Disharmonium: Nahab is
Blut Aus Nord's third consecutive musical meditation on the works of
H.P. Lovecraft. The first was May 2022's long-player
Disharmonium: Undreamable Abysses. They followed in September with the five-track
Lovecraftian Echoes EP in a subscriber-only edition from
Order of Outer Sounds, but it's now widely available digitally. The second word in the title of
Disharmonium: Nahab is Arabic (Ù?ØØ¨), a verb that means, alternately, "love" and "wail," or "lament."
For decades,
BAN leader, composer and producer
Vindsval -- who wrote, produced and mixed this set -- has felt little connection to 21st century black metal. Though this is instantly recognizable as the same band that recorded
The Work Which Transforms God, the
Memoria Vetusta and
777 trilogies,
Disharmonium: Nahab moves further afield. Their vanguard meld of dense atmospherics, blackened and ambient soundscapes, spiky buzzing guitars, and almost indecipherable lyrics rife with esoteric spirituality and philosophy remain constant, but are appended and expanded by startling, sometimes unsettling proggish melodies, jagged keyboard grooves, and a filthy maximal mix.
Opener "Hideous Dream Opus #1" is full of otherworldly ambience and tension akin to dread. It's an intro/interlude with subsequent parts that introduce longer tracks. It gives way to "Mental Paralysis" with thick, circular, chant-like guitar vamps in contrasting modes above heavily reverbed, indecipherable growling vocals that sound bestial at times. Advance track "The Endless Multitude" offers a dialogue between warring guitar vamps in alternating tonalities with minimal, shard-like leads. The drumming clatters, pops, and drives the repetitive phrasing, but is so syncopated it feels wonderfully chaotic. "Queen of the Dead Dimension" is a highlight. Its urgency is governed by a droning, dirty bassline and stacked guitars playing chromatics in fingerpicked vamps, with a snare and tom-tom cadence that underscores then increases the tension and intensity. "Nameless Rites" delivers psychedelicized black metal (influenced no doubt by 2019's
Hallucinogen), but wonky. The production sounds like the early
Killing Joke of
What's This For? jamming with
Sonic Youth's
Lee Ranaldo and
Earth's
Dylan Carlson. After two minutes of clanging guitar feedback, razor-wire riffs, grinding jagged bass, and keyboard vamps, the drum kit establishes dominance and brings an uneasy balance to the chaotic force -- tempering the incessant attack -- while lonely lead guitar lines accompany with uncharacteristic gentleness. In closer "The Ultimate Void of Chaos," blastbeat snares create dynamic momentum atop warring atonal guitars before a layered, meandering lead line, growling vocals, boatloads of reverb, and near-gothic ambience gel with power and taste.
Fans expect consistency from
BAN and
Disharmonium: Nahab doesn't disappoint. Its progression from beginning to end sounds not only logical, but profound. Stronger than either of its predecessors, it is arguably more artistically successful than any release since 2014's
Memoria Vetusta III: Saturnian Poetry. This is easily a candidate for best of 2023. ~ Thom Jurek