Review from The Headbanging Moose
Posted by Hypnotic Dirge Records on Wednesday, April 30, 2025 Under: English
From: The Headbanging Moose
Published: February 5, 2025
Canada’s own Atmospheric Doom/Death/Post-Metal entity returns with another imposing album, exploring the concept of duality, flowing between slow and faster songs while highlighting the contrasts in death and doom.
Named after Siberia’s northernmost city, Норильск in Russian, home to the world’s largest heavy metals smelting complex, Gatineau/Hull, Quebec-based Atmospheric Doom/Death/Post-Metal band Norilsk blends slow and crushing riffs, death growls, icy melodies and atmospheric arrangements in their music, drawing inspiration from the 1990’s doom-death scene, while incorporating a heavy dose of eclectic and contemporary influences. Now in 2025 the band formed of Nic Miquelon on vocals and bass, Tom Hansen and Matt MacIvor on the guitars, and Nick Richer on drums and backing vocals is back with their third full-length opus, titled Antipole, the first album to be recorded by all four members of the band. Mixed and mastered by James Plotkins at Plotkinsworks, with drums recorded and mixed at Wolf Lake Studios by Mike Bond with assistance from JP Sadek and edited and mixed in The Bond Cave, guitars and bass recorded by Tom Hansen, vocals recorded by Topon Das at Apartment 2 Studios, and displaying a classy artwork by Adam Burke of Nightjar Illustrations, Antipole is also the first record that Norilsk have been extensively rehearsing, and working on the arrangements together before entering the studio, resulting in a much bolder, tighter and heavier opus than their previous releases.
The metallic sounds blasted by Nic, Tom and Matt match perfectly with the hammering drums by Nick in the title-track Antipole, exploding into a darkened feast of Doom Metal with deep, devilish vociferations, followed by D’ombre et de glace (l’asphyxie), which is French for “of shadow and ice (asphyxiation)”, another rumbling creation by the quartet overflowing doom and fear led by the striking riffs by Tom and Matt. And Locus Sanctus, or “holy place” from Latin, starts in a sinister, serene manner before the band smashes their sonic weapons once again, resulting in one of the most sluggish songs of the album, with Nick stealing the show with his thunderous beats.
Nunataks, from Inuit nunataq, is the summit or ridge of a mountain that protrudes from an ice field or glacier that otherwise covers most of the mountain or ridge, and the band puts the pedal to the metal musically speaking, offering a thrilling fusion of Doom and Death Metal with captivating Post-Metal elements. Then get ready for an intense ten-minute musical voyage entitled La chute du géant, or “the fall of the giant” from French, kicking off in the most lugubrious, pensive way and flowing smoothly while at the same time piercing our minds mercilessly until its ethereal finale. In La fonte, or “the source”, Norilsk go full Post-Metal, with the heavy bass by Nic walking hand in hand with the classic drums by Nick, albeit not too exciting in the end. And lastly we have Un chant pour les morts, or “a song for the dead”, a pure Doom Metal onrush sounding absolutely heavy and grim thanks to the raspy roars by Nic.
The quartet has assembled a brand new chapter in their discography with Antipole, building on the characteristics that made Norilsk what it is today while offering something undeniably contemporary, with its slow doomy riffs, cold melodies, recognizable death growls, and a hint of Post-Metal atmosphere brought by a dual guitar interplay. Exploring the concept of duality, the album flows between slow and faster songs, and highlights the contrasts in death and doom, with its beauty and tragedy, harshness and fragility, light and darkness, reality and fiction, and its gravity and ethereality. Hence, don’t forget to get in touch with Norilsk on Facebook and on Instagram for more of their music, news and tour dates, to stream their music on Spotify, and to purchase Antipole from Norilsk’s own BandCamp, or from the Hypnotic Dirge Records’ BandCamp, EU store (and if I were you, I would go for the more than special CD + merch bundle), or Canada/US store, letting their doomed, heavy and pensive creations penetrate dep inside your blackened soul.
Rating: 3.5/5
Reviewed by: Gustavo Scuderi
In : English