With album number four, Agathodaimon have fallen on the lighter side of the fence they were riding between black metal and the less grim varieties of the genre. Not that the band has abandoned screechy vocals or left droning chainsaw guitars and blast beats entirely in the past; songs like "Rebirth still lean toward a nastier sound. Its just that now extremity plays second fiddle to prog-influenced keyboards (think recent Soilwork) and pop-metal groove. The transition hasnt been poorly handled the title track especially has a catchy bore-into-the-brain quality its just that the changes are a little inconsistent at times, like the fruits of songwriting by split personalities. Perhaps its better that Agathodaimon didnt try to recreate Chapter IIIs most successful moments on Serpents Embrace. The new album has some momentary gems of its own, but its just a little sad that the band had begun to find its way only to give it up for a different path or rather multiple and sometimes contradictory ones.
(Nuclear Blast)Agathodaimon
Serpent's Embrace
BY Laura TaylorPublished Sep 1, 2004