COVER IMAGE
CD released: May 19, 2023

Tracklisting:
1. Mourningstar (Intro)
2. Astrologer
3. Each Man A Consteallation
4. Armies Of Tiamat
5. Slay The Shepherd
6. Mountain Of The Northern Kings
7. Realm Of Hades
8. Tales Of The Immortals
9. The Night Sky Beckons
NATTEHIMMEL
MOURNINGSTAR
Label: HAMMERHEART RECORDS
Cat No: HHR202314CD
Barcode: 8715392231421
Packaging: CD Digipak

Former In the Woods... members deliver epic Norwegian Black Metal to takes you into the
night sky!
It’s the moment just after the tree-root thick tangle of guitars come in and the luminous
clean vocals light up the sky while the keyboards suddenly shine from below: when the
singing enters on ‘Astrologer’, the first track of Nattehimmel’s first album 'Mourningstar', that
one might actually hear a continuation from In The Woods...’s legendary 'Omnio'
album from 1997. None of the 5 members are strangers to one another, having met before in
bands such as In The Woods... and Strange New Dawn. We guarantee that the
members regard 'Omnio' pretty highly.
Enough to revere it though? The similarity is not likely to be incidental, and anyway proves
fleeting in the context of the 8 songs on 'Mournigstar', this new union turning out
very creative in shaping their Black Metal with a variety of elements. Primarily, the vocals set
Nattehimmel apart from many other acts of this nature by including a variety of
tropes from harsh growls to monkish groans to undead rasps, plus other backing parts that
overlay the slightly echoey production with a ton of resonance. These come from
James Fogarty, who, along with the Botteri brothers, could be thought to bring a slight doom
influence to otherwise identifiable next wave Black Metal, as comes out in the
crashing low-paced riff kicking off ‘Mountain of the Northern Kings’ sort of like Isole or other
epically touched acts. Nattehimmel prove unafraid to lay off the heaviness on
that song too, letting the keyboards change to electronic sounds in the introduction and a
repeated interlude that doesn’t shift the goalposts as far as you’d think. Furthermore,
touches like the expressive solo in ‘Astrologer’ divorce 'Mourningstar' from regular Black
Metal assumptions, and one might expect little else from the diverse CVs of this group.
With members of such experience, Nattehimmel would have to be silly to mess things up,
yet one does not expect to be so impressed by the concoction boiling in this Norwegian
cauldron. Despite the very pretty nature of some melodic guitar and the lush keys that serve
multiple purposes, the riffs lift every song to stateliness despite not having many
apiece, while the vocal styles have been judged well enough to smother this cake with icing.
Forget the surrogate for now, because Nattehimmel is about to give us something
really special.

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