’m not going to bother telling you to skip back to the official beginning of the album. It shouldn’t matter. If you give this song (“Celestial Dome”) a chance, you’ll know if you need to pick this album up and give it the attention it truly deserves. In all honesty, the quality of this debut is only just starting to set in for me too, as it was only released at the end of last week, and after just one playthrough it became apparent that this was going to be something sticking around on people’s playlists for a long time to come.

Last Friday, we received a humble email from Patrick, the lone musician behind Shroud Ritual, about his progressive black/death release titled Five Suns. Now we get a shitload of emails in the TovH inbox, stuff from labels, PR people, spam, and “review requests” from random Russian “female-fronted” symphonic folk-core bands. Often, it’s hard to separate the instantly DELETE-able from the eventually delete-able. After reading the succinct but detailed accompanying description and being greeted with this intriguing artwork (created by Luciana Nedelea), my pants interest became piqued.

By now, if you’ve been listening to “Celestial Dome” while skimming through those last two paragraphs of me garbling and gushing, fruitlessly scanning for a name-drop of a familiar band or reference point, you won’t need any more convincing than the music itself. However, for those of you who won’t even give a click to something until it can be traced back to something you already enjoy, I’ll give a very haphazard analysis of the style(s) found on Five Suns. Simultaneously haunting and majestically structured compositions that are redolent of Tempel and Opeth-level grandeur, sublime textural dynamics that flow with the beautiful poise of Dumbsaint, tasteful virtuosic bursts that’d fit right in on an Animals As Leaders or Pomegranate Tiger track, and the riff-intensity of those Revocation instrumental tracks, all brushed with melancholic blackness.

  

Shroud Ritual - Five Suns

An interesting thing about instrumental music is the way it's judged as its own genre, as though a lack of vocals is the most notable characteristic of the music.  And while certainly instrumental music does provide a different listening and live viewing experience, I feel like labeling bands as simply "instrumental" lumps them all in together, as though they all sound the same, which is erroneous on multiple levels.  From the black metal of Tempel, to the post-metal riffs of Pelican, to the driving soundscapes of If These Trees Could Talk, instrumental bands are just as varied and cross-genred as their vocal counterparts.  Of course then there are bands like Shroud Ritual, a one man project out of Washington D.C.  Five Suns, the band's debut album, manages to blend and transcend genres, leaving instrumental as the easiest, laziest way to categorize their thoroughly unique sound.

"Heirloom" opens the album with an isolated, mournful guitar melody that's soon joined by a piano to create a dark, somber harmony.  "Heirloom" sounds a bit like post-Watershed Opeth (specifically "Marrow of the Earth"); whether you find that to be a good thing or a bad thing is essentially irrelevant, as "Heirloom" is a minute and a half long.  It serves its purpose as an intro track though, in establishing the overall mood and tone of Five Suns.

 

Yeah, but was it based on a 70s prog album that only 10 people heard?

"Lightless" is, for most of its runtime, a relatively straightforward death metal jam, until it takes a major turn and throws in a Chris Letchford-esque guitar solo.  It's not my favorite part of the album, but this solo is representative of what makes Five Suns so enticing: in no way did I see it coming, and it sounds like something from a completely different album, but it fits so well and creates something new and intriguing.  If I could bottle my reaction to that solo from the first time I heard it, and consume and bask in it constantly, at least a dozen craft breweries would go out of business.

"Celestial Dome" is a tremendous slice of atmospheric black metal, opening with a piano, featuring some acoustic guitar, and then settling into and ending with a nice little progressive death metal jam.  It's a fantastic song, and although at nine plus minutes it manages to not feel rushed, it has so many cool ideas and different influences that I can't help but want to see each of them explored more in depth; the last four minutes of "Celestial Dome" feature passages that would not feel out of place in a Gojira, Animals as Leaders, DTP, or Porcupine Tree track, and Patrick (the "man" in the one-man nature of Shroud Ritual) handles the instruments deftly, moving between genres and into and out of solos and bass riffs adroitly.

All without introducing a coffee-loving puppet alien.  Somehow.

The back half of the album contains my favorite songs: "Verdant" and "Sleep & Oblivion."  "Verdant" is a mellow, mainly acoustic guitar and piano track, that provides a break from the heavy, progressive overtones of Five Suns.  Between "Heirloom" and "Verdant," it's clear that Shroud Ritual could very easily make an album entirely in that style that would be compelling and wonderful.  Think Agalloch's The White EP or one of Steve Von Till's solo albums.  Moving between the styles also makes Five Suns all the more compelling; it shows that Shroud Ritual has a talent for writing songs, as opposed to just death metal songs, or black metal songs, or acoustic songs, making Five Suns feel cohesive, as opposed to an exercise in different styles.  "Sleep & Oblivion" starts with a staticky vocal sample, before exploding into a driving mash of riffs and drums that takes a small, atmospheric break three quarters of the way through.  I don't really have anything profound or intelligent to say about the song, except maybe that I immediately added it to my gym playlist, and it's a lot of fun.

Five Suns is one of those albums that makes me feel incredibly fortunate to be writing for Brutalitopia, because had it not shown up in our inbox one day, I probably would have missed it.  There's so many bands and albums and songs out there worthy of attention that it often feels impossible to get to all of them; needless to say, I'm incredibly happy to have discovered Shroud Ritual.  Hopefully the band is able to find some touring members and move into the physical media realm; I'm really hoping for a vinyl press, because 1) Of course I am, and 2) the artwork by Luciana Nedelea is stunning in its natural creepiness, and I really want to have it larger than in my iTunes window.  Five Suns is a promising debut, and a welcome addition to a fantastic year of music.  I look forward to seeing what Shroud Ritual does in the future, but for now I'm content enjoying one of the year's most enjoyable records.


- Durf

 

Debut album, Five Suns, from Shroud Ritual almost didn’t make my ears this year and that would’ve been a tragedy. As you might guess, we get a lot of email and this one slipped right by but a chance encounter on Bandcamp set the ship on the right course. And that course is one of utter amazement as to what is actually possible when vocals are not the center piece. Yes, this is instrumental but where Shroud Ritual rise atop of this particular genre is just how good they are at making you forget vocals. It’s an amalgamation of progressive / technical black and death metal that left my jaw planted on the floor but when I completely forgot there were no squeals or shrieking I had to pick my teeth up as well. My chance encounter led to hours then days of constant listening and still I’m finding nuances I missed.