€0.00
Your cart is empty
country: UKR
label: Osmose
format: LP
Condition: New
reissue on 12" black vinyl of an old ep from 2007
Tracklisting
Cold Landscapes
Downfall of the Epoch
Towards the Light
Twilight Aureole
The Day Will Come
Listening to the Silence
Fallen into Oblivion
Ashes
Tam gdzie gas'nie dzien'... (Sacrilegium cover)
ndiánská Písen Hruzy (Master's Hammer cover)
...W krainie drzew (Hefeystos cover)
Ten, Ktery Se Vyhyba Svetlu (Unclean cover)
Recidivus (Sacrilegium cover)
With 'A Furrow Cut Short', DRUDKH are continuing on the course charted with their previous release 'Eternal Turn of the Wheel' (2012), where the black and bleak sound of the band's roots seemed to overshadow the progressive and lighter tone of 'Handful of Stars' (2010). Mastermind Roman Sayenko is heavily drawing inspiration from 20th century Ukrainian poetry once more, which often deal with the bloody struggle of this old country to build a nation from foreign oppression. DRUDKH still refuse any kind of interview or promotion and demand to be understood through their music alone. This album equally represents the blood soaked sound of black despair and full hearted resistance to vile treachery and evil as well as the beauty of landscapes and culture.
Drudkh deliver black metal poetry at its finest. Previously only available on split EPs with Hades Almighty, Grift and Paysage d'Hiver, the collection of songs gathered on ‘A Few Lines In Archaic Ukrainian’ is a must hear for any fan of the band’s work. Based on Ukrainian poetry and presented in a lush 10-panel Digipak, the tracks on this compilation perfectly combine harshness, epic melodies and a touch of folklore, transforming them into black metal masterpieces.
Legendary Ukrainian black metal project Drudkh is ushering in the cold darkness and alluring decay of autumn with its brand-new offering, ‘All Belong to the Night’.
While the album is only four songs, it rages on for over 45 minutes, delivering an epic maelstrom of grandiose melodies, devastating aggression, and the cold atmospheric passages that have come to define Drudkh’s unmistakable sound.