Pages

Saturday, 19 November 2022

Fall Of Efrafa


Fall Of Efrafa were a five-piece post-metal/crust punk band from Brighton, England that were active from 2005 to 2009. In that time, they released a trilogy of albums all based around Richard Adam's 1972 novel Watership Down. Thus, not only are these concept albums, but this is a concept band. They use the novel's concepts and mythos to explore the cyclical rise and relationship of theocracy, dictatorship, and oppression in humanity, to give you a very basic overview of the band's themes. Lyrically, they aren't directly narrative and only use the novel as a point of reference, so it's not necessary to be familiar with, but it does enhance your experience. This is especially true in the case of the Lapine words, which is a language invented by the author and used by the rabbits in the book. There's an incredible animated film from 1978 based on the novel that may or may not be available in full on YouTube, which is worth your time to watch if you haven't read or don't plan or reading the novel.

The primary trilogy consists of three albums: Owsla, Elil, and Inlé were released over a four-year period and compiled in their entirety as The Warren Of Snares. Sonically, this band is very hard to pin down, but I'll give you a quick rundown of each entry. Owsla is the most bombastic and crust-oriented, with heavy use of d-beat and harsh, guttural vocals. Elil is cinematic and tension-building, with extensive instrumental interludes taking influence from post-rock. They conjure up a dismal atmosphere reminiscent of the apocalyptic landscapes of Godspeed You! Black Emperor. Inlé takes influence from sludge and doom metal whilst still being melodic and forlorn, with the vocals being their most cathartic. Though they all do this, this album in particular blends the heavier moments with skeletal, atmospheric passages. It makes for a fantastic closer to this trilogy, only to reveal in its final seconds that it (spoiler) links back to the start of Owsla, repeating the endless cycle.

This band is incredible and one I've wanted to share for a long time, so I'm super happy they're finally making it on here. I highly recommend checking this band out, they present a plethora of sound that makes this body of work an epic, in the truest sense of the word. Enjoy.

1. Intro
2. Pity The Weak
3. A Soul To Bare
4. Lament
5. Last But Not Least
6. The Fall Of Efrafa

1. Beyond The Veil
2. Dominion Theology
3. For El-Ahrairah To Cry

1. Down To Agony - Donde Arderemos
2. Down To Agony - Giran Las Saetas
3. Fall Of Efrafa - No Longer Human

1. Dominion Theology

1. The Burial

1. Simulacrum
2. Fu Inlé
3. Republic Of Heaven
4. Woundwort
5. The Sky Suspended
6. The Warren Of Snares

Disc 1: Owsla
1. Pity The Weak
2. A Soul To Bear
3. Lament
4. Last But Not Least
5. The Fall Of Efrafa
Disc 2: Elil
6. Beyond The Veil
7. Dominion Theology
8. For El-Ahrairah To Cry
Disc 3: Tharn
9. Dominion Theology
Disc 4: Inlé
10. Simulacrum
11. Fu Inlé
12. Republic Of Heaven
13. The Burial
14. Woundwort
15. The Sky Suspended
16. The Warren Of Snares

1. Pity The Weak (Demo)
2. A Soul To Bear (Demo)
3. Last But Not Least (Demo)
4. The Fall Of Efrafa (Demo)
5. Simulacrum (Live)
6. Dominion Theology (Live)
7. The Burial (Live)
8. Last But Not Least (Live)
9. The Fall Of Efrafa (Live)
10. The Warren of Snares (Live)

Note: First demo and final live performance

5 comments:

  1. Thanks a lot for sharing this!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Great recordings. Very boring live

    ReplyDelete
  3. thanks, i love this blog, added to my bookmark already.

    ReplyDelete
  4. 🐇☀ MuchOS☠🌲GRAZi !! 🐰 🦴

    ReplyDelete
  5. Fall of Efrafa _ ah To Cry
    https://youtu.be/5Qij03PwXhw?si=U9btgxqpX49iyxEe

    ReplyDelete