Drudkh - Forgotten Legends CD Review

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2003-12-07 : The Panzer Wolves
Utterly amazing, atmopsheric, mesmerising minamalist Black Metal. Brutal yet somehow tranquil. Sounding like 'Hvis lset...' era Burzum, & latter day Hate Forest, i mean what could be better? Its gotta be heard!!!
2003-11-10 : DOOMLORD
this is a pure fuckin master piece...truly one of the best black metal cd iv heard in years. a total must for BURZUM fans. in fact any fan of brutal dark music.

to-victory-with-axes
DOOMLORD
2003-11-10 : Bishop Hell
Well this is the debut album by Ukranians Drudkh, which features two members of Hate Forest. I guess that this band do have stylistic similarites to the latter bands more melancholic passages but Drudkh's material is more in line with that of Burzum, with a more folkier, Slavonic edge of course, giving Drudkh a sound and style of their own. The 4 songs on this disc clock in at just under 40 minutes (with the last track being the sound of rain and thunder, reminding me of being in cave under the cliffside near the ocean). this album is fantastic! Really it is that good. You must listen to this in one go to get the true feeling of the music. the riffs seem to transport you away into pure escapism. The vocals are screamed (like those on Hate Forest) but have more room to show off on this release. For me it is best to listen to this album via headphones, with your eyes closed during dusk. A truly obscure masterpiece. And it is released on Supernal Music, and you know what that means when it comes to quality!
2003-09-03 : Gunther Phildius

Drudkh's music is absolutely amazing. It's remarkable in that when one listens to it while meditating it feels like one has entered into a world of pure feeling and Being. The melodies in the music are very magical (many of the melodies create a feeling of nostalgia for a better time--not just in one's own but in the world as a whole, a longer for the traditional world over the modern degenerate jewish world; along with sadness in other parts) and create a dreamy landscape that one falls from this world into. It reminds me a bit of Burzum's "Hvis Iyset Tar Oss" without being as repetitive as Burzum's work. Drudkh's album requires one to sit and listen to it all the way through; listening to the songs by themselves takes away from the magic of the album as a whole. Remember, if you are a subhuman and you buy this album you are buying a weapon against yourself...
Hail those from Thule
Hail the coming Golden Age for awake Aryans only
-Gunther