October Music Series: Nokturnal Mortum – Cheremosh


Nokturnal Mortum is a name one should only ever drop with caution. They are unfortunately the flagship band of the Ukrainian white supremacist nsbm scene. One might expect idiotic ideas to lead to pretty dim-witted music, but Nokturnal Mortum broke the mold. In fact, they’re one of the most talented bands I have ever heard. Knjaz Varggoth has a seemingly unshakable knack for infusing his music with the all of the pride and hatred that his ideology implies. From 1996 up to the present they have remained on the cutting edge of the folk/pagan metal scene, like it or not.

Cheremosh is conveniently a track with no ideological strings attached. Appearing initially on the 1997 Marble Moon ep and then in slightly more refined form on To the Gates of Blasphemous Fire in 1998, Cheremosh is an instrumental song. The name refers to the Cheremosh river in western Ukraine. With a distinct build-up and climax characteristic of many of their finest songs, Cheremosh transitions from a secluded scene of the river rolling along to some convincing and bizarre pagan ritual. The folk is mostly keyboards–Nokturnal Mortum did not begin to employ traditional instrumentation extensively until the following year on NeChrist. (NeChrist, I recently discovered, is a pun. “Nechist” are evil spirits in Russian folklore.) Nokturnal Mortum did a pretty impressive job of inventing their own folk sound through synth though, and their first three albums gain a lot from it. If you can stomach their ideology, Nokturnal Mortum present some of the most compelling pagan metal on the market, and this isn’t the last time I’ll be featuring them this month.

2 responses to “October Music Series: Nokturnal Mortum – Cheremosh

  1. Stop normalizing this hateful music. This man is a killer in all but action, his words and ideas openly espouse genocide. Even if his music is catchy, his ugly ideology darkens it.

    Liked by 1 person

    • I wrote that 8 years ago and would hesitate to share them today. The social climate has changed.

      I think the capacity to appreciate fringe ethos art without fear of popularizing it or being perceived as espousing it speaks to healthier times, and black metal is too inaccessible to have a meaningful influence on the populist movements of our day. But this sort of music makes a lot of people feel justifiably uncomfortable today in a way that didn’t apply so much in 2012, and there’s plenty enough other good music out there that they really don’t deserve a voice.

      Hesitant to delete it right now when it’s probably getting 2 views a year and serves as part of a retrospective on what I was listening to at the time, but I’ll gladly condemn it.

      Like

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