Metal Blade Records | Rivers of Nihil - Subtle Change (Including the Forest of Transition...) (Instrumental) @metalbladerecords | Uploaded June 2024 | Updated October 2024, 22 hours ago.
Buy here: metalblade.com/riversofnihil
Instrumental: riversofnihil.bandcamp.com/album/where-owls-know-my-name-instrumentals
Original version: riversofnihil.bandcamp.com/album/where-owls-know-my-name
"Where Owls Know My Name" represented a massive evolutionary leap for RIVERS OF NIHIL. Whereas …Seed… and Monarchy were thematically centered around spring and summer, respectively, Where Owls Know My Name represented the fall. And although that season is usually associated with death, for RIVERS OF NIHIL, the autumn served as a rebirth. Delivering an album which is often just as punishing as its predecessors while assimilating ingredients from musical genres as varied as electronica, jazz, alternative, folk, and the golden age of Shrapnel Records, the resulting music on Where Owls Know My Name is indescribably progressive, a multifaceted soundscape that goes beyond the wildest dreams of even the group's most ardent admirers.
Comments guitarist Brody Uttley on the instrumental edition of the record, “Ever since Where Owls Know My Name came out we’ve had people begging for an instrumental version. Well… here it is! Better see you musician dorks doing all kinds of cover videos.”
Buy here: metalblade.com/riversofnihil
Instrumental: riversofnihil.bandcamp.com/album/where-owls-know-my-name-instrumentals
Original version: riversofnihil.bandcamp.com/album/where-owls-know-my-name
"Where Owls Know My Name" represented a massive evolutionary leap for RIVERS OF NIHIL. Whereas …Seed… and Monarchy were thematically centered around spring and summer, respectively, Where Owls Know My Name represented the fall. And although that season is usually associated with death, for RIVERS OF NIHIL, the autumn served as a rebirth. Delivering an album which is often just as punishing as its predecessors while assimilating ingredients from musical genres as varied as electronica, jazz, alternative, folk, and the golden age of Shrapnel Records, the resulting music on Where Owls Know My Name is indescribably progressive, a multifaceted soundscape that goes beyond the wildest dreams of even the group's most ardent admirers.
Comments guitarist Brody Uttley on the instrumental edition of the record, “Ever since Where Owls Know My Name came out we’ve had people begging for an instrumental version. Well… here it is! Better see you musician dorks doing all kinds of cover videos.”