Saturday, 11 December 2010

Celtic Frost - Monotheist



CELTIC FROST has had one of the strangest and more controversial career arcs in recent metal history. Rising out of the ashes of Swiss act HELLHAMMER in 1984, FROST centered largely around singer and guitarist Tom Gabriel Fischer (a.k.a. Tom Warrior) and bassist Martin Eric Ain. Early releases such as "Morbid Tales" and "To Mega Therion" won the band instant acclaim on the underground scene. The group combined brutal, doom-laden and distorted death/thrash riffs and vocals with operatic singing, orchestral arrangements and electronic loops, creating a boldly experimental sound that was dubbed by some journalists as "avant-garde metal." The band's imagery and lyrics were equally compelling, exploring the occult, ancient history and arcane mysticism, and helped solidify the band's reputation as one of the underground's heaviest, most innovative and most intelligent outfits, not to mention one of its most influential.

Then came 1989 and "Cold Lake". Jettisoning nearly everything that was integral to the FROST style, including the rest of the band (which at the time included Ain, drummer Reed St. Mark and touring guitarist Ron Marks) and nearly every identifiable aspect of the group's sound, Fischer recruited three new musicians who looked like rejects from a TUFF or PRETTY BOY FLOYD audition and set about remaking CELTIC FROST as, for all intents and purposes, a hair band. "Cold Lake" was a mediocre hard rock album, stripped of the musical heaviness and epic sweep of earlier FROST efforts, while the lyrical concerns degenerated from the likes of "Babylon Fell" (from 1987's "Into The Pandemonium") to "Tease Me".

Ain came back a year later for the heavier and somewhat underrated "Vanity/Nemesis", which in retrospect might have done better had it followed "Pandemonium" instead of "Cold Lake". But the damage was done and FROST disbanded the following year. Fischer spent the rest of the Nineties working on a variety of projects, most notably the band APOLLYON SUN and a written memoir, "Are You Morbid?" (2000). By the turn of the century, however, rumors about a FROST reunion had begun to pick up steam and finally became official around 2001, with Ain coming back into the fold and the duo beginning work on the first new FROST album in 16 years.

That album is "Monotheist", and the question regarding every comeback by a long-dormant group is always whether they can recapture the sound, vibe and chemistry that make them successful the first time around. The answer here is yes: Fischer and Ain (along with new drummer Franco Sesa) have labored long and hard to create an album that ranks with their best work in terms of sheer heaviness and atmosphere, while employing some dramatic new musical ventures that honor the experimental side of the band. If the group's songs are less concise and perhaps not as catchy as earlier work, they're still propelled by sheer musical muscle and an epic, ambitious scope.

"Progeny" and "Ground" open the album and are instantly identifiable through Fischer's distorted, tuned-down guitar and the band's overall crushing sound and powerhouse rhythms. "A Dying God Coming Into Human Flesh" is one of the group's darkest and slowest songs, opening in TOOL-like fashion with a solitary, haunted guitar and a subdued vocal from Fischer that soon explodes into a churning, doom-infested crawl reminiscent of NEUROSIS. Fischer continues exploring new vocal ideas on "Drown In Ashes", channeling SISTERS OF MERCY while playing off a haunting female singer. The frontman's vocal range on this album works far better than the "crooning" affected on parts of "Into The Pandemonium" and "Cold Lake", while his original death metal style has held up surprisingly well (there are a few "death grunts" thrown in as well).

Perhaps the most successful aspect of "Monotheist" is that the band has become much better at merging its disparate musical influences into a complete sound, rather than dividing the album — and sometimes fans — between the group's heavier material and its more esoteric. While "Into The Pandemonium" stands as one of FROST's best albums, going from the hardcore thrash of "Inner Sanctum" to the goth-influenced ballad "Mesmerized" still made for jarring listening. On "Monotheist", elements of everything from BLACK SABBATH to DAVID BOWIE to BAUHAUS to SWANS are present throughout each song, but woven into the overall material instead of standing starkly apart. Two of the album's strongest tracks in this regard are "Os Abysmi Vel Daath" and "Obscured".

That being said, however, this is still a monstrously heavy and oppressive slab of metal that instantly recalls what made this band so unique. If anything, CELTIC FROST has gone into even heavier, blacker territory on "Monotheist", with the album's 11 cuts painting a chilling portrait of decay and ruin on a cosmic scale. The closing triptych of "Totengott", the 14-minute "Synagoga Satanae" and the eerie closing requiem of "Winter" are alone indicators of just how far heavy music can stretch its musical boundaries. Fischer and Ain have restored much of their band's former glory with "Monotheist", producing an epic work that picks up where they left off in the mid-Eighties and brings it boldly and agelessly into the 21st century.

MASTODON - "Seabeast"

Mastodon "Colony Of Birchmen"

Mastodon - Cracke the Skye - The Best Album of 2009

Any album that comes with its own built-in hype machine or slapped with the "next-big-thing" tag before proving its worth to the public should be met with a certain amount of caution and even skepticism. That goes doubly for metal bands that break through the underground and find themselves a part of the major label machine. MASTODON is going to go wherever they want to go and that's exactly what they've done with "Crack The Skye".
 


Musically, conceptually and visually speaking, this is among the best that 2009 has yet to offer. Far be it from anyone to accuse the LSD-addled minds that crafted this record to take a calculated and logical step forward from their last opus, "Blood Mountain"; yet that is exactly what "Crack The Skye" is in many ways. Instantly identifiable as MASTODON, the steps the band has taken to avoid self-plagiarism are also just as evident. On one hand, the music on this disc is a much more progressive and boundary pushing affair, but it's also a much more accessible one at the same time. Almost as if, through penning the tale of a paraplegic young man that discovered how to astral project himself through time and space, the quartet managed to find that small slice of a parallel universe where different truly does equate to good. Aside from the organically honest "classic rock" vibe that breathes from the tunes and the stepping stones that were previous MASTODON albums, there's really nothing outside of individual moments and nuances that this album can be compared to.

Best taken in as a whole, "Crack The Skye" is a fluid journey through varying degrees of beauty and repulsion, confusion and serenity and many other of life's many paradoxes that can metaphorically translated via a musician's tools. Approached individually, these tunes are still solid listens. From the exotic wandering that jumps sporadically into twisted and hurried grooves, hypnotic choruses and soulful solos on "Oblivion" to the snarling, proggish slam of "Divinations" and dueling elements of catchy and trippy that "Quintessence" delivers; the opening trio of songs could all stand proudly on their own merits. The album's first of two epics, "The Czar: (I)Usurper (II)Escape (III) Martyr (IV) Spiral" is a prime example of focused psychedelica. Captivating vocals drawl out over the top of intertwining melodies and ambience. As the songs goes through its four phases, the intensity of both the mood and music increases before reaching an hauntingly infectious plateau. An album highlight comes during the Jimmy Page-esque solo during this song's final moments. A culmination of everything MASTODON is and has been, the thirteen-minute, "The Last Baron" is by far the band's most awe-inspiring combination of eeriness, melody, prog-minded musicianship and riff innovation.

Typically, albums of this nature take the risk of coming off as too pretentious, or just completely go over the heads of most of its listeners.  Fortunately, with MASTODON's song-oriented approach to writing these tunes, coupled with the bulldozer they drove through the walls of expectation, nothing but a tuned-in set of ears is needed to feel the effects of "Crack The Skye". The hype has been lived up to.

Friday, 10 December 2010

Ghost - Opus Eponymus’

The interest in occult heavy rock heavily influenced by the 70’s keeps on growing and successful bands like The Devil’s Blood and Jex Thoth are followed by other bands. Both musicians as well as labels see possibilities to cash in on this hype. Notwithstanding the fact Swedish 6-man formation Ghost try to hide their identity it kind of is out of the bag that this band was formed by guys related to bands like Watain and Repugnant triggered by the success and the music of The Devil’s Blood. After one demo German label iron Pegasus released a 7” EP after which Rise Above Records, one of the leading labels in this genre, quickly responded by signing Ghost. The result, a full-length on CD as well as various coloured vinyl LP’s.



The musical roots of Ghost can be found in (progressive) 70’s heavy rock but they also clearly are influenced by Mercyful Fate’s early work, although they are not as heavy as this Danish band. The recordings sound really good and for the current generation of fans of this genre this is a very good album. Those who look a bit further into Ghost will see a big contingent of opponents to this band, something that happened to the Devil’s Blood too. One of the reproaches towards Ghost is that they blatantly steal too easily. The cover artwork come straight from the movie poster of Salem’s Lot and musically the riff in the song ‘Ritual’ is similar to the opening riff in the Megadeth song ‘Symphony Of Destruction’, but played slower. The song ‘Death Knell’ apparently has a lot of similarities to the song ‘Solution’ from the band Icecross from 1973.

It’s not my duty to blame the band, I just name a few things that came to light, and I think that most music fans couldn’t care less. When you see ‘Opus Eponymus’ as a product on itself you can’t by-pass the quality, that’s a fact. As a matter of taste you can denounce this as garbage, but to fans of the aforementioned bands The Devil’s Blood, Jex Thoth, Witchcraft and so on this album is compulsory.

Triptykon - Eparistera Daimones

Sickened, haughty, lurching, three weeks long and drenched in pretentious, glowering atmosphere, TRIPTYKON picks up right where CELTIC FROST's brilliant "Monotheist" left off. It's at once highbrow and lo-fi, art and brutality, and it places Tom Gabriel Fischer's "new" band immediately in the vanguard of the death and black metal genres he helped birth, while sidestepping nearly all of their restrictions.



From the outset, the time-stretching doom drone of "Goetia"'s intro sets an imperious, dread-soaked tone for the proceedings to come. The main riff before the verse is simplicity itself, but its uneasy tempo and minor-chord scrape make it a thing of dark, minimalist beauty. Not that TRIPTYKON don't dish out punishment as well, in jagged, primitive slashes, Fischer sounding barbaric and vicious as he barks over the crushing riffs of the verse and chorus. And none of that resembles the creepy monotone madrigal robot chant at the end of the song, around the ten-minute mark. In short, one TRIPTYKON song is a lesser band's concept album, a treasure trove of dynamics and plot twists buried under a sodden, oppressive blanket of dank, foggy atmosphere and morbidity.

If anything, you'd almost expect more "Into the Pandemonium" style oddities and flights of fancy from TRIPTYKON. Though "Myopic Empire" takes an abrupt left turn into a spooky piano-and-whisper interlude, and "My Pain" could fit on a PORTISHEAD album, there is a prevailing mood on "Eparistera Daimones", and that mood is bleak, feral, diseased, and queasy. While the songs churn and buckle like tectonic plates even in their most droning and ambient skeletal basics, one gets the sense that any experimentation for its own sake was scraped off these tracks early on, dismissed as counterproductive to that dark vibe. These songs are raw like scraped flesh, auditory wounds that throb with feeling and glower with an ugly, spiteful energy.

Fischer is one of the few people in the music world able to back up his truckloads of self-important pronouncements and defiant attitude with worthy, capital-A Art. TRIPTYKON's charred post-everything metal may find kindred spirits under a hundred different rocks, from NACHMYSTIUM to SATYRICON to 1349, but in renewing their own grim muse they've tapped directly into the spirit that made prime CELTIC FROST so important to all those bands' founders in the first place. A masterpiece of sleepless, timeless, crawling primal doom, not so much better than their peers as above them, in a place they'll likely never tread.

Tuesday, 7 December 2010

Amon Düül II - History

One of the first active Krautrock units, Amon Düül grew out of a commune in Munich that mixed radical political criticism with a unique vision of free-form improvisation tied to American psychedelic rock. Such open-ended and non-musical origins made the later activity of the group quite confusing, as a quartet of (slightly) more musically inclined members branched out in 1969 as Amon Düül II. Meanwhile, the original Amon Düül continued releasing albums, most of which had actually been recorded during a single jam session by the entire conglomeration in 1969. Though Amon Düül ceased recording material by 1972, frequent reissues during the decade -- and the resumption of the Amon Düül name by several Amon Düül II alumni in the 1980s -- resulted in still more confusion. Listeners unfamiliar with the lineup of every Amon Düül-related release can content themselves with the fact that the main line of the group began with Amon Düül in the late '60s and moved to Amon Düül II for the 1970s recordings. When originally founded in 1968 however, the group was more of an alternative-living commune project than actual recording artists. Wishing to bring their vision of hippie living to a worldwide audience, the collective named themselves Amon Düül (Amon being an Egyptian sun god, Düül a character from Turkish fiction) and recorded hours of material during what is reportedly one mammoth recording session from early 1969. Even before the release of the self-titled Amon Düül debut that year, several members -- led by vocalist Renate Knaup-Kroaetenschwanz (aka Renate Knaup), guitarist Chris Karrer, bassist John (Johannes) Weinzierl, drummer Peter Leopold and organist Falk U. Rogner -- had broken away from the original group to form Amon Düül II. That group released its own debut album Phallus Dei in 1969. While three additional albums credited to Amon Düül appeared in 1970 and 1971 (Collapsing/Singvögel Rückwärts & Co., Paradieswärts Düül and Disaster), they were actually comprised of additional recordings from 1969 sessions.

Sunday, 5 December 2010

Eye-Shaking King - Amon Düül II

Krautrock

Krautrock

Krautrock (also called "Kosmische musik") is a German avant-garde / experimental rock movement that emerged at the end of the 1960's. It was intended to go beyond the eccentricities developed by the wild psychedelic rock universe of the US, by giving a special emphasis to electronic treatments, sound manipulation and minimal hypnotic motifs (continuing the style of "musique concrete" and minimalist repetitive music but within a more accessible environment).

Krautrock put the emphasis on extended and ecstatic instrumental epics, neglecting the format of conventional psych-pop songs. The term Krautrock was first used by the British music press in a very derogatory way. The term rapidly found a better reputation in underground music circles and finally gained a certain popularity (thanks to the Brain-Festival Essen...)

The Krautrock movement is widely associated with notorious bands such as Popol Vuh, Amon Duul, Faust, Neu!, Ash Ra Tempel, Agitation Free, Guru Guru, etc. With their own particular artistic expression, these musical collectives provided rocking psychedelic incantations, mantra like drones, melancholic lugubrious atmospheres, long and convoluted collective improvisations, binary repetitive drum pulses, fuzz guitars, feedback, primitive electronic noises, hallucinatory ballads, and garage blues rock trips. Krautrock can be described as an anarchic, intense, acid, tellurian, nocturnal, spacey, dark and oniric "adventure" through rock music.

The most consistent years of the Krautrock scene cover a relatively short period from 1970 to 1975. After their first spontaneous, hyperactive and psychedelic efforts, the bands generally split up or declined into other musical sensibilities, more in line with mainstream rock or with ambient soundscapes.

Each region develops its particular musical scene, interpreting differently the Krautrock musical structure. For instance the Berlin school focused on "astral" synthscapes, weird electronic experimentation and acid jams (Ash Ra Tempel, Agitation Free, Mythos, The Cosmic Jokers, Kluster...), The Munich scene offered fuzzed out (Eastern) psych rock mantras with some folk accents (Popol Vuh, Amon Duul, Gila, Guru Guru, Witthuser & Westrupp...). Cologne and Dusseldorf underground scenes focused on happenings, political rock, electronics, pulsating rhythms and clean sounding Krautrock (Floh de Cologne, La Dusseldorf, Neu! Can...).

This musical cartography is correct in the absolute but naturally reveals some variations and exceptions. This intriguing and freak 'n' roll 1970's German scene enjoyed a rebirth in recent years thanks to a large number of reissues (of long lost classics) published by several independent labels (Spalax, Garden of Delights, Long Hair Music...) as a direct result of Krautrock's musical inspiration of modern post rock bands. There are actually some neo psychedelic rock bands who try to hold up Krautrock, and who notably find a major place to express themselves during the historical Burg Herzberg Festival in Germany.

Saturday, 20 November 2010

The Who - Who's Next. Released 31 July 1971

The Who’s fifth album is one of those carved-in-stone landmarks that the rock canon doesn’t allow you to bad-mouth. It was pretty radical for its day. It still sounds fantastic and fresh today. There’s not much that isn’t thrilling about Won’t Get Fooled Again and Baba O’Riley, which howl and kick like they were born yesterday.
Like many near-masterpieces, it wasn’t meant to turn out like it did. Pete Townshend had one of his ‘futuristic rock opera’ ideas, and recordings began on a work called Lifehouse. It wouldn’t gel, so The Who made the most of the random songs that did. Upon release in 1971 it blew away critics and fans alike, bar a few Who diehards who thought larking around with things called synthesizers and modified keyboards was, like, selling out.  Glyn Johns had replaced Kit Lambert as producer. Still, the sleeve wasn’t exactly bland, picturing the foursome pissing on a slagheap. (Other contenders for the cover had included a group of obese naked women and a shot of Keith Moon in black lingerie).
Baba O’Riley makes a spectacular opener, its hypnotic drone disrupted by power chords that are parachuted in off the backs of meteorites. Dave Arbus’ subtle then frantic viola solo raises it another gear. There has rarely been a more durably evocative refrain than “teenage wasteland”. As ever, Daltrey’s ragged voice brings humanity to Townshend’s over-thinking. Moon is typically hyperactive: any drummer playing like this today would be ordered to rein it in. Bargain floats on the tension between acoustic guitar and the brave new synth. Like most of the album, it’s melodramatic without – as with later Who – fattening into pomposity. The Song is Over oozes poignancy and Getting in Tune and Going Mobile are simply great songs. Behind Blue Eyes is a soul-searching ballad which bursts into belligerence, reflective then urgent.
The climactic (and how) Won’t Get Fooled Again stretches itself and chews its restraints until it becomes much more than a riff and a scream. It’s on fire. In “meet the new boss, same as the old boss” it nailed the bleeding heart of protest-pop. Who’s Next is The Who’s best.

Saturday, 6 November 2010

Never Say Die! 1978

Black Sabbath – Never Say Die!


Autumn and Winter for me is the season of Butler, Iommi, Osbourne and Ward.  Their music symbolises the atmosphere of a changing season and the drawing of darker evenings. A lot has probably to do with the ‘Black Sabbath’ debut cover showing a grainy Autumnal scene.  However I have been listening to the lesser of the eight Ozzy fronted studio albums of late whilst walking through darkened woods and forgotten paths and thus have reappraised them.  Of course when I talk about the lesser albums I refer to 1978s ‘Never Say Die!’ and 1976s ‘Technical Ecstasy’.  To my mind ‘Sabotage’ and ‘Sabbath Bloody Sabbath’ are two of the greatest albums of all time with the first four not far behind.

Well ‘Never Say Die’ is a fantastic album.  The title track was the last song that I ritually listened to when I was about to head out to the disco (of all places) at the weekends (for courting females of course) when I was 16 - 19 years old.  It’s pumped up testosterone driven mania filled one with the confidence to take on the world back in 1986 – 89, and remember this was the ‘Thrash’ years, so there was plenty of testosterone driven mania to be found in my album collection during that period.

What makes this album so special on reappraisal is its diversity.  I love diversity in music and this has it all.

On a track by track basis my views are as follows:

Side One (As of the original Vinyl)

Never Say Die – Classic, simple catchy powerful song.  This hits the right spot.  It’s what Rock ‘n Roll is all about.  There is a confidence and aggression to this song.

Johnny Blade – Keyboards at the start followed by a driving drum pattern and another speedy riff.  It’s the drums on this track that make it.  In fact I love the drum sound on this album.  They are really to the foreground, but again different rhythms in each song.  The diversity factor again.  Ozzys’ vocals to me are urgent and unusual.

Junior’s Eyes – One of the more unusual tracks.  Drums fade in along with Geezer’s swinging Bass.  This track has a Jazz feel with Iommi’s wah wah sounding guitar.  The chorus (if it can be called a typical chorus), is heavy and powerful.  Iommi has a lot of interesting guitar overdubs on this track which adds to the atmosphere.  It’s what I love about Sabbath, the creation of atmosphere.

Hard Road – Iommi riff, overdubbed vocals.  This has to be the most upbeat and optimistic sounding songs on the album.  Not in the pop sense.  Slightly  ‘Quo’ overdubbed like vocal sound.  However this is not a pop song.  If you are feeling down listen to this.


Side Two – if side one did not cheer you up well?


Shock Wave – The shape of things to come.  This reminds me of the style applied to some of the tracks of ‘Heaven and Hell’.  One of the weaker tracks.  A simple riff, melody and vocal.  However gets interesting towards the end with a slightly left turn doomy riff with plenty of band participation ‘ohohohoing’.


Air Dance – The albums real curveball.  I love it.  A Sabbathian progressive rock song.  Starts with a driven melody followed by again jazz rhythms and piano.  Iommi captures some real atmospheric guitar and delicate solos.  The vocals and lyrics reflective and emotional.  To my ears an unappreciated classic.  Towards the end it heads for undisputed elements of jazz in every sense.

Over To You – Again similar to
Hard Road
in that it has an optimistic feel to it.  The chorus includes some elaborate piano.  Fantastic melody and vocal from Ozzy.  Similar feel to ‘Sabbath Bloody Sabbath’s’ ‘Looking for Today’.  This song again drips with emotion and atmosphere.  This however is no light weight song.

Breakout – An instrumental – Has a swing feel to it.  Warning contains brass instruments and some jazz saxophone.  Another curveball – Doom laden jazz?

Swinging the Chain – A doomy riff by Iommi within a very low mix.  Another odd sounding track with Ward singing?  Again one of the weaker tracks.

The conclusion is that this album, as diverse as it is, is a better attempt than ‘Technical Ecstasy’. It has an upfront sound, clear guitar and drum mix, however given the context of the band situation at this time; it is an interesting, diverse, atmospheric and challenging piece of music.  One interesting fact is that the cover for ‘Rainbow’s’ ‘Difficult to Cure’ album was meant to be for this album.


Listen without Prejudice, with headphones, whilst walking at dusk in a lonely Autumnal forest.

Friday, 5 November 2010

The Triumph of Death

The Triumph of Death is an oil painting on panel, painted c. 1562 by Pieter Bruegel the Elder. It is in the Museo del Prado in Madrid.
The painting is a panoramic landscape of death: the sky in the distance is blackened by smoke from burning cities and the sea is littered with shipwrecks. Armies of skeletons advance on the hapless living, who either flee in terror or try vainly to fight back. Skeletons kill people in a variety of ways – slitting throats, hanging, drowning, and even hunting with skeletal dogs. In the foreground, skeletons haul a wagon full of skulls, and ring the bell that signifies the death knell of the world. A fool plays the lute while a skeleton behind him plays along; a starving dog nibbles at the face of a child; a cross sits lonely and impotent in the center of the painting. People are herded into a trap decorated with crosses, while a skeleton on horseback slaughters people with a scythe. The painting depicts people of different social backgrounds – from peasants and soldiers to nobles and even a king and a cardinal – being taken by death indiscriminately.
The painting shows aspects of everyday European life in the mid-sixteenth century. Clothes are clearly depicted, as are pastimes such as playing cards. It shows objects such as musical instruments, an early mechanical clock, scenes including a funeral service, and a common method of execution for sixteenth-century criminals: being lashed to a cartwheel mounted on a vertical pole.

Wednesday, 3 November 2010

Darkness, Rain, River and Forest

I have just returned from a one and a half hour long walk in the rain, in solitude, in the dark, along one of my most contented places.  Minnowburn and the Lagan.  It may seem strange to wander along a rain soaked path, alongside a river on a mild winter's night, however for me it clears my head, refreshes me in the sense that the days worries are subjected to the back of one's mind.  It alerts the senses from sight (adjusting to the dark), smell (the aromas of the last embers of Autumn life decaying), touch (rain applying itself upon my face revitalising skin), sound (music, the river and the percussion of rain).  All this subjects me to my well being.  It is something that I recommend, however not on my route. 

Sunday, 31 October 2010

Celtic Frost - A Dying God Coming Into Human Flesh


Celtic Frost captured their innovative and dark art in a video clip for "A Dying God Coming Into Human Flesh", a song taken from their first album in 13 years, "Monotheist". The fascinatingly gloomy clip was filmed by up-and-coming Swiss director Jessie Fischer in Zurich, Switzerland, in mid-August 2006:


Read more: http://www.myspace.com/celticfrost#ixzz13yNEcxeK

Saturday, 30 October 2010

TRIPTYKON - Shatter (OFFICIAL VIDEO)



Triptykon, the highly acclaimed extreme metal group formed by former Hellhammer/Celtic Frost singer/guitarist Tom Gabriel Warrior, have captured the visual side of their deeply dark and mesmerizing art in the group's first video clip, "Shatter", to accompany the title track of Triptykon's new 5-track EP (released on October 25, 2010, through Prowling Death Records/Century Media Records).

Based on a concept devised by Warrior and directed and filmed by Philipp Hirsch of
Film-M in Leipzig, Germany, in late September 2010, the video clip combines the imagery of occult metal with the somber aesthetics of 1920s-era silent movies.

And thus begins my winter of discontent.

Welcome to The Black North.  Created on the eve of 'All Hallow's Eve' or 'Samhain'.  This truely will be the beginning of this season's Winter of Discontent.