Showing posts with label Infernal Execrator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Infernal Execrator. Show all posts

30 Sept 2024

Album review: Infernal Execrator - Obsolete Ordinance (2018)

Infernal Execrator - Obsolete Ordinance 

Singapore

Pulverised Records (CD/LP) / InCoffin Productions (Cassette)
 

Infernal Execrator is a band that lives up to its name, because their music is certainly infernal in the truest sense of the word. “Obsolete Ordinance” is their second album and the follow-up to 2014’s killer “Ad Infinitum Satanic Adherent.” It took the band four years to record a new album and they clearly did not disappoint, as the whole release is total war from start to finish. The band has kept the same style employed on the previous album, playing militant black metal with a dash of melody.
 
There is no other band that sounds like Infernal Execrator, as they have a style all their own, even though the influence of bands like Immortal, Marduk and Impiety can clearly be heard in their music. The riffing is wild, frenetic tremolo pickings, intensified by hard-hitting drumming that ranges from blazing blasts to muscular thrash beats, but mostly fast, as the drummer unleashes hell on the kit. Seriously, the drummer is fucking good and super capable. The eponymous opener “Infernal Execrator (True Blasphemous Conquest)" opens this record with furious intensity, while the follow-up track “Incinerate Halakhah Theorem” only adds insult to injury with a series of surgical riffs and machine-gun drumming. I swear the band has some of the coolest song titles. They really go out of their way to outdo every other band in terms of extremity, and I’m all for it, but I digress.
 
Many people would use adjectives like “brutal” and “extreme” when describing a band like Infernal Execrator, and while that's certainly true, there's definitely more to their arsenal than simply being heavy. The musicians in the band can play their instruments exceptionally well and it's obvious that the arrangements are well thought out, especially the way the riffs are played, which I have to say is one of the album’s high points. Every fiery riff and guitar part is spot on, backed by vicious shrieks reminiscent of Abbath from Immortal. The vocals are delivered with maximum ferocity on every track throughout the album. In addition, the guitar solos on this album will melt your face off with its power and brutal execution.
 
It’s amazing how the melody on this album offsets the brutality and yet the music never lets up in intensity. A good visual depiction of their sound is to imagine a grenade exploding in your face, followed by a scene of being mauled by a horde of demons as you enter hell. Infernal Execrator is a top-notch act from Singapore and this album solidifies their position as one of the best black metal bands from Southeast Asia. Stand-out tracks: “Incinerate Halakhah Theorem”, “Northern Superiority”, "Obsolete Ordinance" (Jim) 

18 Feb 2024

Album review: Infernal Execrator - Diabolatry (2023)


Infernal Execrator - Diabolatry 

Singapore

Pulverised Records
 

The black metal tyrants from Singapore Infernal Execrator are back with their third album “Diabolatry”, which was released on CD and vinyl by Pulverised Records in December 2023.

From start to finish, “Diabolatry” hits harder than a spiked ballista bullet fired at you from a trebuchet straight out of hell. Every track on this album is ruthlessly executed, precise and showcases the band's superb craftsmanship. I was definitely impressed by the level of ferocity and high-octane aggression that this album exhibits.

Frenzied tremolo riffs are executed with relentless precision while the band maintains the pace and intensity as each drum beat mercilessly pummels the listener to dust like a hellish hammer causing multiple broken bones. The music runs you over like a tank, while Ashir’s martial vocals are spat into the mic like a demonic entity denouncing everything that is holy.

Tracks like “Infernal Storm of Oblivion” show a more mid-paced side to their sound, introducing various dynamics and haunting melodies, while “Marauders Prayers of Profanation” opens with a terrifying scream and simply obliterates everything in its path with all-out viciousness. The riffs are both catchy and blistering, but ultimately very well crafted, which also happens to be one of the focal points of this album. The music strikes a seamless balance between brutality and melody, the way it was always meant to sound, while the album’s excellent production brings out the best of the performance.

After several listens, I can confirm with absolute certainty that “Diabolatry” is the heaviest and best album the band has released to date and another excellent addition to their epic discography. The whole record is packed with incendiary songs that once again show why countries like Singapore, in spite of its small size, are no underdogs when it comes to producing quality extreme metal. Highly recommended.