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Paradise Lost have returned with their seventeenth studio album, "Ascension," which delivers a powerful, dignified statement rather than reinvention. The album art, featuring George Frederic Watts' painting "The Court of Death," perfectly captures the album's themes of human futility and grandeur against inevitability. The music feels heavy and dark, with deliberate, unstoppable guitar riffs and Nick Holmes' potent vocal delivery, alternating between guttural roars and weary cleans with authority.
"Ascension" opens with the intense "Serpent on the Cross" and mellows into the contrasting "Tyrant’s Serenade," blending bleak verses with melodic choruses. The album's heart lies in tracks like "Salvation," a mournful lament with a mix of harsh and clean vocals, and "Silence Like the Grave," which balances despair with catchy melodies and deep growls, showcasing the band's mastery in gothic doom metal. The midsection slows the pace with hymnal, immersive tracks like "Lay a Wreath Upon the World" and the flood-like "Diluvium," before picking up the venomous momentum in "Savage Days."
Standout tracks in the latter half include "Sirens," a doom-laden gothic metal jewel with seductive melody, and "Deceivers," delivering bitter, punk-like energy. The album concludes with "The Precipice," a grim, heavy track encapsulating the album's uncompromising mood, ending the journey without catharsis but with cold confrontation.
Performance-wise, Holmes continues to refine his dual vocal style, with gutturals sharp and cleans full of weathered authority. Guitarist Gregor Mackintosh's leads define the album's mournful and cutting melodies, supported by heavy, thick rhythm work and precise drum control that creates tectonic impact without sterility. The overall production balances crushing heaviness with melodic detail.
"Ascension" is not a fast or loud album but a deeply emotional, heavy, and mature masterpiece that requires patience to appreciate fully. It is a record of ceremony, grief shaped into melody, and riffs carrying decades of experience—an album that whispers the longest and establishes Paradise Lost as masters who continue writing their future rather than resting in their past.
This album stands as a dignified, heavy, and melancholic work that remains relevant and potent, securing its place in year-end metal conversations for 2025
Last edited by inferno24 (2025-10-02 19:27:20)
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