I seem to be bouncing between indie folk and obscure metal lately. Two of my favourite kinds of music, so not surprising.
Disc 1902 is… Wings of the Fallen
Artist: Ancient Empire
Year of Release: 2019
What’s up with the Cover? Metal albums consistently have the best covers, and this is no exception.
Warrior angels descend to an apocalyptic world, and contemplate the devastation. This angel doesn’t look angry at all the death around him, just disappointed.
Meanwhile, the two angels in the sky behind him are giving off decidedly “can we go now?” vibes as this whole “let’s descend into orbit and check out a planet!” proposal has not lived up to the hype.
How I Came To Know It: About ten years ago I found my love of metal rekindled through a subgenre called NWOTHM, or the “New Wave of Traditional Heavy Metal”. One of my early Youtube discoveries in the genre was Ancient Empire’s “Other World”. This led me to their Bandcamp site where I’ve been stalking (and occasionally buying) more records from their back catalogue over the years. The most recent of these is “Wings of the Fallen” which I couldn’t get on CD (yet!) but now have via download.
How It Stacks Up: I have three Ancient Empire albums. Of those, I must reluctantly rank “Wings of the Fallen” at #3.
Ratings: 2 stars but almost 3
I cannot confirm if Ancient Empire play tabletop war games, but if they don’t I feel they’re missing out on a natural outlet to their interests, because these guys love science fiction, particularly of the “epic battle” variety.
“Wings of the Fallen” is no exception, with the band delivering another concept album around lost worlds, endless wars and generally depressing stuff wrapped up in deliciously tasty power chords to help it go down easier.
This one involves angels, or not. The deeper thinking here appears to be the dangers of religious wars rather than anything spiritual. I admit I’ve listened multiple times and never sat down and did a deep dive on what is going on. There are discoveries of ancient weapons, and lots of hopeless “is this our last chance at survival?” conversation, but that’s pretty common stuff for these guys. They tend to tilt toward the bleak in their outlook.
What’s important are the riffs, which are not incredibly imaginative, but are timeless and played with gusto and precision, just as heavy metal riffs should be played. The band is tight and they have a late eighties Iron Maiden vibe to them that features an ever-rising melodic structure and a bit of gallop to keep the blood flowing. Think “Somewhere in Time” or “Seventh Son of a Seventh Son” stylings and you’ll be in the post-apocalyptic ballpark.
Lead singer Joe Liszt is no Bruce Dickinson, but while his range is limited he does have a good tone and delivers the band’s sci fi mayhem with dedicated sincerity. The rest of the band also plays well, capturing the soaring anthemic style critical to Ancient Empire’s sound.
Things generally go poorly for the combatants on an Ancient Empire record, and “Wings of the Fallen” is no exception, with horrific weapons of destruction consuming all life. Somehow, the band always makes their tragic epics sound uplifting. I guess it is hard for power chords to get you down without that minor third.
I enjoyed the guitar work overall, but the mid-record instrumental “Seraph Requiem” lost me. The playing that to this point has been holding down the bones of the record with energized riffs, here becomes unhinged and exposed when soloing.
Fortunately, the band immediately recovers on the next track, “The Last Survivor”, an epic six plus minutes of heavily themed goodness. Mixed in with a bit more structure, the guitar soloing also elevates.
Sure, “The Last Survivor” recounts the end of the human race, but if you are an Ancient Empire devotee (and I am) this is very much par for the course. You will throw your fist in the air, and you will mosh in ecstasy to these riffs, but all the while bad things will be happening to the characters in the story.
Ancient Empire rarely blows me away with innovation, but they are solid players (once again Steve Pelletier’s drums provide a reliably furious thump), and it is always a good time. This record felt a bit “more of the same” when compared to earlier work, but I knew that going in and so - unlike the poor bastards described in the lyrics - I had a good time.
Best tracks: A New Dawn, Wings of the Fallen, the Last Survivor


