Cover of Shape of Despair Angels of Distress
OzzyRotten

• Rating:

For fans of funeral doom and doom metal, lovers of atmospheric and melancholic metal, listeners seeking deeply emotional and dark music experiences
 Share

THE REVIEW

There are thresholds of pain that one should never wish for anyone to experience.
There are pathways on dark roads, lashed by rain and cold, desperate and introverted, passive and subjective, that we would never want to tread, nor even remotely imagine.
There are atrocious demons that delight in tormenting the perfectible human being with senses and passions that have the genes of abomination and death.

All these things are the hidden and ancestral fears that each of us conceals in our hearts and within the nervous tangles of our minds. But the Shape of Despair have chosen to bring them into the open and exorcise them in the most cruel and suffocating way possible; and there is no glimmer of light, not even the faintest, nor the remotest, to illuminate the musical paths of this Scandinavian band, among the forefront of what many call "Funeral Doom."

To describe the tempos as being slow would be to call them fast, terrifying growls over bizarre and changing rhythmic structures: from powerful and super distorted riffs to simple and sublime piano touches, drowned in the densest fog of an October dawn.
This is Shape of Despair, and with this work, as far as I'm concerned, they secure the title of the band that makes the listener most uncomfortable; and I assure you that, as far as I'm concerned, there are very few bands of this kind that I know.
My Dying Bride, certainly, in their lyricism and their eternal romantic and decadent sadness, Slayer, too, in their murderous ferocity and latent cruelty, Opeth, as well, in their thorny purgatories like wild roses, in lifeless foggy plains; and then, also Shape Of Despair: fear, resignation, Despair, darkness, nothing, nothing, nothing, and there's nothing good still in what they play.

The album consists of only five songs, among which I highlight the two "pillars": "Quiet These Paintings Are" and "Angel of Distress", for their incredibly unbearable sensation of atmospheric discomfort that they manage to evoke; for a plunge into the deepest oblivion, of a senseless sleep populated by amorphous creatures ready only to engulf you in the meanders of despair and death.

Incredible, but recommended only to those who are not suicidal. You've been warned.

Loading comments  slowly

Summary by Bot

Shape of Despair's 'Angels of Distress' is a profound funeral doom album that exposes deep existential pain through slow, heavy, and atmospheric compositions. The review highlights the band's ability to evoke intense feelings of discomfort and despair, making it a challenging but rewarding listen. Key tracks like 'Quiet These Paintings Are' and 'Angel of Distress' create an immersive atmosphere of haunting melancholy. Recommended only for those ready to confront raw emotional darkness.

Tracklist Lyrics Videos

01   Fallen (06:09)

02   Angels of Distress (09:43)

03   Quiet These Paintings Are (14:39)

04   ...to Live for My Death... (17:21)

05   Night's Dew (06:58)

[instrumental]

Shape of Despair

Shape of Despair is a Finnish funeral doom metal band formed in 1995 (originally as Raven) and later renamed. Known for vast, slow-moving atmospheres and desolate melodies, their catalog includes Shades of..., Angels of Distress, Illusion’s Play, Monotony Fields, and Return to the Void.
03 Reviews