A Year With No Summer

2016 studio album by Obsidian Kingdom From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Year With No Summer is the second studio album by Barcelona-based band Obsidian Kingdom. It is a concept album featuring seven songs that draw from a diverse range of styles including alternative rock, drone, black metal, progressive rock, post-metal and electronica.[1][2][3] The album was recorded, mixed, mastered and produced in September 2015 by Jaime Gómez Arellano at Orgone Studios in London, and co-produced by Jorge Mur and the band itself.[4]

ReleasedMarch 11, 2016
RecordedSeptember 2015 at
Orgone Studios, London
Length43:12
Quick facts Studio album by Obsidian Kingdom, Released ...
A Year With No Summer
Studio album by
ReleasedMarch 11, 2016
RecordedSeptember 2015 at
Orgone Studios, London
GenreProgressive metal, post-metal, post-rock
Length43:12
LabelSeason of Mist
ProducerJaime Gomez Arellano
Obsidian Kingdom chronology
Mantiis
(2012)
A Year With No Summer
(2016)
Meat Machine
(2020)
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The album was released by Season of Mist on March 11, 2016, with artwork designed by Ritxi Ostáriz[5] and Elena Gallen.[6] A different cover was created for each of the different physical formats, all of them presenting a different glitch variation on an original picture by French photographer Mathieu Bernard-Reymond.[4] The release received generally favorable reviews from critics, who praised its complexity and gloomy sound.[2][7]

A Year With No Summer features the collaboration of Ulver's singer Kristoffer Rygg in the song "10th April" and Mayhem's Attila Csihar in "The Kandinsky Group".[8] The digipak and jewelcase editions feature a hidden track that consist of a stripped-down bossanova rendition of the track "Darkness" by Jr Morgue.[4]

Style

A Year With No Summer is noted for featuring a much different sound approach than the band's debut Mantiis (especially in the vocal field, with a register often compared to that of Genesis' Peter Gabriel and Phil Collins),[8][9] however retaining its variety and difficult classification.[10] The critics also pointed out the decrement of extreme metal resources such as blast beats and death growls in favor of a more accessible sound.[1]

In respect of the wide range of styles and genres displayed in the album, Loudwire wrote that "A Year Without Summer will appeal to fans of My Bloody Valentine, Pharmakon and Cult of Luna. Not any of them — all three."[11]

Critical reception

More information Review scores, Source ...
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Angry Metal GuyStarStarStarStar[12]
Heavy Blog is HeavyStarStarStarHalf star[13]
Metal HammerStarStarStarStarStarStar[14]
TerrorizerStarStarStarStar[15]
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A Year With No Summer was met with positive reviews that highlighted its general aura of disenchantment and resignation,[16][7] its thematic depth,[17][18] and the bold shift in style from the band's debut,[9][19] while a few critics found this turn to feel bland and disappointing.[20][21] Regarding Obsidian Kingdom's sophomore's apparent softening, PROG stated that "Boiled down to easy-to-swallow essentials, there’s a mainstream and very marketable album in here just bursting to get out."[22]

Track listing

All tracks are written by Obsidian Kingdom.

More information No., Title ...
No.TitleLength
1."A Year With No Summer"6:25
2."10th April"4:48
3."Darkness"7:08
4."The Kandinsky Group"10:31
5."The Polyarnik"2:41
6."Black Swan"4:10
7."Away/Absent"7:25
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Personnel

References

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