Country: Sweden
Genre: Pagan black metal
Full length: Sword of Vengeance
Format: Digital album, digipak CD, vinyl (see Bandcamp link for more information)
Label: Immortal Frost Productions
Release date: June 27, 2025
Three years after “Loka Mær,” Swedish black metallers Mara revive the old crypts and uncover what lies within on “Sword of Vengeance.” The band maintains their raw approach, recording lead vocals live in the studio to craft a deliberately underproduced sound that heightens its gritty atmosphere, evoking the agony of a reanimated mind trapped in a stiffening, rigor mortis-ridden body.
In my review of “RÖK,” I observed how modern recording technology, when used skillfully, can authentically capture rawness and even make it presentable. The eight tracks on Sword of Vengeance initially required multiple listens to fully sink in, but now they convincingly evoke the lo-fi aesthetic of early black metal, from a time when bands had limited budgets and resources to work with, relying on rawness they produced as their defining trait. The enduring popularity and inspiration of this approach are evident, as Mara’s sophisticated simplicity continues to evolve toward greater darkness and decay.
There's palpable atmosphere functioning as a backdrop to the pervasive rawness. Hints of Swedish black metal reinforce the rot and decay, subtly supporting the overall sense of physical deterioration portrayed here. The material’s writing, performance, and recording evoke a visceral sense of cold as the crypt door swings open, the stench of centuries of rot, and the corpse that calls this crypt home. You can feel it, smell it, see it, even feel his physical and mental pain as his movements are hindered by the effects of time on a dead body.
The layers are organically crafted through the searing harmony of power chords and tremolo picking, the relentless combined drive of bass and drums, and the anguished, agonized quality of the vocals, all of which deepen the album’s dehumanizing atmosphere. One reviewer compared Mara to Czech black metal bands like Maniac Butcher, which makes sense since their obscurity allowed them to push their raw quality to the extreme in the mid-90s. However, despite the prominence of Mara’s raw sound, their recent albums demonstrate that it's not a limitation on them.
There are quite a few moments when they show how capable they are of transcending their rawness when needed. The band cleverly leverage the intensity of their blast, crafting guitar parts as soporific as they’re sharply incisive. This allows Mara to captivate the listener like modern-day snake charmers, amplifying their tortured visceral qualities with narcotic ingenuity. -Dave Wolff
Lineup:
Vindsval: Vocals, guitars, bass
J: Guitars
P: Drums
Track list:
1. Primordial Son
2. Nidingr
3. Elite
4. Lokabrenna
5. Élivágar
6. Blakkr Heart
7. Urkraft
8. Surtaloga

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