As our personal and societal darkness thicken, one should not be surprised that bands and records will follow that and wallow in the misery. It’s not that our current environment never has happened before, but it’s the first time it’s happened to a lot of us. The downward slopes in our lives, as a result, feel more pronounced, and recovery comes much slower.
Death/doom hybrid Solystalgia emerge with a self-titled debut record that dig into loss, atrocities and the weight we carry from these things, and that power spreads over 37 economical minutes like a heavy gloom blanket. We said doom/death, and while your mind might wander to My Dying Bride or Paradise Lost, this band is doing something much different with similar elements. This is even darker stuff, heavier, tilting more toward the death aspect, which only makes sense considering we’re mining morose territory. The band—vocalist Paul Black, guitarist/bassist Wilco, drummer Austin Wheeler (Tanner Anderson joins on guest vocals)—never pulls back on their expressions, both musically and emotionally, and everything that you hear makes you pay a toll that could help alleviate the emotions inside of you that have left existential bruising.
“Procession” is an orchestral, moody opening, a quick introduction to set the scene, moving into “Funeral” that instantly pours doom smoke. Howls wrench as the sooty underbelly spreads, the playing slipping into a frozen gaze, the guitars spiraling and attacking. The pace trudges as the growls bury, and then everything explodes into dust, the energy moving into the clouds. “Wake” is an instrumental bridge, the atmosphere swelling, stars mixing into the clouds, fading into “Conflagration” that’s instantly dour. The guitars attack as the chugging pace crushes rock, a gasp of calm gushing as the soloing catches fire. The guitars turn into isolated sorrow, and then the howls crash, the pace picking up and unleashing electricity, the playing cascading into a tingling end. “Reflection” is a third, final instrumental with sounds basking in light, echoes shattering, voices warbling in your mind, clouds spreading through the skies.
“Collapse” opens with the drums rousing, guitars flooding, howls wrenching as your skeletal structure ruptures. The vision crystalizes and moves into black metal territory, creaky howls lash, and tornadic forces uproot trees, the drums mashing and a metallic glow warming. “Entropic” is the longest track, running 10:25, turning up the heat, howls crushing and smearing, the guitars circling as they swim through psychological pain. Ashen guitars spread as melodies flood, the force leaves you dizzy, and the screams lash from the shadows. Doom spills guts as dual guitars melt, psychedelic waters trickle, and the mood drains stars. Closer “Acceptance” opens with acoustics and softer singing, the guitars beginning to buzz, a folkish surge dousing with rustic spirits. Leads burn brightly as the guitars simmer, voices murmur as the growls mix with clean singing. Guitars cut as chatter settles, outdoor noises bleeding through the speakers, fading into time.
Solystalgia are off to a promising start with their stunning self-titled debut record, and adventure that rouses and carries you through the woods and streams, fresh, cold air in your lungs. The dark subject matter is woven generously into these songs, helping you feel every bit of what went into creating these eight songs. This has power you can feel in your mind and body, and it has a lot of offer emotionally that it could help release the pressure valve inside of you.
For more on the band, go here: https://solystalgia.bandcamp.com/
To buy the album, go here: https://namelessgraverecords.com/collections/nameless-grave-records-releases
For more on the label, go here: https://namelessgraverecords.com/



















