Behemoth – Evangelion
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1. Daimonos 2. Shemhamforash 3. Ov Fire And The Void 4. Transmigrating Beyond Realms Ov Amenti 5. He Who Breeds Pestilence 6. The Seed Ov I 7. Alas, Lord Is Upon Me 8. Defiling Morality Ov Black God 9. Lucifer |
Over the years Behemoth, while sticking to a core sound, have experimented with the progress of their music. Evangelion is no different. Right off the bat with their opening track “Daimonos”, Behemoth’s epic blackened death sound erupts into an earthquake of heaviness. And it keeps on going, taking notes from past albums such as The Apostasy and Demigod, they fuse the two together in the best possible way.
Aside from the nine epic tracks, there comes a special booklet with extended liner notes and a studio based DVD that leaves you guessing as only some parts are subtitled. It seems you’re missing out on what they are talking about at times but it is still a very good watch to see how this epic album was even a thought in the first place.
Behemoth never fails to impress me.
The liner notes are very cool. Other than track lyrics, and photos of the band in full armor, there are explanations of song meanings and such from Nergal. This was actually almost as a good a read as the music was to listen to. Not that I necessarily agree with all of Nergal’s views and ideals, I do respect them and it’s cool to read. It is written very well, touching on theory, philosophy and direct meaning along with every song except the last track “Lucifer”, which is a poem in Polish by an author I’m unfamiliar with.
All in all this is a perfect album from Behemoth and fans new and old will not be disappointed in the least with this. I 100% recommend it to any metal fan!
10/10!









