ARVET

Black Metal • Finland
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Depressive black metal from Finland. This band was formed in 2005 and currently it contains only one band member, Noxifer, who handles the vocals and all other instruments all alone.
Thanks to Vehemency for the addition and graphix for the updates

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ARVET albums / top albums

ARVET Aijna album cover 4.50 | 1 ratings
Aijna
Black Metal 2011

ARVET EPs & splits

ARVET Ihmiskärsimys album cover 4.00 | 1 ratings
Ihmiskärsimys
Black Metal 2008

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ARVET Elävän Kuoleman Aamuna album cover 0.00 | 0 ratings
Elävän Kuoleman Aamuna
Black Metal 2007

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ARVET Reviews

ARVET Aijna

Album · 2011 · Black Metal
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Vehemency
It’s been four years since Arvet put out its first tape demo Elävän Kuoleman Aamuna, followed by the EP Ihmiskärsimys a year later, both releases prominently dwelling in melancholy, not unlike a plethora of other Finnish black metal acts of late times that lean toward depressive black metal without the pitifulness usually attached to the sub-genre. These bands, instead, shine with occult ideologies and on Aijna, Arvet’s first full-length, the band moves further away from evident depression, introducing a lot of dissonant melody and overall filthiness to the music. The result is something utterly possessed, yet still so beautiful.

Looking at Aijna’s roster, a grand change is visible: Noxifer is no longer the only one responsible for the instruments, as he’s joined by a full line-up of members with strong Saturnian Mist relations. A four headed assembly doesn’t, however, result in precise and professional playing, not at all; Arvet sounds filthier than ever, not only because the instruments are executed with intuitive touch (instead of sitting in the studio recording the fifteenth take of each song), but also production-wise the band still feasts on dusty, low-fidelity soundscapes.

Musically, Aijna took me by surprise right in the beginning when ”Kuoleman Äiti” crawls maliciously with seemingly almost indecipherable dissonance, until a Si Monumentum esque lead melody escorts the track with distant, haunting screams somewhere in the background. Soon after the ’proper’ black metal hits, all the fury reminding me of Verge’s Hatemagic to a great extent - not only this song, but the whole album in general. A clearer example could be ”Rukous Mestarillisen Ajatuksen Oivaltamiseksi” that fluctuates between rapid blasts and slower beats, and closer to the end the melodies rise to heart-rending beauty. In fact, this pattern seems to apply to many of the songs: starting with more rapidity, the tracks progress into quite epic melodies in the end. During first listens, these compositions say little, but after a month of regular listening, I realize they’re all done pretty damn well, including the long outro of ”Liekehtivä Dharana” in which a simple, ritualistic discordance is being repeated for multiple minutes.

If the music alone feels hard to digest, the lyrics are even a level higher. While I was pretty much able to decipher the themes of e.g. mortification on Ihmiskärsimys, Aijna goes wider and deeper into occult subjects in a way that only an advanced explorer of esoteric beliefs can comprehend. The lyrics are spewed out with true feeling by both Zetekh and Noxifer, and the actual content is an important, if not even mandatory, part of Aijna. Personally there’s a lot of unlocked doors in the maze of Aijna for me, and it’ll still take quite a long while to work out everything. But as the thing with comprehensive albums always goes, it isn't required to understand everything and that is what brings a nice charm to a record.

With its intriguing song progressions, authentic and raw sound, intricate occult imagery and symbolic lyrics blazing with ardor, I dare to say that Aijna deserves its place among other modern Finnish classics-to-come, or cult legends, such as IC Rex’s Valonkantajan Alkemia even if I’m already quite certain that - all unnecessary elitism aside - only few can see Aijna’s appeal due to its ultimately challenging nature both musically and thematically.

ARVET Ihmiskärsimys

EP · 2008 · Black Metal
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Vehemency
I don’t know what it is with recent Finnish black metal, but there seems to be a wave of occult Satanic bands that are musically closer to depressive black metal than other religious black metal bands such as Deathspell Omega. Arvet is one of these bands, dwelling in the idea of suffering as a significant part of reaching Gnosis. Is this then a cheap mixture of the two trends - suicidal and religious black metal - or what?

Be it a mixture or not, Arvet doesn’t sound cheap. Ihmiskärsimys includes three relatively slow tracks in low fidelity production that sounds more like a rehearsal recording. The music itself is, as expected, sorrowful and desolate. All the guitar melodies almost cry, if you can say so. This is particularly seen on the last track that sounds like a final exertion after all the exhaustion caused by the previous slower tracks ”Mustan Valon Kantaja” and ”Käärmeen Sana Kuolemissani”. The music is not professionally played but the fairly sloppy playing only fits to the atmosphere of powerlessness.

The lyrics are very symbolic and poetic, and it’s a shame that foreign listeners will miss them. Although, I can’t much decipher the lyrics from Noxifer’s style of frail shrieks, but luckily the lyrics are provided in the booklet. Mortification is presented as a noble idea so from this point of view Arvet is very far from the usual suicidal black metal ideology. The booklet also includes an additional poem, or should it be called some sort of a proclamation, which gives a general idea of the whole theme.

I can not find much fault with Ihmiskärsimys. Overall it’s a very enjoyable EP of authentic and emotional black metal art. It is nothing new but it satisfies my needs for this kind of music perfectly. Somehow I’m still afraid to give a higher score, maybe because I believe that Arvet will top this release later, possibly with a full-length album. We’ll see.

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