Hell III is the third studio album by multi-instrumentalist M.S.W.'s Salem-based doom metal solo project Hell. Originally released on October 11, 2012, the album was available on cassette through Eternal Warfare, on vinyl through Pesanta, and digitally through M.S.W.'s own label, LowerYourHead.

Hell III
A drawing of two robed figures in a pit rendered in red, inspired by the works of Gustave Doré
Studio album by
ReleasedOctober 11, 2012
Recorded2009–2012
StudioMammoth Sound (Mastering)
Genre
Length37:08
Label
  • LowerYourHead
  • Eternal Warfare (322-34)
  • Pesanta (Pesanta Urfolk 023)
ProducerM.S.W.
Hell chronology
Hell II
(2010)
Hell III
(2012)
Hell
(2017)
Limited Pesanta vinyl cover
Released in 2012

Hell III was performed in its entirety on the project's 2016 tour.[2]

Background and composition edit

Hell, a one-man project, concluded a trilogy of albums with Hell III.[3] While the series began as pure doom metal, Hell II and, to a greater degree, Hell III incorporate black metal and funeral doom aspects into the music.[4] Included with the moments of weight, aggression, extremely distorted guitar, and rasped vocals are periods of somber melancholy.[4] The album comprises two songs, "Mourn" and "Decedere", both of which near twenty minutes in length.[5]

"Mourn" edit

Hell III's first half, "Mourn", begins with a slow, clean guitar segment that lasts for five minutes.[4] Ben Hudgins of Heathen Harvest wrote about this passage, "there’s a lengthy ambient guitar introduction that sulks on the borders of the apocalyptic domain of black metal before plunging over the edge into the tar-choked realms of sludge."[3] Following that, the song quickly transitions into the downtuned guitar and driving percussion signature to doom metal. Unlike many singers in similar bands, M.S.W.'s vocals are delivered as high-pitched rasps.[3] At the halfway point of "Mourn", the song slows and descends into a heavy passage that gradually decays and fades.[6]

"Decedere" edit

The album's second half, "Decedere", took four years to complete.[2] It follows a similar structure as "Mourn", beginning with "solemn and ambient guitar melodies" and later launching into protracted periods of heightened aggression before returning to quiet softness at the conclusion.[4] Operatic vocals provided by Leah Estep[7] appear alongside M.S.W.'s screams and rasps.[6]

About performing "Decedere" live, M.S.W. said:

"That song is particularly special to me and not something I ever planned on playing live. Once you overplay a song in any band, it begins to become “just a song” and loses its importance in ways. This has happened with a few songs Hell now has played live hundreds of times in the past tours. That being said, I feel that we execute it perfectly as a live act and I’m glad that we are now able to perform it properly."[2]

Critical reception edit

Hell III was met with positive reception. In a review of Trilogy, a box set concluding with Hell III,[8] Cody Davis of Metal Injection wrote, "It is a demented and diabolical listening experience worth turning out all of the lights and succumbing to the trepidation for an hour or so."[4] Benjamin Bland of Echoes and Dust called Hell III "quite the journey," saying in his review, "The emotional power of this album is fairly devastating if you’re in a bleak frame of mind and the willingness of M.S.W. to draw in influences from inside and outside the drone and metal spheres to enhance his atmospheric vision is perhaps what makes this a rare essential listen."[6] Writing for Heathen Harvest, Ben Hudgins said that Hell III cements the trilogy as unpredictable and full of surprises.[3]

Track listing edit

All songs written by M.S.W..

No.TitleLength
1."Mourn"18:08
2."Decedere"19:00
Total length:37:08

Personnel edit

Credits adapted from liner notes.[7]

References edit

  1. ^ Metal Storm
  2. ^ a b c A, Ben (April 7, 2016). "Falling from Your Heavens: A Conversation with M.S.W. of Hell". Black Metal & Brews. Archived from the original on December 30, 2017. Retrieved February 18, 2018.
  3. ^ a b c d "Lost in the Labyrinth of Hell's "MMXVI"". Heathen Harvest. Retrieved April 17, 2018.
  4. ^ a b c d e Davis, Cody. "Funeral Doom Friday: Getting Tormented By HELL's Nightmarish, Self-Titled Trilogy". Metal Injection. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
  5. ^ Hell III (digital liner notes). Hell. LowerYourHead. 2012. Retrieved April 17, 2018.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  6. ^ a b c Bland, Benjamin. "(((O))) : HELL – III". Echoes and Dust. Retrieved April 17, 2018.
  7. ^ a b Hell III (vinyl liner notes). Hell. Pesanta. 2014. Pesanta Urfolk 023. Retrieved April 17, 2018.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  8. ^ "Hell – Trilogy Boxset Due in May". BraveWords. Retrieved April 17, 2018.