Exivious - Liminal (2013) [Gorgatz]

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Added on November 7, 2013 by Gorgatzin Music > Mp3
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Exivious - Liminal (2013) [Gorgatz] (Size: 105.03 MB)
 04. Deeply Woven.mp315.87 MB
 07. Open.mp315.12 MB
 01. Entrust.mp314.87 MB
 08. Immanent.mp313.96 MB
 05. Triguna.mp311.9 MB
 06. Movement.mp311.26 MB
 03. Alphaform.mp311.22 MB
 02. One's Glow.mp310.7 MB
 Exivious-Liminal.jpg136.59 KB


Description


Exivious - Liminal (2013) [Gorgatz]



- I N F O -

Though it’s the prototype of “intelligent” metal, progressive instrumetal is certainly no longer the only intelligent subgenre of metal. Both conceptually and musically, myriad artists are thinking past gore and power chords to dense networks of conceptual and compositional complexity. But bands can’t rely on superior technical skill and ostensibly intellectual concepts to push their music’s appeal; complicated music that doesn’t consider its affect translates as lifeless and uninspired. As you’d expect from the band members’ impressive resumes, Exivious understand the difference between theoretical intelligence and intelligent execution. On Liminal, the band’s most cohesive work to date, complexity serves to deepen emotional evocations instead of acting as the focal point of the music, resulting in an undeniably modern album that’s simultaneously organic and orchestrated.

Since Tymon Kruidenier’s and Robin Zielhorst’s 2010 departure from Cynic, Exivious’s music has become both less cynical and less like Cynic. Liminal is a curious, questioning release, but it’s optimistic; approaching confidently and whimsically in place of the hesitant trepidation that characterized some of the band’s earlier work. Liminal laboriously arranges slabs of sparkling tonalities into flawless pyramids of consonance (and occasional dissonance). Like the most abstract modern architecture, the structures can appear peculiar and angular, like the melding of triumphant sax shred with an uneasy, shifting groove in “Deeply Woven.” But these occasionally incongruous elements coalesce into a concrete, innovative structure whose beauty and intelligence are less blatant and more subtly subjective than many instrumetal albums.
The band’s intimate awareness of balance enables the effectiveness of their oblique approach. Heaviness is used sparingly – unlike other projects that fuse metal with jazz, crescendos are naturally built up instead of being crammed into every almost-open space. This tendency to make every moment on a fusion album simultaneously both jazz and metal renders such combinations unmemorable or even nigh unlistenable to most people. In these artists’ attempts to balance the two halves, they push too much and render things unbalanced.

Liminal is more self-conscious. Rather than trying to shoehorn everything into a busy monolith of jazz-metal, Exivious know when it’s best to separate the elements and when it’s best to combine them. Liminal breathes; the rise, fall, and flow are more gradual, more natural, rather than the extreme peaks, valleys, and transitions that plague many fusion artists. Transitions are more intense and more appreciable; because we haven’t been flattened by 8-string grooves for half an hour, we can really dig into the distorted rhythmic punch of chromatic closer “Immanent.” Dissonance manifests as a fleeting curiosity throughout “Triguna,” then resolves with a brief but frantic spasm that would likely have been drawn-out and diluted for ten minutes by a less aware artist. The band members resist the all-too-accessible urge to dive into tech-wank territory: technicality isn’t the focus here, but a by-product, preventing the music from overwhelming us with miles of sweeps and marathons of time signature changes. Yuma van Eekelen’s beats rarely approach traditional or extreme metal, eschewing double bass abuse in exchange for creative, driving snare experimentation.

The only valid criticisms here are more criticisms of the genre than of this specific release. Liminal is accessible listening, but it’s not for everyone – nonmusicians will be able to appreciate the album’s emotional evocations, but may get somewhat snared in the sheer amount of instrumental complexity contained within each song. It’s pensive music, not meant for every situation and certainly not an album to keep on constant repeat. Its value lies in its capacity for subjective interpretation, but some people would rather have their interpretations laid out in front of them. Liminal is no such album.

The real glory here is that despite its modernity, and despite how forward-thinking Liminal comes across, it’s neither diluted nor overly digital. It’s obvious that Liminal has been elaborately thought-out and thoroughly calculated, but its overall aesthetic is lush and natural, a rare characteristic even among less complicated productions. Exivious blur the line between organic and synthetic, weaving aspects of one into the other. Rich, silky tones combine in futuristic and intelligent harmonies that never feel artificial. Individual sound quality and the vastly improved production quality make this possible; the guitars in particular account for a rainforest-dense spectrum of voices. Tymon Kruidenier’s hand tone is impeccable, gliding from nuanced, breath-like swells into staccato, mechanical bursts of manipulation and squirrely, Jarzombekian leads. The cohesive but chimeric nature of Liminal ensures that it intrigues for the vast majority of its forty-five-minute runtime, and more than ever reinforces the fact metal does not necessarily need vocals to humble, empower, and awe.

At the heart of Liminal is its concept, which is that of stripping away the superfluous qualities of emotion, situation, and inspiration and leaving behind only its essence. This is the concept of the term liminality and perfectly describes the band’s direction with the absence of a variety of instruments and the sharp focus of the songs. That is not to say Liminal drags on at any point, in fact the pacing is beautifully crafted. The more post-rock songs like “Alphaform” or “Movement” temper the crazier portions of the record such as the saxophone madness of “Deeply Woven” or the strange effects and odd climax of “Triguna”. The record nails these two extremes, and everything in between, effortlessly. Musically, the record achieves everything it was made to do and conveys it’s concept so clearly and poignantly its almost scary.

Exivious once again bestows upon the masses a genre-defining album, displaying a marvelous blend of experimentation, songwriting expertise (not using that word lightly), and the feeling of plain rocking. The strange juxtaposition of using a concept of stripped-down instrumentation, conveying feeling and moods at their most basic level using a framework as frequently ostentatious and gaudy as progressive jazz-fusion is not lost on this reviewer and the fact that it’s pulled off so well by a group of men only releasing their second album is quite a feat. Those who want thrills without frills in their music cannot go wrong by giving this a listen.

- T R A C K L I S T -

1. Entrust
2. One's Glow
3. Alphaform
4. Deeply Woven
5. Triguna
6. Movement
7. Open
8. Immanent


Format: mp3, CBR 320 kbps
Genre: Progressive Metal / Instrumental
Size: 105.03

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Exivious - Liminal (2013) [Gorgatz]

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The long wait was well worth it. Thanks.
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