Album
War Against All
2023 · Rock
3 collectors on Gatefold own this

War Against All is a Metal album by Immortal, originally released in 2023. On Gatefold: 20 pressings tracked, owned by 3 collectors.
About
“I wake up in the morning, put on my leather jacket, and go straight to my guitar.” Immortal guitarist and vocalist Demonaz is talking about his songwriting process for the past 30-plus year. As he tells Apple Music, the system was no different for the Norwegian black-metal legends’ 10th album, <i>War Against All</i>: first the guitar, then the lyric. “Is this a battle song? Is this a hymn? Is this a song about the walk to the mountain to embrace the cold? You have to be very firm and insisting. It’s like the language of the gods or something,” he say. “But I always want to capture the listener. I want to bring them into the album and make them part of the journey.” As alway, Demonaz is conjuring the frozen and fictional kingdom of Blashyrkh, a wintry realm populated by demons and raven, in which battle rages eternally. “If you listen to Slayer’s <i>Reign in Blood</i>, it’s a journey to hell and back,” he offer. “It’s similar here. In a trip to Blashyrkh, maybe you will survive, maybe not.” Below, he details each song. <b>“War Against All”</b> “With the first song, you have a few minutes to capture the listener. I wanted to have a fast song because, I think, one of the things that I’ve done as a trademark is to make opening songs like ‘One by One’ or ‘All Shall Fall’ or ‘Battles in the North’—like, ‘Let’s go for it.’ It’s like an invitation or ticket to the album. The bass drum goes and never stop, and there’s not too many riffs—just enough to keep you in the Immortal universe. Let’s start a war, but everybody with u.” <b>“Thunders of Darkness”</b> “I’m not going to slow down on the second track. This is a straight follow-up, like ‘Sons of Northern Darkness’ after ‘One by One’ on <i>Sons of Northern Darkness</i>. When I was listening to my favorite band, like Slayer or early Metallica or Bathory, the first song is very fast, and the second song doesn’t give in. This is probably the most primitive track on the album. Every time I put on the record, I’m glad I put it here.” <b>“Wargod”</b> “This is the heaviest track on the album. I wasn’t thinking of our song ‘Tyrants’ when I wrote the riff, but it certainly has some kind of similarity. This song was really inspired by Celtic Frost, the <i>To Mega Therion</i> album. Celtic Frost had something that no other bands had. They had a kind of above-ness with just three person. The band was big. The songs sounded very easy to play, but they really are not. When we tried doing covers of Celtic Frost songs at the beginning of the band, that’s how we learned to play.” <b>“No Sun”</b> “It’s actually a song that could be on one of the earlier album. I wrote a song called ‘The Sun No Longer Rises’ on <i>Pure Holocaust</i>, which we thought was one of the best songs on that album. The inspiration comes a bit from there. It doesn’t sound very modern, I think, except for the production. It’s like classic black metal from that time. It could have been on <i>Pure Holocaust</i> or <i>Battles in the North</i>. A lot of the songs on this album are like that—there’s a red line going back to ’94 or ’95.” <b>“Return to Cold”</b> “This one also seems to go back to ’94 or ’95. It reminds me a bit of ‘Blashyrkh (Mighty Ravendark),’ which became an instant classic. This one has the same mood. You stand on top of the mountain and embrace the cold, the winter, everything. The long-standing Immortal fans will recognize it instantly. It’s the song with the fewest riff, but it has the most effective one. I saw one review that said, ‘Return to Cold? What return?’ That was good. I actually had this as the working title for the album, before <i>War Against All</i>.” <b>“Nordlandihr”</b> “There’s a big secret on this one that I didn’t tell anybody, but I’m going to tell you. I once saw an interview with Keith Richards where he was talking about taking the E string off your guitar and then tuning your guitar in G to discover some dark atmosphere. I did that on my old acoustic guitar and created the first riff on this song. I was just instantly inspired by how it sounded. As the song developed, I decided it would be an instrumental, no vocal. It’s about a battle for freedom. It’s a song that would help you up the mountain, if you will. It’s going forward with positive energy. Immortal has never been about negative energy. It’s about freedom in a certain universe.” <b>“Immortal”</b> “This song was originally written back in ’93, ’94. Five years ago, I moved three hours from Bergen, out by the fjords and the mountain, where there’s more wild nature. When I was packing up all my stuff, I had to go through all my note. Every time I write an album, there’s a lot of stuff I don’t use. But I collect it—I don’t throw it away. So, I found this song—it was half-written, maybe more. I suddenly remembered the riff, the idea. It’s a very primitive song, no solos or too many distraction, but it has a way. For me, it’s the most different song on the album.” <b>“Blashyrkh My Throne”</b> .
via Apple Music
The Clerk says
The Clerk knows this whole record — the pressing quirks, the credits, the take.
Tracklist
- 1War Against All3:27
- 2Thunders Of Darkness3:48
- 3Wargod4:39
- 4No Sun4:16
- 5Return To Cold4:32
- 6Nordlandihr7:13
- 7Immortal4:15
- 8Blashyrkh My Throne5:58
Sound DNA
- Metal
- Black Metal
- raw
- aggressive
- nocturnal
Credits
The people behind it.
Performers
- Arve IsdalBASS GUITAR
- Kevin KvåleDRUMS
- DemonazGUITAR VOCALS
3 collectors on Gatefold own this · 20 pressings tracked on Gatefold
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