Storm of the light's bane/ Where dead angels lie

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Storm of the light's bane/ Where dead angels lie album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 61:22

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True Black Metal

Harby

Hands down the best black metal band ever. The first reviewer nailed it as this albums is truly beautiful and crushingly brutal all at once.

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A black heart will only find beauty in darkness

djantithetical

This is an absolutely mandatory black metal album. No keyboards except in the two brief piano tracks, but none are needed; Dissection manages to create a powerful atmosphere of darkness, evil, longing & battle through their excellent guitar riffs. The tempo is generally very fast, but this is not a blastbeat abusing, "blur" speed album. I disagree strongly with the contention that the "Where Dead Angels Lie" material is unremarkable. The two covers (Antichrist by SLAYER and Elizabeth Bathori by Tormentor) are both excellent and Son of Mourning is also a great song that showcases Dissection's more death metal oriented side. Best tracks: Night's Blood, Unhallowed, Where Dead Angels Lie.

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They Say All Music Guide

Dissection’s Storm of the Light’s Bane is the unquestionable high-water mark for one of melodic Scandinavian death metal’s founding acts. The last full-length completed before vocalist/guitarist Jon Nödtveidt was convicted of murder (thus ending the career of Dissection), the 1996 offering is combined with the EP Where Dead Angels Lie on this 2002 Nuclear Blast dual release. Storm of the Light’s Bane is a frightening and highly accomplished effort. The performances and material are first-rate, perhaps even revolutionary — if such a phrase could be apply to music with such a limited appeal. The five selections from Where Dead Angels Lie aren’t anything figuratively or literally new. An unremarkable demo version of the title track is followed by a couple remixes and two new cuts that generally aren’t up to the standard set on Storm of Light’s Bane. – Jason Anderson

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