Death Came Through a Phantom Ship

Death Came Through a Phantom Ship is the second studio album by Dutch symphonic black metal band Carach Angren, It was released in 2010.

Death Came Through a Phantom Ship
Studio album by
Released26 February 2010
RecordedTidalwave Studios
GenreSymphonic black metal
Length43:47
LabelMaddening Media
ProducerPatrick Damiani, Carach Angren
Carach Angren chronology
Lammendam
(2008)
Death Came Through a Phantom Ship
(2010)
Where the Corpses Sink Forever
(2012)

This album tells the legend of a ghost ship (an interpretation of the Flying Dutchman[1]) from its beginnings. While a wide variety of interpretations of the Flying Dutchman legend exist, the band says that the album is based on the Dutch interpretation of the story. However, they took some creative liberties with it to make it a more horrifying story.[2]

The album starts in the future, when a boat with an electronic communication device sails to the sea. The boat picks up signs of an eerie voice cursing its captain's name through the radio. Then a ghost ship comes across the sea. The sailors then remember stories about how people who saw that ship died in horrible ways. In track No. 3, in the same day of the sighting, later that night, the captain is haunted by the ghost of the seas. He kills his wife and daughter while sleepwalking and then kills himself with a shotgun. After that, it begins telling the story of Van der Decken and how he became the captain of an evil ship.

Style

The album contains symphonic black metal although the vocals are kept clear.[3] Parallels to Dimmu Borgir have been observed in the keyboard lines and the vocals' timbre. The structure of the songs has been described as "bulky" with many abrupt breaks,[1] which is contrary to traditional black metal structures.[3]

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Metal Hammer (Germany)5/7[1]
Sputnikmusic4/5[3]

Death Came Through a Phantom Ship received positive reviews from Sputnikmusic and the German edition of Metal Hammer. The former observed that the band had even improved their instrumental qualities compared to their debut album Lammendam and recommended the new album for listeners new to the genre. Metal Hammer praised the diversity of the songs but was sceptical of their unusual structure.[1]

Track listing

  • All music by Seregor, Ardek & Namtar
  • Main compositions by Ardek
  • Lyrics by Seregor and Erik Wijnands (Negakinu Photography)
No.TitleLength
1."Electronic Voice Phenomena"0:59
2."The Sighting Is a Portent of Doom"4:09
3."...and the Consequence Macabre"6:45
4."Van der Decken's Triumph"5:17
5."Bloodstains on the Captain's Log"5:52
6."Al betekent het mijn dood" (Even If It Means My Death)1:08
7."Departure Towards a Nautical Curse"5:33
8."The Course of a Spectral Ship"5:09
9."The Shining Was a Portent of Gloom"8:49
2013 re-release bonus tracks
No.TitleLength
10."The Ghost of Raynham Hall" (Ethereal Veiled Existence EP 2011 re-recorded song)4:55
11."Ethereal Veiled Existence" (Ethereal Veiled Existence EP 2011 re-recorded song)5:20
12."Sepulchral Disequilibrium" (The Chase Vault Tragedy EP 2011 re-recorded song)3:58

Personnel

Credits adapted from the album's liner notes.

Carach Angren
Additional musicians
  • Patrick Damiani (Rome, Le Grand Guignol) - bass-guitar & additional guitars, choir on track 6
  • Nikos Mavridis (Rome) - violins on tracks 3, 4, 5 and 9
Team
  • Patrick Damiani - recording and mixing at Tidalwave Studios (www.tidalwave.de)
  • Patrick Damiani and Carach Angren - producing
  • 24-96 Mastering - mastering
  • Carach Angren and Erik Wijnands - artwork
  • Erik Wijnands (www.myspace.com/negakinu) - all photography, textures & design

References

[4]

  1. Wickler, Martin (1 May 2012). "Carach Angren – Death Came Through a Phantom Ship". Metal Hammer (in German). Retrieved 30 October 2012.
  2. Haan, Roel de. "Interview - Carach Angren". Lords of Metal (in Dutch). Retrieved 2018-02-03.
  3. Ponton, Jared (26 February 2010). "Carach Angren – Death Came Through A Phantom Ship". Sputnikmusic. Retrieved 30 October 2012.
  4. "Photographic image of album sleeve" (JPG). 3.bp.blogspot.com. Retrieved 1 April 2022.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.