supported by 7 fans who also own “Where The Serpents Are Growing”
Another atmospheric gem. Best listened to from beginning to end, to get the full impact. Some lyrical refrain connects this one (and apparently the forthcoming one) to the debut, and there are songs from each album that sort of inversely mirror each other. It seems WNR are building their own darkly romantic musical mythos, and the journey is well worth going on. Some guy
supported by 7 fans who also own “Where The Serpents Are Growing”
A delicious helping of mid-tempo gothic doom, tonally and atmospherically similar to one of my favorite bands in the genre, Wine from Tears. Great stuff, recommended! Bruce
supported by 7 fans who also own “Where The Serpents Are Growing”
Really like this album. Very melodic but not at the expense of heaviness, and the symphonic aspects add to the music's emotional resonance. The compositions are varied and well thought out and the music on a whole has quite a theatrical feel at times. Some guy
supported by 6 fans who also own “Where The Serpents Are Growing”
Ethereal beauty-great debut hinting traces of early Katatonia with cosmic synth layers, acoustic parts and crying epic lead guitars complementing each other
thus enhancing the overall melancholic and longing atmosphere in true Swedish-French style of dreaminess. The repetitiveness as a stylistic device enhances the hypnotic effect initiating a lasting impact on the mesmerized listener. You get deeply absorded into the music finally exiting leaving one with a sense of reflectiveness, pensiveness hungercamp