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STARGAZER

Tech/Extreme Prog Metal • Australia


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StarGazer biography
With one of the most cult followings in death metal today, Australia's StarGazer, alongside their comrades in Portal, are seen as one of the most unique and bizarre bands in death metal today.

StarGazer began initially in the mid-'90s, with a collection of demos, splits, best-of compilations and EP's, yet this new album, A Great Work Of Ages, is only their second full-length release to date and their first album in five years following their highly acclaimed The Scream That Tore The Sky debut. Even though A Great Work Of Ages is StarGazer's second full-length album, the band have conjured a reputable cult following, pretty much death/extreme metal fans who are looking to indulge in bands that like to push the envelope even further within the genre. Hence that's why StarGazer's following mirrors Portal's following; even though both bands are of a wholly different sound and entity, both bands are two bands within death metal that are really tearing the boundaries on what such a genre has to offer and destroying all limitations and conceived perceptions on the death metal genre as a whole.

With themes steeped in occult lore, StarGazer's brand of death metal leans more towards the technical and progressive side of the genre, following in the footsteps paved by such forefathers of the genre such as Atheist, Sadus, Cynic, and Pestilence while meshing the progressive edge of classic thrash metal a la Coroner and Voivod and the black-thrash idiosyncrasies of bands such as Absu. The two main members of StarGazer (The Serpent Inquisitor and The Great Righteous Destroyer) have also been involved with some of Australia's top underground extreme metal bands likewise, namely Mournful Congregation and Cauldron Black Ram respectively.

STARGAZER Videos (YouTube and more)


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STARGAZER discography


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STARGAZER top albums (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

4.00 | 4 ratings
The Scream That Tore the Sky
2005
4.00 | 5 ratings
A Great Work of Ages / A Work of Great Ages
2010
4.00 | 3 ratings
A Merging to the Boundless
2014
4.00 | 3 ratings
Psychic Secretions
2021

STARGAZER Live Albums (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

STARGAZER Videos (DVD, Blu-ray, VHS etc)

STARGAZER Boxset & Compilations (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

3.00 | 1 ratings
Gloat / Borne
2020

STARGAZER Official Singles, EPs, Fan Club & Promo (CD, EP/LP, MC, Digital Media Download)

4.00 | 2 ratings
Tryaal by Obsidian
2013
4.00 | 1 ratings
Harbringer
2013
4.00 | 1 ratings
Magikkian
2013
3.33 | 3 ratings
Bound by Spells
2023

STARGAZER Reviews


Showing last 10 reviews only
 A Great Work of Ages / A Work of Great Ages by STARGAZER album cover Studio Album, 2010
4.00 | 5 ratings

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A Great Work of Ages / A Work of Great Ages
StarGazer Tech/Extreme Prog Metal

Review by UMUR
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator

4 stars "A Great Work Of Ages" is the second full-length studio album by Australian death metal act Stargazer. The album was released through Profound Lore Records in August 2010. Stargazer formed as far back as 1995 and has released several splits and an EP before releasing their debut full-length studio album "The Scream That Tore the Sky" in January 2005.

The music on the album is at itīs core old school blackened death metal, but this is by no means a "regular" sounding old school death metal album. The music also features elements of black metal, traditional heavy metal, and itīs overall quite adventurous too, bordering progressive. Itīs no surprise though if youīre familiar with some of the other acts that some of the members are or have been associated with like Mournful Congregation, Misery's Omen, and Portal. None of which play conventional sounding music either. The influence from the darkness and chaos of Portal and the busy bass playing and semi-progressive structures of Misery's Omen are audible. Those are just elements of Stargazerīs music though and they do have quite a unique sound of their own.

The lyrics and the image of the band revolve around mysticism and other dark and sinister subjects and provide the sound with the right mood to suit the mystic and dark atmosphere of the music, which song titles like "The Morbid Slither, The Sinner Slough", "Refractive Convex Continuum" and "Formless Face of the Timeless Faceless" also bear witness to. Other then "Chase For The Serpentsong" which is 9:15 minutes long, the tracks stay within the 4 to 6 minutes time range, but quite a lot happens during that time (vers/chorus structures are more or less abandoned). Everything happens for a reason though and help build the sinister atmosphere. The pace changes often and there are everything from blast beats to doomy sections featured on the album (and some very busy and dominant bass/fretless bass playing). The vocals range from aggressive sneering, to brutal intelligible growls to unintelligible inhuman growling.

In addition to the distorted parts Stargazer also incorporates atmospheric clean guitar parts in the music. Itīs not a dominant feature on the album, but itīs quite nice for the variation when those sections occur. So the songwriting is certainly top notch and the musicianship equally so and fortunately the same can be said about the dynamic and organic sounding production which grace "A Great Work Of Ages". A high quality release through and through, deserving a 4 - 4.5 star (85%) rating. This is an album which should greatly appeal to fans of the above mentioned acts, but maybe fans of acts like Opeth and Enslaved might find something to like here to.

(Originally posted on Metal Music Archives).

Thanks to cristi for the artist addition.

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