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Anata - The Infernal Depths Of Hatred  CD (album) cover

THE INFERNAL DEPTHS OF HATRED

Anata

Tech/Extreme Prog Metal


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UMUR
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator
2 stars "The Infernal Depths Of Hatred" is the debut full-length studio album by Swedish death metal act Anata. The album was released through Season of Mist in 1998.

The music style on the album is pretty regular sounding death metal. Deep growling vocals, brutal downtuned guitars and powerful drumming. Anata is not your regular melodic Swedish death metal act nor are they a Swedish old school death metal act. There are elements of the former style on the album but there are just as many US influenced death metal elements on "The Infernal Depths Of Hatred". Thatīs US death metal of the more technically well played kind. "The Infernal Depths Of Hatred" features 8 tracks distributed over 42:14 minutes of playing time and while the quality of the output is consistent, very little sticks out as above standard for the genre or as particularly memorable.

The musicianship are decent, but there is little here thatīll make your jaw drop. The sound production is decent too, but again we are dealing with a very standard product and the sound production could definitely have prospered from more power and punch. "The Infernal Depths Of Hatred" is as such not a bad album, but it just doesnīt stand out from the legions of other death metal albums that are released every year. So calling it bad might be wrong, but calling it generic isnīt. Anata would develop their sound and ultimately show a more progressive side of themselves on later albums, and thereby become slightly more interesting than whatīs the case here, but this particular album is very standard US influenced death metal delivered without offering anything original. A 2 - 2.5 star (45%) rating is warranted.

Report this review (#241762)
Posted Sunday, September 27, 2009 | Review Permalink
2 stars This is one of the better death metal bands around. Well, they try to incorporate some quality into their music instead of just being brutal for the sake of being brutal. There are hundreds of bands down that alley. Although Anata is heavy influenced by the likes of Suffocation on this, their album, they tries to do something different. They have also a lot of influences from the melodic Gothenburg scene. The likes of At The Gates springs to mind.

Despite of this, the music here is pretty much standard death metal in the US vein. Anata does ultra-fast death metal here and they are pretty good at it. Despite of this, this album lacks orginality and mostly falls flat on it's face. But it is not a bad debut album. This being a progressive rock website, a two stars verdict is fitting. But this underrated band should not be ignored. But start with the last album from 2006 and not this one.

2 stars

Report this review (#241897)
Posted Monday, September 28, 2009 | Review Permalink
3 stars Post Technical Death Metal

Anata is one of my favorite technical/progressive death metal acts. It's a swedish death band, and you know Sweden. But the great surprise is the different sounding of Anata in comparison with other influential bands of the town, like Dismember/Carnage, Entombed/Nihilist, or even into the prog and tech vein like Opeth and Dan Swano projects. This debut is the weakest album in their catalogue. It's very different from the successors. It's brutal, technical, sometimes exaggerated, but with some kind of melodic riffs like... Do you know how to distinguish post-hardcore from hardcore or melodic hardcore? This is it.

It's a great album, but if you listen to it once, you will not get the whole thing, too many riffs per track, that kind of technical pissing songwriting. But years ago I was too much into death metal and had the chance to listen carefully to Anata whole discography. The aftermath is that Anata is one of the few "exaggerated technical" death metal bands that I still have some consideration.

Report this review (#992146)
Posted Friday, July 5, 2013 | Review Permalink
siLLy puPPy
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic
3 stars ANATA started out in Varberg, Sweden (just south of Gothenburg) all the way back in 1993 when Fredrik Sch'lin (vocals, guitar), Mattias Svensson (guitar), Martin Sj'strand (bass), and Robert Petersson (drums) started jamming to their favorite death metal bands and took their sweet time in releasing the two demos 'Bury Forever The Garden Of Life' and 'Vast Lands Of My Infernal Dominion' but the practice and patience paid off because as the band was honing its chops it successfully caught the attention of the Seasons of the Mist label. By the time the band got to releasing the 1998 debut THE INFERNAL DEPTHS OF HATRED there was a new lineup with Henrik Drake on bass and Andreas Allenmark.

Noted for their brutality and technical inclinations, ANATA's debut started out as a typical death metal release in the vein of Cryptopsy, Deicide and Dark Tranquility only more bombastic, with faster tempos and a sense of brutality more like Suffocation. The band's unique stamp was that it implemented C# tuning and created melodic constructs out of dissonant guitar riffs. While sounding rather generic on this first offering, the band exhibited a firm command of the instrumentation with lightning fast riffs that pummel away the senses and with heavy distortion and hints of progressiveness that would mature on future albums although one wouldn't call this technical by today's standards especially when side by side by other 1998 landmarks such as Gorguts' magnum opus 'Obscura.'

While creating melodic tracks instead of focusing on the rhythmic patterns that many tech death bands use to construct their labyrinthine progressions, ANATA has been referred to as melodic death metal given that the band emerged near the epicenter of melo-death, the Gothenburg scene where bands like At The Gates, In Flames and Dark Tranquility got the ball rolling. Having played with bands like Rotting Christ, there is a sense of blackened death metal in the mix as well. Overall the tracks contain a plethora of ridiculously fast tempos with incessant dissonant guitar riffs pounding away with the occasional Morbid Angel influenced guitar squeal or two. The musicianship is top notch but overall i find this to be a bit too generic for its own good as the tech death world had evolved significantly by this time.

Particularly impressive is the drumming prowess of Robert Petersson who nails all the blastbeat and jazzified fills like a pro. Fredrik Sch'lin's growly vocals offer zero variation as he simply imitates the growly grunts of the past and in the process contributes to the rather stale presentation on display. As far as variation in the music though, there's enough disparate elements to keep this from being a total waste of time although for those not accustomed to the fastest tempos played in a death metal context, this will probably all sound the same. Overall i'm impressed by the instrumental skills of the musicians involved on THE INFERNAL DEPTHS OF HATRED but the compositional fortitude is clearly lacking as ANATA is simply going through the motions without really placing their own stamp on the world of extreme metal at this point. Still though ANATA are considered one of the more important bands of tech death so the logical place to start is in the beginning and although this debut isn't the most stellar example of tech death metal, it certainly gets the job done.

Report this review (#2282354)
Posted Monday, November 18, 2019 | Review Permalink

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