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HORNA - Nyx - Hymnejä Yölle CD

HORNA - Nyx - Hymnejä Yölle CD

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Horna need no introduction. Formed in 1994 when they were but teenagers, the band soon began creating a vast, prolific catalog – and, since the early 2000s, began asserting considerable influence over the black metal underground both in their native Finland and abroad. And while there are three distinct eras of Horna – the Nazgul-fronted version during the late ’90s to early 2000s, then the feverish Corvus-fronted years from 2003 to 2009, and finally, the Spellgoth-fronted lineup that began the 2010s and which has seen a few lineup shifts but has patiently parceled out recordings ever since – stellar songwriting and impassioned playing have always been their hallmarks. Their sound may’ve undergone subtle shifts of texture throughout those many years, but Horna‘s vision of unapologetic BLACK METAL has never faltered: proud and pure, familiar yet unique, and undeniably eerie and emotive.

Fitting for their 30th anniversary, Horna now unveil a new full-length that bridges past, present, and future: Nyx – Hymnejä Yölle. While the preceding Kuoleman Kirjo challenged with its sheer length – then again, so did 1999’s classic Haudankylmyyden Mailla, which retroactively wielded influence on that album and this next one – it nevertheless comprised 13 mostly-compact rippers emblematic of the Spellgoth era: nightsky melodicism conjured forth by founding guitarist Shatraug and longstanding six-string foil Infection, with the new rhythm section of drummer LRH and bassist VnoM creating blistering speed that was somehow swinging. That lineup carries forward to Nyx, and largely does that songwriting schematic. But whereas its predecessor touched upon a moodier aspect, on Nyx do Horna expand upon that in conjunction with longer tracks; six songs in 44 minutes should be easy math for most people. However, the album’s structure is unique in that the first five tracks are Roman numeral variations of “Hymni,” and thus fit a framework of crisp, mystical black metal both nostalgically ancient yet somehow surprisingly “modern.” Then comes “Kuoleva Lupaus,” which features former bassist (and currently Kryptamok mainman) Hex Inferi. Solemn and stripped back unlike anything else in their extremely deep discography, this nine-minute closer is essentially neofolk, but unmistakably done the Horna way. A haunting end to a majestic catharsis…

Of especial note is the production across Nyx: arguably the “cleanest” production Horna have yet had, it only heightens said mysticism and adds a palatable sheen to these raging wraiths of song – the latent emotion brought to a boil, the hypnotism pulling heartstrings in magickal collusion. It speaks to the strength of their songwriting, once again, which somehow manages to become ever more focused yet varied as time marches on. And although nods to the Nazgul era are noticeable – the Corvus era stands cold ‘n’ alone in its righteous, ragged filth – this synthesis of peak performance and professionalism with spectral songwriting becomes its own new “era,” in effect. Or, simply, it’s Horna. Their legendry continues to be written…

W.T.C. 2024

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