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Madder Mortem - Mercury CD (album) cover

MERCURY

Madder Mortem

Tech/Extreme Prog Metal


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3 stars What Mystery Tribe is this?

INTRODUCTION
"Mercury" is Madder Mortem's debut album. It's quite hard to describe the musical field in which they operate on this album. Atmospheric/gothic metal intertwined with symphonic passages is what comes first to mind. What makes this band unique is the female vocals (by Agnete Kirkevaag). In the gothic metal area generally the vocals are a "battle" between the beauty and the beast (soprano vs. growls). Madder Mortem however uses clean midrange female vocals.

TRACK by TRACK
1) Undertow [6/10]
2) Under Another Moon [6/10]
3) He Who Longed For The Stars [6/10]
4) These Mortal Sins [5/10]
5) The Grinding Silence [6/10]
6) Loss [7/10]
7) Remnants [8/10]
8) Misty Sleep [7/10]
9) Convertion [8/10]

CONCLUSION
The combination of the vocals combined with the constant changing of moods between dreamy/atmosperic and dark/aggressive did work out very well. The vocals by Agnete are impressive. She has a very strong voice and adds something special to madder Mortem's music. The other band members however did also a great job. They very well succeeded in creating a groovy, varied and solid basis for the vocals, without turning it into a (metal) wall of sound.
For me the two highlights on "Mercury" are the tracks Remnants and Convertion. "Remnants" starts as a slow, haunting nightmare, that suddenly speeds up and turns into a heavy monster with a killer riff. "Convertion" starts with an atmospheric clean guitar intro, then slowly builds up to a very groovy mid section that finally leads to a slowly fading crescendo of guitar, bass and drums.
"Mercury" is a good, but non-essential album. I recommend it to prog rock fans that are interested in strong female vocals and who are not afraid of some - well performed - metal influences.

Album rating: 62% = 3 stars

Report this review (#115985)
Posted Wednesday, March 21, 2007 | Review Permalink
UMUR
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
3 stars "Mercury" is the debut studio album from Norwegian goth/ doom metal act Madder Mortem. The album was released through Misanthropy Records in February 1999.

The music is pre-dominantly slow- to mid paced goth/doom metal featuring mid ranged female vocals. No operatic or soprano vocal parts here. Agnete M. Kirkevaag is a skilled vocalist with a strong voice. She´s not very distinct though, but her style suits the music fine. The music is at times quite sombre but also very melodic. The tracks are generally simply structured but there are a few diversions from the "regular" vers/chorus structure that make the music more varied. There are a few melodic folky elements in the music too that are worth mentioning. This is not folk metal though. It´s only a few elements.

The musicianship is solid and I really enjoy how Madder Mortem are able to make their songs flow nicely without awkward shifts between sections.

The production is great. It´s actually quite soft for a metal album but it suits the music well.

"Mercury" is a decent debut album by Madder Mortem and certainly recommendable to fans of goth/doom metal with female vocals. It´s not terribly innovative or challenging to listen to, but it features a great atmosphere and some really well written material. A 3 - 3.5 star (65%) rating is deserved.

Report this review (#200316)
Posted Friday, January 23, 2009 | Review Permalink
Bonnek
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
4 stars The Norwegian answer to Opeth's 'Morningrise'?

Madder Mortem evokes quite an atmosphere here, not by doing long Opethian compositions or black metal rasps, but by the same frost-bitten guitars and wet drum sound as Opeth had on Morningrise. They also have that Nordic folksy vibe and must use similar chord progressions as they create the same sweeping and melancholic atmosphere.

I'm not much of a fan of female-fronted metal. It's mostly more interesting for the visuals then for the music. The Gathering and Stream of Passion are the obvious exceptions, but you also can't go wrong with Agnete here. Over the course of Madder Mortem's career her voice evolved into a very prominent and acquired taste, but here she keeps things very gentle and melodious.

I'm not sure if this would be the Madder Mortem album of preference for prog fans, certainly not for the tech/extreme metal fans. Madder Mortem evolved in leaps throughout their first 3 albums. Each one being very different. Musically the debut is adequate and brooding, be it not as challenging or technical or extreme as on later albums. But it's the mood that gets me, very melancholic, grey, subtle, eerie.

The album needs some growing but slowly and irreversibly creeps under your skin. All songs compete with each other to evoke the most upsetting psychological distress, the deepest yearning or the toughest desperation. Not all succeed equally convincing but for a debut, this album is a true revelation. Not their most proggy effort but their most touching one. Recommended to fans of the Gathering and gloomy funeral music. A slightly flattering 4 stars.

Report this review (#257197)
Posted Monday, December 21, 2009 | Review Permalink
sleeper
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars The mid 1990's saw an explosian in prog bands from Norway, both of the more symphonic and metal variaties, and '99 saw Madder Mortem join their ranks with this, their debut album, Mercury. Unlike a lot of Norway's Prog Metal acts, the band keeps away from Black Metal here and instead offers up a fusion of Doom Metal, similar to the likes of Candlemass, and Goth Metal with The 3rd and the Mortal being an obvious big influence.

As you will find with many debut albums, the band seems a bit tentative here as their musical style keeps pretty close to the Doom/Goth fusion without developing that uniqe sound that will come to charecterise the bands albums. Its particualrly noticable with vocalist Agnete Kirkvaarg, who sings in a style reminiscent of that soft, calm and airy voice of the vocalist from The 3rd and the Mortal, a style that has encompassed many goth singers for quite a while now, and a far cry from the powerful, distinct and, some would say, aquired taste that her vocals will become. In short, Mercury offers little to distinguish itself from the pack, except that within its limitations its quite a well made album. The songs are driven forward by the twin riffing of BP Kirkvaarg and Christian Ruud, sometimes using the counterpoint that would become a hallmark of the band but largely relying on the strong riffs to dominate the song. Nyborg's bass and Nielson's drums work togethor to create a strong rhythm section underpinning the riffs but without ever really making their prescence felt.

The composition of the songs is pretty good, but the album lacks variation between most of its tracks, meaning that the album as a whole wont stick in the memorry to well but indavidual songs can certainly grab the attention. The biggest problem Mercury has is that the production is definitely second rate, the first few songs in particualr sound like they were recorded on the cheap. Its the kind of quality you would expect from a demo or a first time negineer getting to grips with the kit. The sound isnt terrible, the album is certainly listenable and you can hear all the instruments, but I'm left with a definite feeling of "could do better".

I'd say that last statement sums up the album perfectly, in all departments there is nothing bad, or particularly wrong, with the album but its unsatisfying in the end. Loss, Misty Sleep and Convention are my favourite tracks on here but Madder Mortem went on to much bigger and better things after Mercury. For fans of the bleaker end of Progressive Metal, like In the Woods... and Green Carnation, who arent out to be challenged and to those that want to complete their MM discography.

Report this review (#382897)
Posted Wednesday, January 19, 2011 | Review Permalink

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