Necronomicon (CANADA)

Death Metal , Melodic Death Metal
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Horex
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Necronomicon (CANADA)

Postby Horex » 14 Apr 2026, 09:16

Necronomicon - Rise Of The Elder Ones (2013)

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Year : 2013
Style : Death Metal
Country : Canada
Audio : 320 kbps + all scans
Size : 114 mb


Bio:

Rising from the 90’s “The Canadian Occult Legend (BWBK)” have sailed against all storms and wars to conquer all countries they landed under heaven and earth. It is not without difficulties that the pioneers of the dark genre have kept the machine alive, but nevertheless, their faith and strong belief in the band’s message has succeeded to overcome the worst and beyond. Since the beginning of the new millennium, the cult of the Book of the Dead keeps spreading around the world, taking the fans by surprise like a disease. Renowned for its live presence and intensity, the Occultist trinity aims for nothing less than reaching every area of the living world, doing what they do best - rocking the stage.The “Pharaoh of Gods” album became a classic a few years after its release. Now considered to be too advanced for is time, mixing brutal dark metal with almost “new age” ambiances. As for “Return of the Witch”, which became the first worldwide release, bringing the band to tour the Old continent for the first time.Previous releases are not to be forgotten, starting with the “Morbid Ritual” demo, which was nationally acclaimed. “The Silver Key” EP gained attention from labels in the US and overseas, especially with the title track song. Last but not least, the extremely tribal “The Sacred Medicines”: an American Native concept featuring “Red Bull” singers from Western Canada’s Cree Nation on the title track.Necronomicon originally comes from the deep northern part of the Canadian province of Quebec, called the “Fjord of Saguenay”. The band later relocated in the city on Montreal, now well known for the quality of is metal scene, to ensure a more prosperous future for the band… Something that would’ve been impossible in their remote Nordic home region.Since the beginning, the band always blended in mixing ambiances with extreme metal, along with atmospheric passages using narration and angelic female voices, exotic instruments and various orchestrations. Although every album has its own theme, it is also part of the grand concept of the band itself.Their hard work and renowned growth brought them to share the stage and tour with several well established bands such as Cradle of Filth, Dimmu Borgir, Behemoth, Morbid Angel, to name a few, as well as invitations to well renowned festivals such as Inferno (Norway), Heavy MTL (Canada), Ragnarok (Germany), the Barge to Hell metal cruise and more.Stopping at nothing, the Eternal trio led by the Dark One, Rob “The Witch”, is now working with the well-established record label “Season of Mist”. This is the call upon the opening of the gateway for their new offspring… “Rise of The Elder Ones”: The darkest; meanest album created for one purpose only –conquer everything from darkness onto the light.

Album:

Twenty-five years is a long time for a band, especially that of such an underground and extreme nature, to exist. To persevere through decades of an ever-changing landscape of trends, technologies and aging fan base, it is a feat to be unmatched by few. However, some bands have managed to reign impressively and as fiercely as the day they were born. Such is the case for Canadian death metallers Necronomicon. Since 1988, they have created masterful works that delve deep into the underworlds of death and occultism with their most-recent being, 2013's Rise Of The Elder Ones.It's been three years since Necronomicon's last album, The Return Of The Witch, and not much has changed as far as the band's approach in its crafting of Rise Of The Elder Ones. While the latter remains the superior of the two in terms of production quality, the songs boast similar songwriting styles and sound. The two albums as a whole could be seen as two evil twins, or as chapters written in the same unholy book. Nevertheless, each are spectacular records worthy of any fan's collection. Rise Of The Elder Ones finds Necronomicon unequivocally in top form and amazingly peaking some twenty-five years after inception.Necronomicon has perfected a niche for themselves, creating a sound that is a crossbreed of Morbid Angel meets a less symphonically-saturated Fleshgod Apocalypse. Sonically, Rise Of The Elder Ones is to a lesser degree brutally crushing than it is fierce in its attack. The album is riddled with absolutely superb riffs among a multitude of tempos and song structures. There is a harmonious balance throughout of death metal mixed with blackened elements and symphonic highlights. Upon the record's first track, "Resurrected", Necronomicon greets the listener, hypnotically ensuring a prolonged listen to the rest of the album. Other album highlights include: "The Living God (Pharaoh Of Gods Part II)", " From Beyond" and, "The Valley Of Lost Souls". Each song on Rise Of The Elder Ones is uniquely crafted with "The Nuclear Chaos" and "Celestial Being" being two instrumental interludes, which add a nice balance and atmosphere to the work as a whole.Rise Of The Elder Ones is a full-bodied work and perhaps Necronomicon's best to date. Throughout its history, the band has maintained an authenticity that is unwavering and at this point is ingrained deep within its very soul. With their newest creation, the band puts forth, in an impressive display, the accumulation of twenty-five years of experience in a sound that is uniquely their own while still remaining a pace one step ahead of themselves and their contemporaries. Rise Of The Elder Ones is an essential work by an exceptional band, and any collection is incomplete without it.

Line Up:

Rob "The Witch" Tremblay - Vocals, Guitars
Armaros - Bass (2011-present) - See also: ex-Hollow
Rick - Drums - See also: ex-Water Depth

Tracklist:

01. Resurrected 04:26
02. The End of Times 04:23
03. The Living God (Pharaoh of Gods Part II) 04:49
04. The Nuclear Chaos 02:01 instrumental
05. From Beyond 04:26
06. Rise of the Elder Ones 03:46
07. The Valley of the Lost Souls 04:16
08. Celestial Being 03:51 instrumental
09. Dark Corners of the Earth 05:15
10. The Fallen 06:09


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Download links for all albums only on our blog here: http://goodmetalandhar.do.am/

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Download links for all albums only on our blog here: http://goodmetalandhar.do.am/
User avatar
Horex
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Posts: 34643
Joined: 21 Feb 2013, 19:14
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Re: Necronomicon (CANADA)

Postby Horex » 14 Apr 2026, 09:17

Necronomicon - Advent Of The Human God (2016)

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Year : 2016
Style : Black Metal , Death Metal
Country : Canada
Audio : 320 kbps + front + Video
Size : 180 mb


Bio:

Rising from the 90’s “The Canadian Occult Legend (BWBK)” have sailed against all storms and wars to conquer all countries they landed under heaven and earth. It is not without difficulties that the pioneers of the dark genre have kept the machine alive, but nevertheless, their faith and strong belief in the band’s message has succeeded to overcome the worst and beyond. Since the beginning of the new millennium, the cult of the Book of the Dead keeps spreading around the world, taking the fans by surprise like a disease. Renowned for its live presence and intensity, the Occultist trinity aims for nothing less than reaching every area of the living world, doing what they do best - rocking the stage.The “Pharaoh of Gods” album became a classic a few years after its release. Now considered to be too advanced for is time, mixing brutal dark metal with almost “new age” ambiances. As for “Return of the Witch”, which became the first worldwide release, bringing the band to tour the Old continent for the first time.Previous releases are not to be forgotten, starting with the “Morbid Ritual” demo, which was nationally acclaimed. “The Silver Key” EP gained attention from labels in the US and overseas, especially with the title track song. Last but not least, the extremely tribal “The Sacred Medicines”: an American Native concept featuring “Red Bull” singers from Western Canada’s Cree Nation on the title track.Necronomicon originally comes from the deep northern part of the Canadian province of Quebec, called the “Fjord of Saguenay”. The band later relocated in the city on Montreal, now well known for the quality of is metal scene, to ensure a more prosperous future for the band… Something that would’ve been impossible in their remote Nordic home region.Since the beginning, the band always blended in mixing ambiances with extreme metal, along with atmospheric passages using narration and angelic female voices, exotic instruments and various orchestrations. Although every album has its own theme, it is also part of the grand concept of the band itself.Their hard work and renowned growth brought them to share the stage and tour with several well established bands such as Cradle of Filth, Dimmu Borgir, Behemoth, Morbid Angel, to name a few, as well as invitations to well renowned festivals such as Inferno (Norway), Heavy MTL (Canada), Ragnarok (Germany), the Barge to Hell metal cruise and more.Stopping at nothing, the Eternal trio led by the Dark One, Rob “The Witch”, is now working with the well-established record label “Season of Mist”. This is the call upon the opening of the gateway for their new offspring… “Rise of The Elder Ones”: The darkest; meanest album created for one purpose only –conquer everything from darkness onto the light.

Album:

Despite being dubbed the “Chameleon of Rock” for his ever-changing style, the late David Bowie didn’t agree with this title. “For me a chameleon is something that disguises itself to look as much like its environment as possible,” he once said. “I always thought I did the exact opposite of that.” But fret not, you fanatical herpetophiliacs out there, Canadian blackened-death trio Necronomicon is proof positive that musical chameleons do, in fact, exist.Formed in Quebec in 1988, I first discovered Necronomicon in 2009 with their music video for “The Time Is Now” from third album The Return of the Witch. To say it was inspired by Behemoth is like saying the last Ketzer album had a slight Tribulation influence. The music and visuals were a dollar-store version of The Apostasy, and I quickly wrote them off without exploring further. Fifth album The Advent of the Human God shows Necro changing their colors to adapt to the modern symphonic environment inhabited by bands like Fleshgod Apocalypse, Septicflesh, and Carach Angren. Is it once again a plastic mockery of better music?Surprisingly, no. Though the Fleshgod and Dimmu Borgir influence is clear right from the bombastic choirs of instrumental opener “The Descent” and orchestral flourishes that weave between the burly riffs of the follow-up title-track, “Advent,” shows the band deftly side-stepping the pitfalls of mid-period Fleshgod to produce a surprisingly adept take on the style. Whereas Agony was infamous for parading its strings over a squashed generic riff-bed, tracks like early highlight “Unification of the Four Pillars” show Necronomicon soaring through sections of squealing strings and chunky riffs that – while both equally mighty in sound – manage to not just coexist, but augment each other wonderfully. The symphonic element isn’t just a spice for bland music, either: the album’s strongest track, “The Golden Gods,” features no string accompaniment whatsoever, instead riding its pugnacious Evangelion-style riff to a crushing rhythm break and terrific solo, finishing with a cyclical, maniacal melody that would make Nergal grin.Credit is due to both guitarist Rob “The Witch” Tremblay and drummer “Rick” (yep, just Rick). Tremblay’s death metal experience is apparent, and while his riffs may never be considered ‘iconic,’ moments like the hefty Nile-style opening and escalating Krisiun verse licks of “Crown of Thorns” give these tracks just enough headbang-fuel and distinction to make them surprisingly memorable. There’s fiery blasting aplenty in songs like “I, Bringer of Light,” but Rick also incorporates some combatant, tribal rhythms reminiscent of Vader, as heard on “The Fjord” and aforementioned “Crown.” Furthermore, the songs are written to incorporate their soaring strings at just the right moments, whether filling in when the guitars halt in the title track, or providing an eyebrow-raising piano melody and cinematic fight-to-the-death ending in closer “Alchemy of the Avatar.”Production wise, the DR varies from Satanica-level squashed for the main tracks to a 7 for the instrumental interludes, but fortunately, the guitars and symphonics remain extraordinarily distinct and well-balanced. The guitar tone is thick and commanding, the snare is snappy, and while the bass drums are a bit clicky, it actually fits the contemporary sound well. But sadly, while Advent is a good record which I enjoy front to back (even the whopping 4 instrumental interludes feel well-placed instead of superfluous), the amount of name-drops in this review betray its greatest flaw: this still feels like a generic blend of everything that’s dominated the scene for the last decade. For musicians who can clearly write decent songs and riffs, it’s frustrating that they allow themselves to wallow in the shadow of bigger bands rather than attempting to blaze any sort of original path. Additionally, Tremblay’s vocals – be it his off-the-shelf growl or occasional Nuclear Blast-approved croak – lack character. And while tempo differences between the songs make them distinct, a lack of rhythmic variation within the songs sometimes makes them a bit of slog, particularly on the title track.Advent will not revolutionize your opinion of death metal. It will probably not make your year-end list or have you posting Necronomicon music videos on your friend’s Facebook wall (other than to laugh at the googly-eyed expressions of Tremblay in “The Time Is Now”). But for those looking for 40-ish minutes of well-executed symphonic death metal, you could do far worse than what these color-changing reptiles have to offer.

Line Up:

Rick Drums - See also: ex-Water Depth
Rob "The Witch" Tremblay Vocals, Guitars
Mars Bass (2014-present) - See also: Hidden Pride, Point Blank Rage

Tracklist:

01. Into The Descent
02. Advent Of The Human God (The Heart Of Darkness)
03. Necronomicon - The Golden Gods (The Blood Of Ages)
04. Okkultis Trinity
05. Unification Of The Four Pillars
06. Crown Of Thorns
07. The Fjord
08. Gaia
09. I Bringer Of Light
10. Innocence And Wrath (Celtic Frost Cover)
11. Alchemy Of The Avatar

+ Video "Crown Of Thorns" (Official Video)


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Download links for all albums only on our blog here: http://goodmetalandhar.do.am/

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Download links for all albums only on our blog here: http://goodmetalandhar.do.am/

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