Country : United States Label : Napalm Genres and styles : Death Metal / metal / Technical Death Metal Year : 2024

Nile – The Underworld Awaits Us All

· by Laurent Bellemare

Nile is one of those bands that left a mark on the history of death metal with its high-velocity music and ancient Egypt themes. The band could have easily buried the axe in 2005, having been so influential in the industry. However, in the months leading up to the release of their new album, the band once again captured the imagination by unveiling a song entitled “Chapter for Not Being Hung Upside Down on a Stake in the Underworld and Made to Eat Feces by the Four Apes,” whose title is taken from the Egyptian Book of the Dead. But extravagances aside, Nile proves that there are still plenty of quality albums to be fashioned from its musical language. 

Karl Sanders, 61 and the band’s sole founding member, shows no signs of fatigue on The Underworld Awaits Us All. This 10th album is packed with his signature guitar style: ultra-fast runs of diminished scales, a highly musical use of dive-bombs, and heavy passages played with palm muting. As always, there’s a profusion of semitones and minor thirds, the intervals that produce Nile’s characteristic “oriental” riffs. However, the density of notes, the frantic tempi, and the death metal context prevent this compositional cliché from being perceived as such, acting instead in the band’s favor by setting it apart from its peers. Sanders also impresses with the vitality of his low cavernous roar, more powerful than ever, which complements Brian Kingsland’s rather medial lead vocals. 

Since Annihilation of the Wicked (2005), the album that introduced Greek drummer George Kollias to the world, playing standards have changed. From album to album, Kollias has proved his impeccable mastery of fast tempi and the creativity with which extreme percussion can be pushed. On this new opus, there is indeed meticulous attention to detail behind the drums’ allure of total destruction. Even after many listen, the richness of the rhythm section’s writing is easier felt than heard, as the music moves so fast. On the other hand, when the tracks slow down and allow long, heavy atmospheric passages to breathe, this percussive creativity comes to the fore. 

Speaking of the atmosphere, the vocal arrangements involving singers Jasmine Sheppard, Tiffany Frederick, Ashley Johnson, Jessica Williams, and Michelle Mercado are a nice touch. These passages emerge from nowhere and create a depth of field in the density of the musical landscape. The album closes with the equally epic “Lament for the Destruction of Time,” a dark, ponderous quasi-instrumental piece that does justice to its title. And as no Nile album is without an interlude or acoustic introduction, the classical guitar piece “The Pentagrammathion of Nephren-Ka” splits the aural assault in two. 

Each Nile album adds its own colour to the discography, but The Underworld Awaits Us All seems to have had a seismic effect. Many are already quick to proclaim it as one of—if not the—best of the lot. And the superlative is justified, for there’s not a dull moment in this 53-minute saga. Not only is The Underworld Awaits Us All an excellent contribution to the death metal tradition, it also fully justifies the band’s controversial aesthetic. For although no one knows what the music might have sounded like in Egypt 5000 years ago, Nile easily immerses us in its unabashedly phantasmagorical exploration of the times of the Pharaohs.

Latest 360 Content

Meggie Lennon – My Best Self

Meggie Lennon – My Best Self

Critique Love… Critical Minerals in Montreal’s Underground

Critique Love… Critical Minerals in Montreal’s Underground

The Mars Volta – Lucro sucio; Los ojos del vacio

The Mars Volta – Lucro sucio; Los ojos del vacio

Laurence Hélie – Tendresse et bienveillance

Laurence Hélie – Tendresse et bienveillance

From Zigaz to Charlie Juste

From Zigaz to Charlie Juste

FACS, WORKS, and DahL at Quai Des Brumes

FACS, WORKS, and DahL at Quai Des Brumes

Before Sitting Down Alone at The Piano, Ingrid St-Pierre Responds

Before Sitting Down Alone at The Piano, Ingrid St-Pierre Responds

Virginia MacDonald, clarinet rising soloist with ONJM

Virginia MacDonald, clarinet rising soloist with ONJM

Lionel Belmondo , Yannick Rieu and l’OSL: Symphonic Jazz Around Brahms, Ravel and Boulanger

Lionel Belmondo , Yannick Rieu and l’OSL: Symphonic Jazz Around Brahms, Ravel and Boulanger

Djo – The Crux

Djo – The Crux

Université de Montréal: Stars shine on music’s next gen

Université de Montréal: Stars shine on music’s next gen

Bon Iver – SABLE, fABLE

Bon Iver – SABLE, fABLE

Magnificent Heiresses

Magnificent Heiresses

Stéphanie Boulay: Healing Album, Reconstruction Album

Stéphanie Boulay: Healing Album, Reconstruction Album

Joni Void wants you to ‘watch experimental films in the club’ or at La Lumière

Joni Void wants you to ‘watch experimental films in the club’ or at La Lumière

Marcus Printup at U de M: Wisdom, Generosity, Musicianship

Marcus Printup at U de M: Wisdom, Generosity, Musicianship

Pascale Picard Dives Back Into Creation

Pascale Picard Dives Back Into Creation

Dean Wareham – That’s The Price of Loving Me

Dean Wareham – That’s The Price of Loving Me

Pro Musica | Lucas Debargue, Pianistic Free Thinker

Pro Musica | Lucas Debargue, Pianistic Free Thinker

Éléonore Lagacé – Brûlez-moi vive

Éléonore Lagacé – Brûlez-moi vive

Laurence Hélie Has Found Her Name

Laurence Hélie Has Found Her Name

Quatuor Molinari and Berio, in the words of Olga Ranzenhofer

Quatuor Molinari and Berio, in the words of Olga Ranzenhofer

Tunisian Goddess Emel Presents MRA

Tunisian Goddess Emel Presents MRA

Shreez – ON FRAP II

Shreez – ON FRAP II

Subscribe to our newsletter