Anthropocentric (album)

Anthropocentric
Studio album by The Ocean
Released 9 November 2010[1]
Recorded La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland, between April and December 2009
Genre Post-metal, sludge metal, progressive metal, art rock
Length 50:06
Label Metal Blade
The Ocean chronology

Heliocentric
(2010)
Anthropocentric
(2010)
Pelagial
(2013)

Anthropocentric is the fifth studio album by German metal band The Ocean Collective. It is the second album in a 2 album series, following Heliocentric. Anthropocentric continues the critique of Christianity as in its companion album Heliocentric. The album was released in North America on November 9, 2010.

Theme

Like its companion Heliocentric, Anthropocentric focuses on critique of Fundamentalist Christianity and Creationism. It "challenges the views of creationists and other modern fundamentalists who still believe that the earth is at the center of the universe and no more than 5,000 years old."[2] The band comments on the theme of the album: "As far as the concepts behind Anthropocentric are concerned, the focus is on man and his place in the universe: at the center, as many fundamental Christians still claim today, or more likely a dust particle in its periphery. All lyrics are circling around this question. Anthropocentric will continue the critique of christianity, inspired by the questions that Dostoyevsky asked and some of the answers that Friedrich Nietzsche and Richard Dawkins gave." At the base of the album are three songs with the titles "The Grand Inquisitor I, II and III". These songs have been inspired by the chapter of the same title in Fyodor Dostoyevsky's novel The Brothers Karamazov: a conversation between the brothers Ivan, an atheist, and Alyoscha, a monk. Ivan tells Alyoscha the story of a Second Coming of Christ in 16th century Sevilla. According to this parable, Jesus is arrested by the Catholic inquisition. The grand inquisitor who interrogates Jesus casts a new light on the legend of the temptation of Christ: he reproaches Jesus with having betrayed humanity and having deprived man of salvation by offering him freedom. The conversation between Ivan and Alyoscha mirrors, to some degree, the conversation between the grand inquisitor and Christ and raises more questions than it answers.

Music

While Heliocentric was "continues where the "Proterozoic" half of Precambrian left off, with dense, epic songs and big orchestrations.", 'Anthropocentric' "is going to be a bit more straight forward rocking and technical, whilst still tapping the full range of dynamic."[2] The band's comments on the albums reveal things about the music of the album: "Musically, the album feels somehow heavier than Heliocentric. "The sound is more dense and maybe a tad more raw, which suits the songs perfectly, comments guitar player Jonathan Nido. The album covers a similar sonic and dynamic range as Heliocentric, also including a number of calm, acoustic moments but these are for the most part orchestrated with guitars, and not so much with piano and string section. The focus is on the heavy songs: "The album is a pretty big production, and still has a very earthy, organic feel to it, comments guitarist Robin Staps. "We have spent a great deal of time on the basic sound this time around, drums, bass, guitars and vocals... and at this stage I am pretty confident that this will pay off in the end!"[3]

Recording

"The albums were mainly recorded in the mountainous isolation of La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland, the highest city of Europe. The band decided to record and mix the album with the band's house sound engineer Julien Fehlmann." The third song on the album "She Was The Universe" was released on to the official Metal Blade Records website.[4]

Track listing

All music and lyrics written by Robin Staps, except where noted.

No. TitleMusic Length
1. "Anthropocentric"    9:24
2. "The Grand Inquisitor I: Karamazov Baseness"    5:02
3. "She Was the Universe"    5:39
4. "For He That Wavereth…"  Jonathan Nido, Loïc Rossetti 2:07
5. "The Grand Inquisitor II: Roots & Locusts"  J. Nido 6:33
6. "The Grand Inquisitor III: A Tiny Grain of Faith"    1:56
7. "Sewers of the Soul"  Louis Jucker 3:44
8. "Wille zum Untergang"  J. Nido, R. Staps 6:03
9. "Heaven TV"  J. Nido 5:04
10. "The Almightiness Contradiction"  J. Nido, R. Staps 4:34

[3]

Personnel

The Ocean

Additional personnel

Reception

Anthropocentric has received generally positive reviews so far. AllMusic gave the album 3.5/5 stars, noting the band's intent to make listening to the album an experience both for the ears and mind: "...it's possible to just let the loud guitars and thundering drums wash over you...but that's so clearly not what the band wants to happen that Anthropocentric ceases to be cathartic, like all the best metal, and starts to feel like homework."[5] SputnikMusic gave the album 4.0/5 in its featured review, while user ratings averaged 3.8, considered "excellent" by the site's standards.

The Australian music magazine Blunt, gave the album 5/5 stars.

References

  1. "The Ocean | Anthropocentric". Metal Blade Records. 2010-11-09. Retrieved 2012-01-14.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "The Ocean". Metalblade.com. Retrieved 2012-01-14.
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Metal-Blade-Records Merch, T-Shirts, Hoodies, CDs". District Lines. Retrieved 2012-01-14.
  4. "The Ocean | Anthropocentric". Metalblade.com. 2010-11-09. Retrieved 2012-01-14.
  5. Phil Freeman. [Anthropocentric (album) at AllMusic "Anthropocentric"]. Allmusic. Retrieved 2012-01-14.

External links