Panopticon / Kentucky
Album: | Kentucky | Collection: | General | |
Artist: | Panopticon | Added: | Feb 2013 | |
Label: | Pagan Flames |
A-File Activity
Add Date: | 2013-03-16 | Pull Date: | 2013-05-19 | Charts: | Loud |
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Week Ending: | May 19 | May 5 | Apr 28 | Apr 21 | Apr 14 | Apr 7 | Mar 24 |
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Airplays: | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
Recent Airplay
1. | Jun 13, 2023: | Strum, Pick, and Thrash
Black Waters |
4. | May 18, 2013: | The Base of A Dream Is Empty
Black Waters |
|
2. | Mar 18, 2023: | The Iron Skillet
Kentucky |
5. | May 04, 2013: | The Base of A Dream is Empty
Come All Ye Coal Miners |
|
3. | Jan 05, 2023: | Traditions
Which Side Are You On? |
6. | Apr 27, 2013: | The Base of A Dream is Empty
Come All Ye Coal Miners |
Album Review
Lestrygonian
Reviewed 2013-02-19
Reviewed 2013-02-19
Black metal + bluegrass! Austin Lunn proves himself to be a black metal prodigy with this one-man band, very forward-thinking both musically and politically. This is a concept album about the plight of Appalachian coal miners and the land they tragically exploit for a paltry, polluted living. The bluegrass is standard fare but very good nonetheless; the metal is where he shows off his chops. Greate Laroque-esque neoclassical lead guitar fits seamlessly within the bursts of wintry bleakness, and the drumming is wildly energetic and creative. I’d hesitate to compare this to other folk-metal acts such as Kampfar, Taake, or Falkenbach, just because this is in a league of its own. Don’t miss out on this masterpiece! I highly recommend juxtaposing both genres for full effect, but please play this if you’re a fan of either genre—we’re here to support hardworking, brilliant independent artists like this guy. FCC clean.
1. (2:53) Instrumental, jaunty bluegrass with banjo, guitar and fiddle. Fades into…
2. (10:25)** Epic black metal with crescendos, flutes, the whole shebang with a nice folksy interlude that builds momentum before the metal comes back to annihilate, albeit with melancholy string-laden beauty.
3. (4:11)* Great banjo-driven tune about how much it sucks to be a coal miner. Poignant in a way only bluegrass can be. Ends with a disturbing sample from a documentary about the mining industry.
4. (10:04)*** Plodding, somber black metal march with some choral vocals thrown in. There’s a fantastic folksy bridge that samples an interview with a coal miner recounting a successful mining strike. Here the indignation and anger gives way to an uplifting message of solidarity.
5. (3:03) A rousing, stomping bluegrass anthem that demands to know “which side are you on?”
6. (12:19) Lightspeed black metal with some incredible two-handed guitar leads, epic harmonies. Amazing twin guitar bridge gives way to a somber post-rock bridge with another interview, and by the end we’re back to black metal with searing fiddle.
7. (4:56) some kind of ambient interlude with echoing choral washes, vocal chanting buried under layers of synth and guitar strumming; not at all interesting for airplay, but it adds conceptual coherence to the album
8. (3:24)** gorgeous plaintive bluegrass instrumental, mostly banjo-driven with some slide guitar melodies, HIGHLY recommended for any folk-oriented show
1. (2:53) Instrumental, jaunty bluegrass with banjo, guitar and fiddle. Fades into…
2. (10:25)** Epic black metal with crescendos, flutes, the whole shebang with a nice folksy interlude that builds momentum before the metal comes back to annihilate, albeit with melancholy string-laden beauty.
3. (4:11)* Great banjo-driven tune about how much it sucks to be a coal miner. Poignant in a way only bluegrass can be. Ends with a disturbing sample from a documentary about the mining industry.
4. (10:04)*** Plodding, somber black metal march with some choral vocals thrown in. There’s a fantastic folksy bridge that samples an interview with a coal miner recounting a successful mining strike. Here the indignation and anger gives way to an uplifting message of solidarity.
5. (3:03) A rousing, stomping bluegrass anthem that demands to know “which side are you on?”
6. (12:19) Lightspeed black metal with some incredible two-handed guitar leads, epic harmonies. Amazing twin guitar bridge gives way to a somber post-rock bridge with another interview, and by the end we’re back to black metal with searing fiddle.
7. (4:56) some kind of ambient interlude with echoing choral washes, vocal chanting buried under layers of synth and guitar strumming; not at all interesting for airplay, but it adds conceptual coherence to the album
8. (3:24)** gorgeous plaintive bluegrass instrumental, mostly banjo-driven with some slide guitar melodies, HIGHLY recommended for any folk-oriented show
Track Listing
1. | Bernheim Forest In Spring | 5. | Which Side Are You On? | |||
2. | Bodies Under The Falls | 6. | Killing The Giants As They Sleep | |||
3. | Come All Ye Coal Miners | 7. | Black Waters | |||
4. | Black Soot And Red Blood | 8. | Kentucky |