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Nile

In Their Darkened Shrines (Relapse)

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By Jason Bracelin

Published on October 31, 2002

Every conceit that makes heavy metal both goofy and great is encapsulated on Nile's colossal In Their Darkened Shrines. Sure, it might be hard to suppress chuckles at these guys' preoccupation with Egyptian mythology, which leads them to name-drop ancient gods, dub their sound "Ithyphallic Metal" and, most inexcusably, speaketh in Olde English from time to time. But all this juvenilia is balanced by death metal at its most technically vigorous. Majestic and malevolent, "Unas Slayer of the Gods," Darkened's eleven-and-a-half-minute centerpiece, is almost operatic in its stateliness, as layers of mach-3 guitars, algebraic drumming and sandblasted vocals morph into an ominous death march, complete with a spoken-word monologue that sounds like Vincent Price dislodging a chicken bone from his windpipe. Much of this disc is more funereal than frenzied, with haunting incantations that add Gregorian chants, chimes and Old World percussion to Nile's lethal charge. It all makes Darkened a disc that will be hard to top as 2002's finest metal offering.