Roads To Judah
豆瓣 
      简介
Brought on by the notion that discernible notes bear weakly for this sort of crowd we have brewing another upstart it seems from the Cascadian persuasion of Black Metal. Somewhere in 2007, at least that's when I became conscious of it, black metal bore another fuzzy creation which focused on the condensation of notes into one stream of momentum. To which I found this evolution in music to create a sort single consciousness, each musician and often each title contributing to a trance like solidarity. Beyond that time I have absorbed many of it's imitators and in doing so I have become disillusioned by the rank texture of communism...few even suffice to provide any grasp of tone that this sort music demands, (I'm probably talking about amplifiers and shit...) yet in that statement itself I see a sort of conforming rendering, adhering to the doctrine of a micro-genre of a stupid genre title (Heavy Metal) is succumbing to a coalescing decline, but tremolo picking with what sounds like an entry level stratocaster with it's pickups too loose is hardly reminiscent of someone who happens to actually care about what those notes mean, it all just seems to be a facade for passion. But enough of Fool Hens.
Deafheaven take this sort of strayed formula of Black Metal and craft their own aerial offspring. In this we get a taste for a more intelligent sound, it doesn't stray from the rise and fall, sometimes quietly sometimes loudly, but it does execute with deliberate motive to succeed it's forebears, it tries and accomplishes something new in each stroke with out failing to a dying standard. The typical forest and earth ritual titles are kept to a sort of esoteric medium and it benefits the listening to know that when you close your eyes you're not going to see Missouri and shotguns by the influence of a some obligatory album cover and accompanying track titles. Reviews are a a slant to the right when watching toe eroticism. To surmise, Road to Judah amounts to a success that doesn't define anything but allows the definition that said release adheres to ring with a superior clarity.
Let's just say that very few superior albums have been released in this style since Alcest and Wolves in the Throne Room set the standard for it five years ago. The main difference here appears to be a certain kind of emotional passion, not unlike something you would hear on the  great  screamo  records of the late 90s/early 00s. It doesn't feel as though this band is simply riding the new wave of 'blackgaze' or the cascadian black metal movement so much as they're attempting to set their own new standard for where modern black metal should be going. Maybe neither is true and these guys couldn't give a fuck less about the scene, who knows. What's important is that this relatively short release is incredibly exciting and should be heard by anyone interested in atmospheric black metal of any kind.
tracks
1	Violet	 	12:19
2	Language Games		6:47
3	Unrequited		9:31
4	Tunnel of Trees		9:45