Angry Metal Guy
70
I love it when a rando intrigues my old bones and half-deaf ears. Especially after so many years at AMG and so many damn reviews. But even with all my years of metal knowledge and undeniable musical taste, even I can be surprised by something that floats to the top of the pit. After seeing nothing of interest for a July 12th release date, I summoned Leviathan to tread the waters and bring forth something that would possess me and give my arthritic hands the strength to write. What that majestic creature brought up to the shore was the third full-length album from Vanessa Funke. This one-person band has been around for some time, releasing albums, singles, and splits, and yet has remained hidden by all those who’ve secured large label deals. But, for better or worse, her promo for Void has made it into the hands of grumpy, ole Grier.
After exploring Vanessa Funke’s previous material, one thing is apparent: Funke is an incredible instrumentalist, from clean and acoustic guitars to distorted ones, piano, and keys. Incorporating folk with melodic death and atmospheric black metal, her songwriting appears to have no limitations. For instance, after combining all these elements in an Alcestian way (including vicious rasps and distant cleans) on the debut record, Solitude, Funke completely changed course for last year’s Dawn. With only two songs in forty minutes, Dawn explores similar territories to October Falls’ brilliant acoustic compilation, Kaarna. Mostly instrumental, Funke shows off some impressive skills on the acoustic guitar and piano to paint a beautiful tapestry of blissful nature. Now, she’s back with perhaps the heaviest and most intricate record she’s ever created.
Void by Vanessa Funke
The back-to-back opening tracks roll into one another to introduce Void. “The First Word” begins with acoustic guitars, piano, and low whispers before the distortion introduces the atmoblack elements. It alternates between calming sections and a chugging riff on the back half before handing the baton to “Broken Ground.” With this track, the album gains steam as the guitar and key solos push this ditty to a climax of distant, overlapping clean/rasping vocals. When we arrive at “Infelicity,” the intensity increases ten-fold as Funke reaches for other influences. After opening with the standard acoustic guitars and soft vocals, the song transitions to a Insomnium-inspired melodeath charge that shows the diversity and power provided by the guitars, drums, and gnarly growls. But this eight-plus-minute track becomes more interesting when we pass through a Dark Tranquillity-like riff and vocal approach before closing with the crushing machine-gun fire of the guitars and drums—making this track the most rounded and pleasing of the bunch.
Other highlights are “Blood on My Hands” and the closer, “Closing the Book.” These two tracks are the black sheep of the album, showing another twist in Vanessa Funke’s approach and making it difficult to tie it to even a couple of genres. “Blood on My Hands” is cool because of its tone, using a muddled distortion for the guitars and vocals. Not to mention the completely unexpected midpoint where you’re hit square in the face with a trumpet lead. Throughout, that nifty distortion remains, giving the song a unique character compared to the rest of the tracks. “Closing the Book” is special because Funke invites the Rinke brothers from Germany’s melodeath outfit, Storm Unleashed. Magnus Rinke lends some clean vocals to pair with Funke’s, while Lukas Rinke contributes some flugelhorn to this beautiful track. Marcus’ part is gorgeous, giving off some While Heaven Wept vibes that work beautifully on a Funke song.
I can hear it already (and have already from other staffers), you don’t like Funke’s distant clean vocals. Get over it. It’s traditional to the style and with hopeful passages like those in “The Funeral” and “Closing the Book,” there are a lot of Alcestisms where it works. That said, the vocals were more dominant in Solitude, which I prefer. Funke’s guitar, bass, drums, and piano skills are impressive, and the stories the instruments tell deserve their limelight. The major downfall of an album with over an hour of material is when song introductions are predictable. Solitude was similar, but it had enough variation when introducing songs that I didn’t notice it so much. Regardless of the song, you’re sure to get clean/acoustic guitars and piano to kick things off, where the real differences between the songs come later. Once you experience Void, you’ll also wish for better dynamics to capture the performances even more. None of these criticisms cripple the album by any means because this band is an underappreciated treasure for those who like moods, impressive guitar work, and albums you can lose yourself in.
Rating: 3.5/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: WAV
Label: Liminal Dread Productions
Website: vanessafunke.bandcamp.com
Releases Worldwide: July 12th, 2024
The post Vanessa Funke – Void Review appeared first on Angry Metal Guy.
Tue Jul 09 15:59:33 GMT 2024