AMIENSUS: Treble Streams Abreaction Full-Length From Progressive Black Metal Collective; LP Nears Release Via Transcending Records

[Photo by Josh Fields]
“…an epic, progressive set of black metal, featuring moments of dark, cinematic atmosphere, gothic instrumentation, and dramatic shifts in arrangement and intensity. It’s a soaring, yet haunting album that feels increasingly more appropriate as we creep deeper into the fall, at times reminiscent of the likes of Opeth, Enslaved, and Agalloch.” — Treble
 
Stream AMIENSUS’ Abreaction HERE.
Treble is currently streaming Abreaction, the impending new full-length from Minnesota-based progressive black metal collective AMIENSUS, in its compelling entirety. The premiere comes in advance of the record’s official release Friday, October 2nd via Transcending Records.
Mixed and mastered by French-Canadian acoustic guitarist Antoine Dufour, Abreaction is an amalgamation of all AMIENSUS material to date – the vastly acclaimed melody of 2013’s Restoration, the progressive highs of 2015’s Ascension, and the brain scrambling heaviness of 2017’s All Paths Lead to Death – rolled into one, fifty-five-minute attack on the listener’s perception of heavy metal. The concept of Abreaction pertains directly to the name of the album – that is, the expression and emotional discharge of repressed emotion.
Writes Treble, “It’s an epic, progressive set of black metal, featuring moments of dark, cinematic atmosphere, gothic instrumentation, and dramatic shifts in arrangement and intensity. It’s a soaring, yet haunting album that feels increasingly more appropriate as we creep deeper into the fall, at times reminiscent of the likes of Opeth, Enslaved, and Agalloch.”
Stream AMIENSUS’ Abreaction, now playing at Treble, at THIS LOCATION.
 
AMIENSUS’ Abreaction will be released on CD, vinyl, cassette, and digital formats. Find physical preorders at THIS LOCATION and digital preorders HERE. For European orders, go HERE.
Forged in 2010, AMIENSUS has been releasing diverse albums spanning multiple genres. 2013’s Restoration is an atmospheric black metal must-have while its followup, 2015’s Ascension, was a well-received and well-polished continuation, exploring even more stylistically soft and heavy musical avenues. 2017 brought with it lengthy EP, All Paths Lead To Death, which saw the band drop some of the heavy orchestration in favor of more melodic death and black metal passages. Since the release of their first album, AMIENSUS has embarked on international tours with the likes of Ashbringer, Wolvhammer, and Abigail Williams. The young but experienced group now enters their tenth year as a band, and with the tools and skills to change their sound on a whim.
“The mood on ‘Drowned’ is that of awe and subservience to forces greater than any one person can restrain – the song relishes in its own gradual build as well as the smooth delivery of clean vocals to counterpoint the harsh ones. AMIENSUS teeters carefully on the balances created by such contrasts, as they always have, but now see increased cohesion and more delicate songwriting.” – Invisible Oranges on “Drowned”
 
“Undeniably heavy and hammering, the song is also panoramic and entrancing. And it’s not entirely electrified – the band have included acoustic guitar and cello melodies in ways that will be familiar from the previous version of the song, combining them with the punch of the drumming and the wrenching intensity of the shrieking vocals…” – No Clean Singing on “A Convocation Of Spirits”
 
“…truly bone-crushing…” – BrooklynVegan on “Iconoclasm”
 
AMIENSUS continue to be one of metal’s finest underground acts. Abreaction sits just as strongly as Restoration and Ascension before it, while providing yet another slightly different yet compelling take on the band’s sound in a way that’s both dark and beautiful. The appeal is wide with this one – everyone from black to death to folk should be able to find something to dig in and find a deep appreciation for. – Dead Rhetoric
 
“…a fantastic release… Harsh, angry tones combine with pretty, ambient moments, but it’s the placement of these various moments that makes the album as strong as it is. At its core, it is depressing music, but in a beautiful way.” – Metal Temple
 
AMIENSUS thrill with their raw dynamism, the eagerness that they throw themselves into the fray. This is a band who oftentimes sit in a league of their own… a masterful black metal offering.” – Two Guys Metal Reviews
 
“The propensity for progression is obvious. The nature-based, blackened melodic pseudo-folk aspects of Restoration… developed into a more progressive, epic sound with Ascension… then moved into more traditional synthphonic black metal aggression with All Paths… With Abreaction, AMIENSUS seem to take all of these seemingly disparate styles and combine them into a cohesive unity in which every element is pronounced and perfected – and it is pretty damn amazing.” – Black Metal Daily
 
AMIENSUS‘ cerebral mix of black metal, progressive metal, and folk continues to do wonders on Abreaction, their first full-length record in five years. Benson said the record feels truer to what the band sounds like live as they’ve learned to work and play together more efficiently, and you can hear that in these exciting, full-bodied songs. This is a record that hopefully puts the band’s name on more people’s tongues, especially those who can appreciate an ambitious group that can unleash storms right from the center of their hearts.” – Meat Mead Metal
 
“All aspects of Abreaction are honed, tightly knotted and sewn into seamless and watery warmth. Easy listening is a difficult term to use appropriately when I’m regularly inducted into the deepest extremes of metallic forms yet there is such ease and well-rounded grace in this record’s ascent.” – Grizzly Butts
 
“An undeniably epic collection of otherworldly black metal-tinged tunage, AMIENSUS incorporate gothic overtones, indie rock, and prog within Abreaction to create one very unique record.” – Rock And Roll Fables
 
  
For AMIENSUS coverage contact liz@earsplitcompound.com.