STRUCTURE (Països Baixos) presenta nou àlbum: "Heritage" #Structure #AtmosphericDoom #DeathMetal #Abril2025 #PaïsosBaixos #NouÀlbum #Metall #Metal #MúsicaMetal #MetalMusic
By Steel Druhm
Just when I thought I’d make it to May without awarding the coveted Steel ov Approval, an unheralded project erupts from the Netherlands and forces my unwilling hand. Structure is the labor of love of Bram Bijlhout, who served seven years as a guitarist in atmo-doom deathers Officium Triste. Now he’s putting his own spin on the genre, handling everything save for vocals and drums. In comes the esteemed Pim Blankenstein, also of Officium Triste and The 11th Hour, to handle the former, with Dirk Bruinenberg (Elegy, ex-Adagio) manning the latter. On the full-length debut, Structure prove this project can honor the doom Heritage that birthed it. This is a massive, monolithic slab of doom that paints a sweeping mural across your head and heart, all in gray and black. Crushing and gorgeous in equal parts, Heritage takes you on an immersive journey through the human experience, teaching you about fathomless despair, undying hope, and ultimately, redemption. It’s a staggering work of heartbreaking genius, and something every doom fan needs to know about.
The album opens with what may be the hands-down winner of Song o’ the Year, “Will I Deserve It.” It’s a monumental doom epic that caves in your chest with its raw power and brings a tear to the most jaded eye with its heart-wrenching beauty. Vaguely Bathorycore riffs thunder away as Pim emits inhumanly death bellows, and soon the melancholic trilling calls to the sadperson in all of us. It’s heavy as fook but maintains a forlorn, tragic air, taking one back to the glory days of the Peaceville Three and those early My Dying Bride and Anathema gems. When Bram cuts loose with his soloing at the 4-minute mark, bittersweet beauty blooms like springtime flowers over the grave of a dearly departed, like a gift to remind you that, no matter where their spirit roams, they’re with you always. I could write 750 words about this song alone, but suffice it to say, it’s brilliant. It’s the rare album that can match a radiant moment like this one, but Heritage is far from done with its smoke show. “What We Have Lost” drags things down into funeral doom territory for rib-cracking density before gradually evolving into a more melodic voyage. Bram’s emotive guitar weaves throughout the heaviness as minimalist piano lines plink mournfully, and Mr. Pim shakes the rafters with unbearable pain. It’s a wonder something this intensely despondent can be so captivating, but despite its nearly 8-minute runtime, when it ends, you’ll wish it hadn’t.
“Long Before Me” is even longer yet no less stunning. It’s so morose and gloriously depressive, it’s almost exhilarating. It sucks you in with its funereal trilling and carries you away in its dark embrace. The guitars from 5 minutes onward are so minimalist but pure perfection. The title track borrows much from Warning’s timeless Watching from a Distance, replicating that album’s unrelenting glumness perfectly, only to switch to Bolt Thrower-esque power chugs that threaten your very existence. Surrounding these moments are bright, melodic bits that take me back to Edge of Sanity’s Crimson. Closer “Until the Last Gasp” is a somber instrumental that imparts the same grim emptiness evoked by the denouement of Agalloch’s Ashes Against the Grain, making one feel as if they stand at the precipice of a swirling, matter-annihilating black hole. As the track advances, small hints of hope creep into the droning doom, imparting faint rays of light into the inky blackness. The album climaxes with horns blaring a sad but cautiously uplifting note, giving you the perfect ending to a truly stupendous journey. At 50 minutes, Heritage somehow feels much shorter, and despite the harrowing despair, you won’t want to escape its bleak cocoon. It almost hurts to hear the last strains fade away into silence. I haven’t had that experience in a long time. I’m at a loss to find flaws, and no song feels overlong or bloated. This is an album you must experience as a whole, and it’s shockingly easy to digest in its entirety.
I’m nothing but impressed by what Bram accomplished here. His writing is at another level, and his guitar work is stunning. He does so much by doing so little, always opting for feeling over showboating. His melodic touches are perfect and arrive at ideal times to take some of the burden from the listener’s shoulders. His heavy riffing is spot on, oppressive, pulverizing, and inevitable. He shows a great ability to inject real emotion into the music without leaning too much on Goth idioms. It’s all so well-crafted and defined that Heritage is more like a master’s canvas than a recording. Many moments triggered an emotional response in me, though I strenuously resist such things. Mr. Blankenstein was the perfect choice to provide vocals. His ungodly death roars are powerful and tooth-rattling, and he pairs superbly with the larger-than-life material. He’s the ideal doom-death front man, and this may be his finest hour. Ayreon / Star One singer Robert Soeterboek provides very sparse, understated, clean vocals and does a fine job.
When you spin an album as heavy and depressive as this and immediately want to hit replay, there’s something very right about it, and something very wrong with you. Heritage is as close to flawless as it gets, and I’m unable to pinpoint any areas that could be improved upon. This is a stunning accomplishment, and I can’t do Heritage justice with mere words. You need to experience this yourself. A MUST HEAR.
Rating: 4.5/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Ardua Music
Websites: structure-doom.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/structure.doom
Releases Worldwide: April 25th, 2025
#2025 #45 #Anathema #Apr25 #ArduaMusic #DeathMetal #DoomMetal #DutchMetal #Heritage #MyDyingBride #OfficiumTriste #Review #Reviews #Structure #The11thHour #Warning
SciTech Chronicles. . . . . . . . .April 25th, 2025
#LiSA # perovskite #copper #electrocatalysts #CspZ #structure #"immune response" #trials #"daily cycle" #regolith #protons #hydrogen #AMOC #"warming hole" #tropics "Northern Hemisphere" #"deep aquifers" #karstified #sandstone #"natural replenishment"
Working out character balance on paper. It really comes down to math. A major character moment every ten pages. (You can see I have a note to kill three pages. That will cut down on the bagginess of one scene and the audience will subconsciously expect something every ten pages. Though they won't know WHAT.) This structuring is a little like music. But you DO have to stick the landing.
Couldn’t wait to share - SQUARNA 2.0 is here, with greatly improved performance in single-sequence RNA secondary structure prediction!
https://github.com/febos/SQUARNA
Updated preprint is coming soon :)
Non-traditional plot structures
No need to be so linear!
#WritersCoffeeClub #plot #structure
http://dancingtreefrog.com/2025/04/21/non-traditional-plot-structures/
Fishery, Etang De Thau, France. August 2006. Ref-1250
https://www.denisolivier.com/photography/fishery-etang-de-thau-france/en/1250
#pontoon #infrared #denisolivierphotography #etangdethau #denisolivierphoto #farming #structure #water #denisolivierphotographer #lake #seafood #shellfish #fishery #denisolivier #canon5d
“In every beam we place, in every wall we raise, exists the potential for something amazing.” — Albert “The Engineer” Evans
Valkey 支援 Bloom Filters
先前在「Valkey 對 hash 資料結構的改善」這邊有提到會需要觀察 Valkey 的開發能量,後續就看到「Introducing Bloom Filters for Valkey」這篇了。 Redis 的 Bloom filter 是透過 module 的形式掛進去的:「Bloom filter」,這也是早期溫水煮青蛙的第一步,2018 年時從周邊的 module 換掉本來的 open source license:「update license」。 回到 Valkey 這邊,這次推出 Bloom filter 的支援算是經典演算法,也是 Redis 的熱門功能,在蠻多情境下可以使用的,可以降低對 database 層的存取,尤其是有很多查詢時不存在的情境。 這次的實作是 3-cl…
https://blog.gslin.org/archives/2025/04/14/12342/valkey-%e6%94%af%e6%8f%b4-bloom-filters/
“A building is only as strong as the hands that built it” — Author Unknown
“To me, a building — if it’s beautiful — is the love of one man. He’s made it out of his love for space, materials, things like that.” — Martha Graham