From the Wrong Side of the Aperture
From the Wrong Side of the Aperture | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | ||||
Released | April 3, 2009 | |||
Recorded | Chainroom Studio, Senta, Serbia | |||
Genre | Progressive metal Industrial metal Symphonic black metal | |||
Length | 50:38 | |||
Label | Noisehead Records | |||
Producer | Nikola Mijić Marjan Mijić Draconic | |||
Draconic chronology | ||||
|
From the Wrong Side of the Aperture is the second studio album of the Serbian metal band Draconic. The album was recorded in 2008, and released in 2009 through Austrian label Noisehead Records. The album marked the band's shift from symphonic black metal towards progressive metal.
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
Stormbringer | link |
Popboks | link |
Metal Monday | (favorable) link |
Trablmejker |
Track listing
All songs written and performed by Draconic.
- "Through Escape" - 5:34
- "Opaque" - 5:20
- "The Amnesia Transmissions" - 4:27
- "This Time There Would be No Witnesses" - 4:42
- "Bleak Future Trauma" - 2:09
- "The Imbecile" - 7:23
- "Murder The Distance" - 4:11
- "Of the Pulse and the Iris" - 5:11
- "Laudanum" - 12:04
Reception
The album was generally well received by the Serbian reviewers. Vladimir Ninčić of Popboks stated that From the Wrong Side of the Aperture presents the first world-class metal record from Serbia.[1] On the other hand, German Stormbringer gave this album 2.5/5 stars, praising the band's technicality and will to successfully break through the autistic Serbian metal scene, but criticized the band with the statement that the album was not a unique piece of metal, musically speaking.[2]
Personnel
- David Lazar Galić - bass guitar, vocals
- Miloš "MC Mike" Kovačević - drums
- Branislav Stanković - keyboards, vocals
- Marjan Mijić - vocals, recording, producer
- Uroš Andrijašević - guitar
- Vanja Dušan Andrijašević - guitar
Additional personnel
- Nikola Mijić - recording, producer
- Marko Galić - keyboards (on "Of the Pulse and the Iris")
- Valter Cijan - album art
References
- ^ "From The Wrong Side Of The Aperture review on Popboks". 2009. Retrieved 15 April 2010.
- ^ "review on stormbringer". 2009. Retrieved 2 June 2010.