Cover of Horde Hellig Usvart
Robutti

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For fans of black metal, lovers of christian metal, enthusiasts of metal history, and those curious about genre hybridity in heavy music.
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LA RECENSIONE

The world is crazy, but we already knew that. Post-modernity has abolished pure concepts in art and celebrated hybridization. But we knew this too.

What we would never have expected, at least in the '90s, was to come across a band of furious and angry Black Metal with the habit of proposing clearly Christian and anti-Satanist messages. Initially, it was thought to be a prank organized by some joker or, in the worst case, the creation of some schizophrenic.

Black Metal, and today even stones know this, was born as THE demonic genre par excellence within the whole of Heavy Metal. From the forerunners Venom, Celtic Frost, and Bathory, to Scandinavian champions like Mayhem and Darkthrone.

Someone, however, intended to play that music but expose a message diametrically opposed to that of a Euronymous or en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horde_(band) of a Burzum. I learned only a few years ago about the existence of Antestor: the first "Black Metal" band close to Christianity. But in 1996 no one knew anything about it.

This record, which I finally had the opportunity to listen to in full, is a real kick in the balls. Murderous speed, deadly blast beats, infernal screams (despite the aforementioned anti-Satanic belief) and a chill that only the masters Darkthrone have managed to generate. Darkthrone, of course, are the primary source of inspiration for the mysterious Horde. "Hellig Usvart" is influenced by the fury and harrowing melancholy of works such as "A Blaze in The Northern Sky" and "Transilvanian Hunger". Add to all this some references to Brutal and Grindcore.

Blind and ruthless violence. Not very original and not even innovative.

It was discovered, over the years, that "Anonymous" (leader and the only stable member of the formation) was a Christian metal musician, Australian and active with both the prolific Mortification and the doomster Paramecium.

Do you want to know the titles of some Christian Black Metal tracks? Here you go: "Invert the Inverted Cross" (laughter!), "Silence the Blasphemous Chanting" or "Weak, Feeble and Dying Anti-Christ". I repeat: nothing innovative or extraordinary. Certainly, this little disc gained followers and today, as you may already know, Lord-blessed Black Metal is a reality in constant growth.

Curious and certainly a forerunner of an entire genre.

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Summary by Bot

Horde’s 1996 album Hellig Usvart surprises with its furious black metal sound paired with clear Christian and anti-Satanic messages. Inspired heavily by Darkthrone and early Scandinavian black metal, it combines brutal speed and harsh vocals. Though it lacks originality or innovation, the album stands as a pioneering force in the development of Christian black metal. The mysterious anonymous leader connects to other influential Christian metal acts, making this release both curious and significant in metal history.

Tracklist

01   A Church Bell Tolls Amidst the Frozen Nordic Winds (01:02)

02   Blasphemous Abomination of the Satanic Pentagram (00:47)

03   Behold, the Rising of the Scarlet Moon (03:22)

04   Thine Hour Hast Come (04:05)

05   Release and Clothe the Virgin Sacrifice (05:37)

06   Drink From the Chalice of Blood (03:59)

07   Silence the Blasphemous Chanting (05:37)

08   Invert the Inverted Cross (03:10)

09   An Abandoned Grave Bathes Softly in the Falling Moonlight (05:09)

10   Crush the Bloodied Horns of the Goat (02:24)

11   Weak, Feeble, Dying, Antichrist (03:32)

12   The Day of Total Armageddon Holocaust (01:42)

Horde

Horde is an Australian one-person black metal project best known for the album Hellig Usvart (1994). The project's sole member used the pseudonym "Anonymous" (publicly identified as Jayson Sherlock) and presented explicit Christian lyrics within a black metal sound.
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