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The Conductor's Departure

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Download links and information about The Conductor's Departure by Anata. This album was released in 2006 and it belongs to Rock, Black Metal, Hard Rock, Metal, Death Metal, Heavy Metal, Alternative genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 53:36 minutes.

Artist: Anata
Release date: 2006
Genre: Rock, Black Metal, Hard Rock, Metal, Death Metal, Heavy Metal, Alternative
Tracks: 10
Duration: 53:36
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Downward Spiral Into Madness 5:28
2. Complete Demise 4:29
3. Better Grieved Than Fooled 5:57
4. The Great Juggler 6:00
5. Cold Heart Forged In Hell 4:59
6. I Would Dream of Blood 5:29
7. Disobedience Pays 5:19
8. Children's Laughter 1:44
9. Renunciation 5:44
10. The Conductor's Departure 8:27

Details

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Perhaps its only natural that a band that has a PhD in their midst (this being geology master and bassist Henrik Drake, who obviously must really know how to rock!) like Sweden's Anata should specialize in composing ultra-technical, almost scientific death metal. From the very start of their career, the Varberg natives have purposefully skewed the structural conformities and amenable melodies propagated by their nearby neighbors in Gothenburg, and embraced a far more challenging yet ultimately rewarding brand of songwriting complexity — and this is certainly still the case with their fourth album The Conductor's Departure. Assembled from oftentimes oddly shaped building blocks which only start revealing their carefully measured fittings with time and repeat listens, tracks like "Complete Demise," "Cold Heart Forged in Hell" and "Renunciation," gradually ascend into unconventional edifices, as intriguing as they are surprising. Yet, at the same time, they never prove as impenetrable as Nile's murky catacombs of sound, nor as forestalling as Atheist's wacky death-jazz; but rather find a balance akin to bands like Immolation or Morbid Angel by pulling off their instrumental acrobatics with surprisingly athletic grace, despite their innate intricacies. And the closest Anata gets to relative accessibility is during doom-stricken passages found in "I Would Dream of Blood" and the plaintive midsection of "Better Grieved Than Fooled," though one still has to confront an especially dizzying musical spin-cycle in order to get to them. All of which means that Anata's music may not translate to widespread public consumption, but it's tailormade for adventure-seeing extreme music fans who demand some measure of order and attention to songwriting amid their Byzantine excesses.