Thursday 15 June 2023

Atvm - Famine, Putrid And Fucking Endless


Labels: Self-Released/Dry Cough Records

Formats: Digital/Tape/CDr/Vinyl

Release Date: 28 Apr 2021


Tracklist:


1. Sanguinary Floating Orb

2. Ⲁⲛⲋ-ⲟⲩ Ⲙⲁⲧⲟⲩ

3. They Crawl

4. वाघनख [Vagh Nakh]

5. Squeal In Torment

6. Picture Of Decay

7. Slud

8. Finisher Of The World


It was the 10th anniversary of UK label Dry Cough Records last week. A label known for some of the best extreme doom/sludge/death metal from both the UK and abroad. The reason I mention this occasion is because it was Dry Cough that introduced me to UK progressive death metal band Atvm, through the 2022 double vinyl release of Famine, Putrid and Fucking Endless. The album had already been released by the band on tape and CDr formats a year prior, but the striking artwork that adorned the record drew me in when I first saw it. The complementing red and green LP's sealed the deal. According to Metal Archives, Atvm now makes up part of the UK roster of bands over at Transcending Obscurity Records (including Abaddon Incarnate, As The World Dies, De Profundis, Deus Vermin, The Drowning and Warcrab amongst others!).


Mid-week feels like the perfect time to dive into some progressive/slightly avant-garde old-school death metal. From the bluesy/jazzy intro of opener ‘Sanguinary Floating Orb’, you’re greeted with proper NWOBHM-style guitar, which culminates in intricate riffs. Alongside that there’s off-kilter yet bouncing percussion, growls that vary from deep to higher-pitched wails and instrumental passages filled with an abundance of musical prowess. We’re only on the first song too!


Despite Atvm’s old-school leanings, they do a great job of sounding modern (without it being forced of cheesy) and ‘Ⲁⲛⲋ-ⲟⲩ Ⲙⲁⲧⲟⲩ’ proves that with it’s melodic riffs, which could give the likes of The Black Dahlia Murder and Trivium a run for their money. This album grabs you in the right way and doesn’t let go. It’s infectious (just like the aforementioned comparisons). 


The songs are lengthy enough to get your teeth into. No pointless ambient interludes are needed as Atvm blast from one rip-roaring number to the next. ‘They Crawl’ is filled with urgency and chainsaw-like riffs, sitting at the lower end of Atvm’s spectrum. It all sounds a lot more furious and thrash-like, which is fine with me! ‘’वाघनख [Vagh Nakh]’ sees the thrash influence grow even further as it follows on from ‘They Crawl’ seemingly without a pause to speak of. This is such an infectious release, as if my previous ramblings haven’t already made that clear enough! Just when you think it’s coming to an end at the six-minute mark, things roar immediately back into life once again, closing the album’s first half out perfectly. 


The album’s second half is even more baffling in it’s directional moves, from the dank/gruesome old-school blueprint to the multi-faceted, multi-genre approach that Atvm takes on ‘Squeal In Torment’. I’m beginning to regret reviewing this record on such a warm evening. Thankfully the progressive/blues-laden mid section makes up for the over-excited armchair headbanging that’s going on right now, let alone the final-third’s majesty. That majestic vibe is quickly banished by the record’s fastest and heaviest song ‘Picture Of Decay’. Delivering Atvm’s sound at it’s most authentically old-school. Bands like Atheist and Cynic would be proud of the steps taken here to enhance a sub-genre that’s often seen as being too br00tal. Spurious claims (from myself) aside, it’s utterly brilliant from beginning to end. 


Penultimate song ’Slud’ is yet another bewildering slab of prog/tech/OS death metal that’s clearly been sent to discombobulate you as a listener. It twists and turns, pulling and pushing you in different directions. The infectious musicianship that’s been present throughout grows with each and every bar here, before the tempo slows to a gnarly doom-like crawl, reminiscent of Dry Cough’s early releases (Sea Bastard, Open Tomb, Ommadon et al) and draws to a close with a stupendous drum solo.


What’s a little curious is that the LP’s final song ‘Finisher Of The World’ isn’t available to listen to as part of the full album Bandcamp stream from either Dry Cough or Atvm themselves, so if you don’t own the LP pressing you’ll have to stream it as a standalone song via Atvm’s Bandcamp page. That’s no real hardship though. ‘Finisher Of The World’ itself borrows from the uptempo delivery of ‘Slud’, compressing everything into less than four minutes of utter death metal madness. 


At the time of writing the double LP pressing from Dry Cough Records is still available to purchase, so it’s definitely worth hitting buy on if you haven’t already. If (like me) it’s the first release you’ve discovered by Atvm, you won’t be disappointed. I can’t wait for more from them in the future.


You can stream and digitally purchase the album, and also stream 'Finisher Of The World' from Atvm below:-




Vinyl copies are still available from Dry Cough Records here - https://www.drycoughrecords.com/product/atvm-famine-putrid-and-fucking-endless-2lp-dc61


Atvm - https://www.facebook.com/AtvmOfficial

Dry Cough Records - https://www.facebook.com/DryCoughRecords

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