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Svartsot – Ravnenes Saga

Svartsot at myspace

Folk Metal is something you either love or hate. Apart the odd artist such as Agalloch or Hammers of Misfortune it’s usually exuberant, joyous and unashamedly cheesy. It’s an easy recipe to get hideously wrong, in a widdly keyboard smorgasbord and ye olde worlde theme park style charm offensive that certain acts end up just sounding smug and self-referentially ironic in one of those oh so ‘random’ ways that appeals to the same kids who thought the Lostprophets “megalulz” t shirt was the height of hilarity until their friend introduced them to metal hammer magazine last summer.

Svartsot, thank fuck are not one of those bands. There are no keyboards on the recording of ‘Ravnenes Saga’ their debut album, but instead an array of Flutes, Whistles and the Celtic percussion instrument the bodhran all played by at this point now ex member Stewart Lewis (who had to quit due to his wives ill health) which add to the air of authenticity that pervades this album. The guitar riffs have more of a folk influence than those of say Turisas or Korpikplaani, and the folk stylings of Svartsot’s home country of Denmark make a welcome change from the now textbook Finnish style. The cheese is kept at a welcome minimum with the searing death metal vocals and beautiful production job of Jacob Hansen who has worked with Yrkoon and Destruction in the past and is at this moment in time working with reunited Dutch Death Metal legends Pestilence, helping to create a non too serious but in no way at all goofy atmosphere.

With a lot of the similar bands in this genre, you feel they are trying too hard to create a party album, but ‘Ravnenes Saga’ is a rare all purpose folk metal album. You can party, headbang, or relax to this album and with not a comedy cover in sight to make one groan; this is certainly one of the finest folk metal releases of the past two years.

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