Review from Doom-Metal.com

February 16, 2015
From: Doom-metal.com
Published: February 14, 2015

Atten Ash hail from North Carolina, and both they and this debut album have been around longer than you might think. Originally founded by James Greene - clean vocals, guitar, bass, drums - the line-up was completed in 2011 by Barre Gambling (founder of Daylight Dies, amongst others) on guitars and keyboards, along with growl vocalist Archie Hunt (from Black Metallers Legion Of The Fallen). The trio then went on to complete Greene's initial compositions, then record and digitally self-release 'The Hourglass' in 2012. It would be fair to say that it didn't meet with astronomic success at the time, though it did reach the ear of independent Canadian label Hypnotic Dirge Records at some point, leading to this 2015 re-release. 

Essentially the same 2012 material, with running order shifted around a little, 'The Hourglass' now comes as a tidily-presented digipack with booklet insert. Layout photos, a mixed collection of suitably moody black-and-white images, were supplied by (EchO)'s drummer Paolo, and form a backdrop to the included lyrics. A simple scan of that presentation will give you a pretty good idea what to expect: aside from the opening 'City In The Sea' (adapted from Poe's poem of the same name), the tracks cover a gamut of familiar topics - isolation, pain, futility, the inevitability of death - and reading them reveals a style and format which straightaway conjures the thought of them being delivered by Jonas Renkse. 

Indeed, that early Katatonia style of melancholic guitar-and-vocal-led Death/Doom is basically where Atten Ash set their starting point, though the full and mature, melodic sound points just a little further forward than the usual 'Brave Murder Day' likeness: think more along the lines of 'Discouraged Ones', or even 'Tonight's Decision'. And if that sounds something like the way you'd describe Daylight Dies, there's a good reason for that, and not exclusively because of the overlap in guitarists: both bands fall quite squarely in the 'European sound' bracket. Atten Ash, particularly, even come quite close to Draconian's atmospheric, Gothic sound in places - though the latter's sister-band Doom: Vs is perhaps a more consistent comparator. 

But that's (more than) enough on the name-dropping front: yes, this'll be well-known territory to most - the important thing is, though, how well it's traversed. And in this respect, Atten Ash are playing with the full deck. As expected, veteran guitarist Gambling is a huge asset, always ready to cut loose with a trademark soaring guitar lead to liven things up. Less of a foregone conclusion is the presence of the lesser-known members, but there, too, they score high. Greene's compositions, bar the occasional overindulgent passage, are strong, mixing up the slow and stately atmospheric moments with pacier interjections, finding room for choral features and keyboard inserts: maintaining the essentially depressive, bleakly emotional pressure of the music without ever allowing it to become stale or tedious. The raw, strained growled vocals of Hunt contribute a powerful and welcome contrast to Greene's more lamenting, plaintive clean tones; the balance between the two again helping to keep the album from the monotony that can plague weaker examples of the genre. 

In fact, there isn't a weak track on 'The Hourglass': they all have something of interest to offer, generally in the interplay between guitar leads and riffs to shape the progress of the song, or in the emotive vocal shadings - even when those, paradoxically, are delivered with an almost deadpan lack of nuance. That's used to good effect in the harsh parts of 'Born', whose complex, changing tapestry provides my personal highlight, though the slow and sadly majestic title track and the growling misery of 'See You...Never' come close to taking that title. 

There are some minor criticisms which could be made: I would have liked a little more spaciousness and clarity to the mix (there's no mention of remastering, so this is presumably the original sound, and sometimes feels a little indistinctly compacted). The drums err somewhat on the lightweight: whether they are actually programmed isn't stated, but there's certainly some of that mechanical, high-treble deadness to them, and the occasional fallback to some high-bpm pounding at oddly distracting moments. Finally, for those who highly value originality: the longest suit here is definitely great execution of the familiar, rather than innovation into the unique. They are quite petty niggles, though, and ones which shouldn't seriously divert anyone in search of a refreshing fix of Death/Doom that can sit comfortably beside established classics. To me, the only mystery is how this didn't gain more acclaim initially: let's hope this reissue, deservedly, corrects that particular injustice. 

Rating: 8/10
Reviewed by: Mike Liassides
 

Review from Moonspell Rites Promotion

February 13, 2015
From: Moonspell Rites Promotions
Published: February 13, 2015

However being released in 2012 once as a digital version,Hypnotic Dirge Records brings you now this fabulous masterpiece in physical  format.

The band consists out of mastermind Barre Gambling(guitars.keyboards) who is an old veteran in Daylight Dies.James Greene (Clean vocals,guitars,bass,drums),Archie Hunt(Grunt,Harsh vocals).

What is there to say about the music.First of all you immediately can hear some resemblances wi...

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Review from Dead Rheteric

January 28, 2015
From: Dead Rheteric
Published: January 27, 2015

Talk about a buried treasure! Atten Ash is made up of founder James Greene (who contributes drums, bass, guitar, and clean vocals) alongside Daylight Dies’ Barre Gambling (who provides guitar and keys) and Legion of the Fallen’s Archie Hunt (who does the growling). Originally released independently back in 2012, The Hourglass somehow avoided everyone’s radar (though how remains a mystery upon hearing it), Hypnotic Dirge Records ...

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Review from Doom Metal Heaven

January 22, 2015
From: Doom Metal Heaven
Published: January 21, 2015

Hailing from North Carolina, Atten Ash create intoxicating death-doom that blends the majestic freedom and expressiveness of Hamferd with the heavyweight despondency of Daylight Dies. The latter connection is hardly surprising, with Barre Gambling, founding guitarist of Daylight Dies, wielding the axe here.

Atten Ash are generous guys, it seems. They pack a hell of a lot of ideas into each song, resulting in an extremely rich and f...

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  Released: February 19, 2015
500 Copies
Genre: Melodic Death-Doom Metal

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