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KINSHIP

Iotunn

Tech/Extreme Prog Metal


From Progarchives.com, the ultimate progressive rock music website

Iotunn Kinship album cover
4.16 | 16 ratings | 3 reviews | 38% 5 stars

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Studio Album, released in 2024

Songs / Tracks Listing


1. Kinship Elegiac (13:52)
2. Mistland (9:01)
3. Twilight (7:42)
4. I Feel the Night (6:34)
5. The Coming End (7:42)
6. Iridescent Way (5:36)
7. Earth to Sky (6:40)
8. The Anguished Ethereal (11:16)

Total Time 68:23

Line-up / Musicians


- Bjørn Wind Andersen / Drums
- Jesper Gräs / Guitars
- Jens Nicolai Gräs / Guitars
- Jón Aldará / Vocals
- Eskil Rask / Bass

Releases information

Label: Metal Blade Records
Release date: October 25th, 2024

Official music video(s):
- I Feel the Night

Official lyric video:
- Twilight

Recording information:

Mixed and mastered at Hansen Studios, Denmark.

Thanks to umur for the addition
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IOTUNN Kinship ratings distribution


4.16
(16 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music (38%)
38%
Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection (38%)
38%
Good, but non-essential (19%)
19%
Collectors/fans only (6%)
6%
Poor. Only for completionists (0%)
0%

IOTUNN Kinship reviews


Showing all collaborators reviews and last reviews preview | Show all reviews/ratings

Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by kev rowland
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Prog Reviewer / Special Collaborator
4 stars Here we have the second album from Danish Progressive Death Metal outfit Iotunn, and there is much to take in as musically and lyrically there is a lot going on. 'Kinship' tells the story of a prehistoric tribesman, journeying through life's conditions with themes of unity/disunity, light/dark, body/mind, nature/culture, good/evil, creation/destruction, and human/inhuman. It is difficult to know quite where to start, but opener "Kinship Elegaic", is the longest track on the album and probably contains much of what one might to know about this. First off, singer Jón Aldará is an absolute monster, able to provide death growls or soaring vocals, whatever the music requires. At the back there is Bjørn Wind Andersen who is obviously an octopus, able to keep things going in multiple time signatures while always hitting hard, and bassist Eskil Rask plays between drums and guitar, sometimes providing melodies of his own or locking in tight to provide backup. Then we have the twin guitars of Jesper Gräs and Jens Nicolai Gräs who are happy to riff in slower times, or shred, whatever is required.

Here we have a band who are approaching the music head on from a metal viewpoint, looking to the likes of ICS Vortex for inspiration, yet more death than black, then moving in a different direction which is progressive but far removed from the likes of Threshold or Dream Theater. I found while playing this I kept turning up the volume as this is music which demands to be played loud, even if Aldará is performing in a theatrical fashion which makes one think of Savatage, but heavier and with no keyboards. It is a lengthy album, with the two longest tracks bookending the others and a total playing time of 68 minutes, but it feels much shorter than that as the listener quickly becomes invested and interested in understanding what the band are doing and where the music takes them.

The current line-up came together in 2019, with 'Access All Worlds' being released only two years later, and now they are back with their second. This is a band to keep an eye on, as if they keep on this trajectory, they could well become a major name.

Review by UMUR
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Honorary Collaborator
4 stars "Kinship" is the second full-length studio album by Danish metal act Iotunn. The album was released through Metal Blade Records in October 2024. It´s the successor to "Access All Worlds" from 2021. There have been no lineup changes since the predecessor. Iotunn formed in Copenhagen in 2015 and released the promising "The Wizard Falls" EP in 2016 and with the release of "Access All Worlds" they started making headlines.

Stylistically the material on "Kinship" is a natural successor to the material featured on "Access All Worlds". Progressive/power metal combined with both death, black, folk, and even doom metal elements, and all delivered in an epic and atmospheric package (it´s one of the better combinations of melodic tinged metal and extreme metal I´ve heard in a while). Lead vocalist Jón Aldará (Barren Earth, Hamferð) performs both epic clean semi-operatic vocals (both low end and high end cleans), death metal growling, and black metal snarling, and as a result the vocal part of the album is quite varied. The material on the 8 tracks, 68:23 minutes long album is both eclectic in style, epic in sound, but also powerful, heavy, and massive. It´s relatively polished, but still with enough rawness to pack a punch when that is needed. Other than the paatos filled and skilled vocal performance, one of the other great assets of "Kinship" is the harmony- and lead guitar work of the two Gräs brothers, Jens and Jesper. The album is loaded with soaring epic leads that´ll have you picture great mountains and beautiful valleys, fantasy castles and dark wizards. The scope of the music is almost cinematic in nature.

"Kinship" features a high quality production job courtesy of prolific Danish producer Jacob Hansen. This is a perfect sound production for this type of music. As mentioned above the sound is relatively polished and you can hear all details clearly in the mix, but there is still bite and rawness enough for this never to become a sterile listening experience. Combined with the intriguing, sophisticated, and powerful songwriting, and the high level musical performances, this results in a high quality sophomore studio album from Iotunn. A 4 - 4.5 star (85%) rating is deserved.

(Originally posted on Metal Music Archives).

Latest members reviews

5 stars Discovering a new band is a little like being handed a key to an unmarked door. You open it, not knowing what lies beyond?anticipating either greatness or disappointment. Iotunn's Kinship is one of those rare moments where what you find is something so expansive and mesmerising, it feels like steppi ... (read more)

Report this review (#3139546) | Posted by Evissergorp | Wednesday, January 1, 2025 | Review Permanlink

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