We’ve updated our Terms of Use to reflect our new entity name and address. You can review the changes here.
We’ve updated our Terms of Use. You can review the changes here.

The One Great Curse

by Lucifuge

/
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.

about

"The One Great Curse is a 40-minute thrash-fuelled piece of old school black metal, very much in the Venom and Under the Sign of the Black Mark-era Bathory vein. Somewhat more straightforward than Lucifuge’s previous outings, particularly their debut, The One Great Curse is, above all else, a fun listen. There is a real energy to the record, which you feel the moment the first thrashy riff drops about a minute into opener “Among Dead Gods.” For the first half of the record, there’s little you can do to stop your head from banging along to the dual guitar attack, while the simple but effective work on drums from Xavi pounds away beneath Equinox’s gravelly, barked vocals, which have a heavy dollop of Quorthon about them. As combinations go, this is a hard one to argue with." - Angry Metal Guy

"There is no such thing as bad production, especially in an age where anyone with a decent interface and a little time to invest in watching YouTube videos can put together a clean and polished sounding album. In these times especially, there are only bad production choices. The way in which the music is presented to the world should help tell the story behind it, put it in context, and fit with the style.

Release date: February 2nd, 2020. Label: Self-Released
The latest output by German one-man black metal act Lucifuge provides a perfect case study for this wildly captivating phenomenon. The production on The One Great Curse is, well, cursed. It’s choppy, inconsistent – at times the drums are too loud, sometimes the vocals are muddled, the bass gets buried – you name it. In fact, it sounds like a handful of demo tracks cobbled together into a makeshift album release, and it absolutely works in the album’s favor.

Album opener, “Among Dead Gods” would absolutely not work as well as it does without the over-compressed kick drums booming obnoxiously over everything or the de-tuned guitar making the whole track sound like a well-worn cassette with it’s tape being stretched to capacity. Of course, all the correct production choices in the world won’t make up for bad music, but Lucifuge delivers in that department, as well. The riffs are fairly simple and mostly inspired from old Venom and early Bathory. Lucifuge nails the timing and changes – giving the riffs plenty of time to sink in without overdoing the repetition, and, unlike its primary inspirations, progresses the song into an extended bridge built on even more snarling guitar work from both the rhythm and leads.

“Dogs From Hell” plays like a blackened, fukk’d homage to Motörhead and Tank. Simple and anthemic, it is no less effective at keeping the energy bar set high following the first track. “Predestination For The Labyrinth” slows things down a hair, but absolutely nails the sinister mid-tempo of Bathory’s “Necromancy” and “Raise The Dead.” With so much worship going on, it kind of begs the question: why not just listen to Bathory or Venom? What’s so captivating about The One Great Curse for me is how Lucifuge manages to take all the great aspects of their muses and rework them so masterfully. “Sons Of Belial” just stretches the riff to the very brink of over-repetition before making subtle changes – it’s all based off one relatively simplistic riff (with an intro that sounds like Vader’s “The Final Massacre” – and I cannot overstate how overlooked the Necrolust demo is in the discussion of first-wave black metal) that slowly alters and changes palm-muting patterns as its claws twist and sink into the brain before a flurry of soloing works its way deeper into the finer crevices.

If you’re looking for the most fukk’d sounding track, “Chambers Of Lust” should absolutely do the trick. Largely Venom-esque in its riff and attitude, the production takes a turn for the worse (better?) with everything peaking out deep in the reds. It’s the way heavy metal should sound – pushing the limits with everything louder than everything else. It’s no fault here that the worthless attempts of mere mortals fail to capture the sheer loudness and intensity of Lucifuge; after all, they’re backed by The Fallen One Himself.

As important as the production may be to the delivery of The One Great Curse, it is no substitute for good riffs, high energy, and the passion that makes it such a fun turn through the earliest days of black metal and what made it so much fun in the first place. It would be unfair to give full credit to the recording process, however, there’s no way it would be as much fun if it played it safe in the production department. It could be argued that such a process is disingenuous, but I can think of nothing more genuine than presenting the songs in the manner in which they were meant to be heard. The One Great Curse is the pure speed and attitude of first wave black metal, and every choice made serves the spirit of the style." - Your Last Rites.

"Bremen’s own LUCIFUGE are one of the busiest bees in Metal at the moment. Only one year after their album “Der Antichrist”, Equinox is already back with a new album. “The One Great Curse” is on the one hand pretty constant, as any instruments were played by Equinox himself and recorded by Mr. Mikey Hanson again. But on the other hand the new songs are a little bit more mature in comparison to “Der Antichrist”. It just seems that Equinox has explored his boundaries. The result is of course still very close to the primordial Black Thrash feeling of the 1980s, including the somehow punkish attitude, feeling and vocals. Maybe the MOTÖRHEAD vibes was winded down a little bit, luckily not on cost of the rudeness. Thus “The One Great Curse” will still please any old fashioned Black Thrasher and lover of the prime elementary force of the old bands. Asides from the indulgence, the variability of the songs still is the great strength of LUCIFUGE. There are those snotty Black Thrashers like ‘Predestination For The Labyrinth’ or ‘Chambers Of Lust’ or punkish smashers like the opening double of ‘Among Dead Gods’ and ‘Dogs From Hell’. But the brake is pulled a little more to underline the power of the riff. Just listen to ‘Conjuration Of Destruction’ with its continental 80s Thrash vibe or the massive ‘Diabolically Divine’ with its Doom beat. And the decent nod to ‘Hell Awaits’ at the beginning of the B-side opener ‘Sons Of Belial’ should normally say it all. In the end, ‘The Final War’ surprises with an acoustic guitar in the intro piece before it picks up a more doomy and massive beat. So, with “The One Great Curse” LUCIFUGE have a second great album in their discography that should not be missed." Voices From The Darkside.

credits

released February 2, 2020

Recorded from August until October 2019 at the Lucifuge Bunker.
Guitars, Keyboards, Drums and Vocals - Equinox.
Recorded by Mikey Hanson and Equinox.
Mastered by Necromansy Studio

license

all rights reserved

tags

about

Lucifuge Bremen, Germany

Lucifuge is a Black / Thrash Metal band inspired by the first wave of Black Metal and NWOBHM.

shows

contact / help

Contact Lucifuge

Streaming and
Download help

Shipping and returns

Redeem code

Report this album or account

Lucifuge recommends:

If you like Lucifuge, you may also like: