Location: Athens
Country: Greece
Genre: Melodic Black death metal, gothic metal
Full length: Children of Eve
Format: Digital, CD, LP
(see Bandcamp link for complete information)
Label: Season Of Mist
Release date: May 2, 2025
What makes "Children of Eve" stand out is not only Nightfall's crossing over varying hues of black metal, melodic death metal and gothic rock, but also its perspective on the possibility of organized religion turning arbitrary and dictatorial, from a despondent outlook. Efthimis Karadimas, the band's vocalist since their 1991 inception, was reportedly diagnosed with depression from what I’ve read. Channeling some of it into his performance he showcases a notable vocal range that remains engaging, complementing the musicianship without becoming monotonous or weighed down.
I’ve read Nightfall’s longevity is attributed to their unpredictability between albums. While I can't speak for everything they’ve come out with, on "Children of Eve" they employ several techniques to initially guide the listener in one direction before suddenly veering into another. The first example is "I Hate" which opens with a bleak, atmospheric intro featuring tense chants and spoken word expressing bitterness over some unspoken offense to humanity. This shifts into an atmospheric guitar riff, exploding into guttural vocals and melo-death metal that’s layered with choral female voices during the choruses.
The lyrics, written in a fragmented but poetic style, dramatically blur the lines between good and evil, emphasizing chaos over order and suggesting (revealing?) a space where any and all distinction between the two dissolves. This creates a connection between themes of devotion, whether to higher ideals or apocalyptic destruction, and the gothic overtones that permeate the fusion of black and melodic death metal. It’s also possible the lyrical style is meant to create overtones of inner turmoil.
As "Children of Eve" shifts in tone with each track, from relentless Viking metal to even more bizarre, chaotic fusions of black, death and goth, something begins to emerge from the ambiguities and gray areas established earlier on the album. This emerging presence feels less mystical and more bent on pure darkness, evil desires and rampant wrath. "Inside My Head" takes another unexpected, almost existential turn, exploring inner turmoil and a desire for peace overshadowed by memories of forgotten gods sacrificed in ages past. The conflict between private darkness and longing for freedom is set to dissonant tremolo picking and heavier crunch.
"Seeking Revenge" features cold, surreal tremolo-picked intensity, angelic female vocals, and a tighter fusion of black and death metal. It portrays rising anger and a desire for retribution, edging toward a massive religious conflict. This theme of religious conflict continues on a deeper level in "For the Expelled Ones," which seemingly opens a doorway for beings emerging from the shadows of banishment by oppressive forces, finally liberated to revolt against what left them there. The existential crisis revealed earlier reappears with themes of silence and a loss of hope, but from this bleakness comes a subtle suggestion of possible rebirth.
After this, the rest of “Children of Eve” explores various forms of spiritual conflict and moral decay: greed, deception, treachery, betrayal, the desire for power and control, and the rejection of faith. Paradoxically, it also examines redemption through resistance and renewal through the darkness inherent in rebellion against injustice, especially the sanitized, whitewashed versions of it. The final track, "Christian Svengali," with its closing line “save me from religious evil,” encapsulates this ongoing spiritual struggle, an enduring quest for salvation amid all the pessimism and despair, salvation from evil and corruption in all its forms. –Dave Wolff
Lineup:
Efthimis Karadimas: Vocals
Kostas Kyriakopoulos: Guitars
Vasiliki Biza: Bass
Fotis Benardo: Drums
Track list:
1. I Hate
2. The Cannibal
3. Lurking
4. Inside My Head
5. Seeking Revenge
6. For the Expelled Ones
7. The Traders of Anathema
8. With Outlandish Desire to Disobey
9. The Makhaira of the Deceiver
10. Christian Svengali








