Review by: Metal Reviews - 2009.
It's rather a bittersweet emotion to rediscover a band of 'yours', as my colleague Alex likes to put it, a band that you have discovered and helped bring to the attention of others, only to find that the band remain deep underground and far from the success which they so deserve. Back in 2007 I awarded the debut full-length from Australian Melodeathers Be'lakor with Surprise Of The Month and declared it possibly the best Melodeath album ever made, and the knowledge that the band's follow-up is even better should come as news to no-one who took my advice and listened. Of course, the one difficulty with ordering you, the reader, to rush out and buy this is the band's label-less status; were Be'lakor Swedish or German they would doubtless be signed to Century Media or Nuclear Blast by now and all over the local Metal media, but as they're Australian it seems that they'll have to toil at the coalface for a while longer.
Fortunately, if the band can keep releasing such fantastic albums as this then major label support seems only a matter of time. With Stone's Reach Be'lakor are two for two, and whilst on first listens this may appear to be more of the same, it's the little upgrades and progressions here and there that really impress. Keeping the same line-up here as on 2007's The Frail Tide, the band again set out their style and aim to impress, mixing together the same influences as before - Dark Tranquillity, Opeth, My Dying Bride - and taking their music further down the artistic path. Few others could pull it off, really... starting the album with an Opethy drum flourish and swirling, gentle melodies before the main riffage arises and drives the song straight into the awesome zone, those sudden guitar leads and Maiden-gone-Prog melodies still as compelling as before.
With songs tending towards the upper limit of ten minutes rather than the sub-three minute interlude Husks, patience is the name of the game, although few genuine Metalheads will have little problem with any tracks here, as they're all packed full of excellent guitarwork. Whether it's headbangable riffs or pastoral interludes, both George and Shaun play their hearts out - not that the rest of the band are far behind, of course, all entirely professional at what they do. The album is a joy to listen to, from the opening Toolish mutterings of Outlive The Hand that quickly turns into a piledriving Melodeath battery, to the mildly Folky parts of Sun's Delusion. Of course, each song is more than complex enough to have so many things going on that listing them all would be a disservice to both you and the band; whilst never doing anything completely unexpected (perhaps the one improvement that Be'lakor could make is adding a little pinch of the Avant-Garde, keeping the listener on his toes) Stone's Reach is pretty much Melodeath perfection, and is wonderfully easy to praise.
If you enjoy the bands listed before, you should certainly hunt down this album, released in Australia by Prime Cuts Music and independently the rest of the world. Any Melodeath fan should love this, not just lovers of the likes of Insomnium and Swallow The Sun, but even the Amon Amarthlings will get a lot from Stone's Reach - an absolutely killer album with real class, and a must-listen for all.
Review source: http://www.metalreviews.com/reviews/detail.php3?id=5516
Review by: Brendan Amos - Metal Obsession - 2009.
Gaining masses of popularity in their local scene after the release of their debut record, Melbourne's Be'lakor are back in 2009 with a stunning second release showcasing a matured and creative sound from the band – ‘Stone's Reach‘. Recorded at Pennydrop Audio in Melbourne and mastered by Crystal Mastering, the band consists of George Kosmas (Vocals/Rhythm Guitar), Shaun Sykes (Lead Guitar), Steven Merry (Keyboard), John Richardson (Bass) and Jimmy Vanden Broeck (Drums).
First impressions are always critical, and with the acoustic introduction to the opening track ‘Venator', the band sets the landscape on which ‘Stone's Reach‘ is built on. It is consistent with the bands ideals, that of nature and its struggle between life and destruction. And it is this ideal that the band enforce in full throughout the album. Epic melodies, acoustic passages and well placed atmospheric key sections are beautifully countered by faster paced marauding distortion riffs.
There are many highlights on the album, and if tempted I could easily go through moment by moment and treat all fan boys and girls to a orgasm on every musical memory here provoked in this review, however for a broader view on the album, the band has shown some foresight into the melodic death metal genre. Critics could easily say “Look, the band has clear influences such as ‘x' and ‘y' bands”, and while I agree to some extent, it is the vision into the future that makes the Be'lakor so appealing. ‘Stone's Reach‘ is where Amon Amarth should go next… it is a vision that sits equal to the Enslaved direction, but most of all, it is vintage Be'lakor, through and through.
Personal favourites of mine include ‘From Scythe to Sceptre' which has probably the most interesting guitar section on the whole album (see 1:40 into the song), while other tracks such as ‘Sun's Delusion‘ (6:11 = wow) and Countless Skies hold epic melodies to the core. The production of the album is also of stellar repute with Kosmas' vocals the only critique from me, and only because they get somewhat lost in the powerful duel guitar mix. The only other slight downside on the album is a couple of rough segues which are frustrating because aside from these tiny glitches, I hear next to zero flaws on an album that could well be the pinnacle of 2009.
Experiencing these songs for the first time in a live environment was bliss, and on my arrival home and subsequent listening to the recorded version of Stone's Reach, it is very safe to say that I am one very happy man, along with all the other Be'lakor obsessed metal heads out there! 9.2/10
Review source: http://metalobsession.net/belakor-stones-reach
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