Schaliach
Sonrise


4.5
superb

Review

by Troggy USER (17 Reviews)
March 22nd, 2013 | 66 replies


Release Date: 1996 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Old-school melodic death metal done the right way.

Sonrise, the only release from Norwegian melodic death metal band Schaliach, has the look and feel of a classic. It came at a time when melodic death metal was about to take on a new life of its own, with Swedish bands like At the Gates and In Flames leading the charge. Schaliach appear oblivious to this momentum, and don’t owe much of anything to Heartwork, either. Instead, the band relies on the intricate, but not flashy, guitar work of Ole Børud (technically the band relies on him a lot, since he contributes everything except lead vocals), and an early 90s production standard that really works. The tracks on Sonrise aren’t blistering or intense. Instead, the album has a majestic aura, at times melancholic, but at many others hopeful.

The album’s first two tracks are the archetype of Schaliach’s sound. They are defined by slow to mid-tempo riffing, melodic guitar bridges and solos, and appropriate death grunts (courtesy of Schaliach’s second member Peter Dalbakk). Both of these tracks take time to work in multiple elements, rather than the simpler structure that would come to be associated with melodic death metal. ‘The Last Creed’ marches through verses at a pace that could be described as doomy, but progresses into two guitar solos bookending the tracks most powerful moments, where drums roar out of the background and charge upward as Dalbakk amps up his vocal intensity. ‘You Maintain’ ups the tempo noticeably, and uses a more traditional chorus as its cornerstone, but doesn’t lose the soloing or forward thinking structure.

The album’s centerpiece, ‘A Father’s Mourning’ lightens the template with clean vocals and acoustic guitars, but at a snail’s pace. While the track explodes briefly before settling in for the night, more contrast could have made it a truly enthralling tune, rather than just a very good one. Contrast, however, is a word that could describe the three instrumental tunes on Sonrise. Ranging from delicate keys and acoustic picking to the glorious riff-fest of ‘Whisper from Heaven’, these tracks show the priority Ole placed on the melodies of Sonrise.

Wrapping things up is the title track, ‘Sonrise’. Probably the most intense track on the album, the song has some aggressive verses, but also the most memorable tune. The duo don’t lose any of their flair ending the song on a guitar solo which spins itself out of control and crashes into a black hole of distortion. Both of these musicians continued on in the Scandinavian metal scene, more notably Ole, who played guitar on Extol’s first three albums (Dalbakk became the vocalist of Vardøger). Watching Dalbakk’s band cover ‘You Maintain’ almost fifteen years later evokes the deep sense of nostalgia this record carries, and you don’t even need to have ‘been there’ to appreciate it.



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user ratings (23)
4.2
excellent


Comments:Add a Comment 
Emim
March 22nd 2013


35439 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Sweet, glad you reviewed this. One of my favorite melodeath albums and dm in general.



Also I agree with captain about that sentence.

evilford
March 23rd 2013


64487 Comments


Nice review. Not sure this would be my cup o tea but pos'd anyway good descriptions

FrozenVain
March 24th 2013


3043 Comments


I love this kind of old-school melodic dm stuff so I will check it out. Very nice review, pos'd.

DrHouseSchuldiner
May 10th 2013


5642 Comments


Looks like something i'd enjoy ....gotta check tonight

Source
July 8th 2019


19917 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Legit one of the best dm albums ever. For some reason I thought this didn't have a review

Space Jester
July 8th 2019


11036 Comments


Hmm so is this more like early melodeath before it became watered down?

Source
July 8th 2019


19917 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

It's like really slow melodeath with awesome harmonized leads. You'll dig

Space Jester
July 8th 2019


11036 Comments


Interesting, I will check today I think. Speaking of underrated melodeath, have you heard Cenotaph - Riding Our Black Oceans?

Source
July 8th 2019


19917 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

I have not

Source
November 6th 2019


19917 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

greatest album ever made

DePlazz
November 10th 2019


4498 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Haven't heard this.

Source
November 11th 2019


19917 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

the leads make me want to assume a fetal position and cry

DePlazz
November 11th 2019


4498 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Excellent stuff. I like how A Father's Mourning reminds me of early Anathema.

Source
November 11th 2019


19917 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

share the love and rec this album to people

DePlazz
November 11th 2019


4498 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Well I'll start by 4-ing it.

Source
November 11th 2019


19917 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

i'm waiting

Demon of the Fall
November 12th 2019


33957 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Here, Schaliach can have their first 3.5 (don't look at me like that Source). I dig, it really feels like a prequel to Burial in many ways, although I prefer the execution on that one. Good stuff regardless, maybe it'll grow in time.

Source
November 12th 2019


19917 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

glad you dig

Friday13th
December 14th 2019


7623 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

This is up there with Undeceived. The last two tracks in particular.

Source
December 14th 2019


19917 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

agreed. as good as burial at least



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