In the darkest part of the evening, I buried the laughter far from where anyone could see. Tears roll down like so many shards of broken glass, overcome with an eerie nostalgia that forever torments my serenity. When I see the haunted place I used to greet you, it’s now in my mind that I hear the door open but it never closes. I’ve silenced the laughter. When I remember the last smile you contrived, I wonder if you could tell what was going to happen thereafter one more skeleton to bury in this closet, a mass grave. In the darkest part of the evening, the laughter arose from the earth and devoured me alive and yet I am still smiling.
supported by 28 fans who also own “Do You Want To See The Knife I Used?”
The album description mentions an “emotional apex.” That’s really the difference between Stare and the band’s previous albums. Ulcerate was always supremely technically proficient. I just didn’t care all that much. Their growth has come from making music you will feel. Metallurgical Fire
supported by 26 fans who also own “Do You Want To See The Knife I Used?”
never been a big death metal fan but this is actually super accessible for the genre, has fun concepts, and personally i'm always a fan of albums with short tracklists and huge runtimes (for individual songs) Great time, good jumping on point for newbies too. alienasu
A foreboding black-doom metal dirge, meditating on a dark world caked in ash, resulting from all the Earth’s nuclear arsenal detonating at once. Bandcamp Album of the Day Jun 14, 2018