If I praise the struggle of every day
That I spent wishing November to turn into May
With every second I contemplate
If the rush is making up for my mind's decay
This one is for all the souls I carried along with me
Relive the past
To feel what certainly will come to be
Old hearts beat half speed
Oh how it made me
Repeat what has been done
And hope that I will learn
A sea of risks to take, and make, regret a parable
Foundations chipped away, replaced, with gold of glory days
My time is moving way too fast
Try to run and make the feeling last
The twelve hours that I lost back then
Are haunting me again
They haunt me again
They haunt me again
This is forever
As far as I can see
Nostalgia is not
Not what it used to be
Is it too late?
Never too late
Never
Though distinctions are far and few
This essence keep pulling through
Pick up your bones, rebuild anew
Since nineteen ninety two
supported by 20 fans who also own “Wilt Over Time”
Gaerea's first release of "Unsettling Whispers" was in 2018, and since, they dared define a "black metal" niche of their own, they dared to walk a new path and stir shit up a bit in the realm of BM, this album is a masterpiece and a milestone proving that it can be done, provided the band can pull it off, and they did, oh they did! Gloomy, dark, post-BM sludgy whatever, it's Gaerea, and this one belongs in my BC collection, the end. sachavonkarl74
supported by 20 fans who also own “Wilt Over Time”
With their deviant kind of Black Metal, White Ward are far away from mediocre. If you’re looking for something different and sophisticated try these guys! You won‘t be disappointed! Sælzer Bub
The latest from Brazilian metal stalwarts Institution has the sweeping, epic scope of blackgaze with the crisp production of post-rock. Bandcamp New & Notable Mar 17, 2020
supported by 17 fans who also own “Wilt Over Time”
A truly stellar death/doom album with heavy doses of black metal. Tracks like Isolation, Child of Light, and Broken Hymns deliver the sorrowful and icy tone of this album, elevated by the stirring cello compositions of Raphael Weinroth-Browne. The album delivers a deeply satisfying crescendo in Becoming Intangible before stirring the soul once again with Epilogue. Matt Richardson