Rheia (album)

Rheia is the third studio album by Belgian metal band Oathbreaker. The album was produced by Jack Shirley and released through independent record label Deathwish Inc. on September 30, 2016.[5] Oathbreaker toured internationally in support of Rheia from September until December with Skeletonwitch and Iron Reagan.[6] The title references Rhea, mother goddess in Greek mythology.

Rheia
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 30, 2016 (2016-09-30)
RecordedApril 2016[1]
StudioAtomic Garden Studio[1]
(East Palo Alto, California)
Genre
Length63:22
LabelDeathwish
ProducerJack Shirley, Oathbreaker
Oathbreaker chronology
Eros|Anteros
(2013)
Rheia
(2016)

Background

Following 2013's Eros/Anteros, the band's first release to feature clean vocals, Oathbreaker decided to continue the mix of clean and harsh vocals on their next album, making sure to "not sound like a Nightwish cover band." Rheia was recorded in San Francisco with producer Jack Shirley, who was known for his work with bands like Deafheaven and Loma Prieta.[7] The band also wanted the album to sound less dark and aggressive than its predecessor.[8] "Stay Here/Accroche-Moi" was the final song to be recorded.[9]

Lead vocalist Caro Tanghe said that her lyrics for Rheia were the most direct that she had written, which was inspired by her boyfriend and bandmate Gilles Demolder encouraging her to open up more.[8] Both Tanghe and Demolder stated that singer-songwriter Mark Kozelek was the main influence on Rheia's lyrics, which tackle subjects ranging from the death of Tanghe's grandmother to her strained personal relationships to her estranged parents.[7][8]

The album's cover art depicts Tanghe and Demolder's hands joined together with burning candle wax as it reacts to cold water.[7][9]

Reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic76/100[10]
Review scores
SourceRating
Exclaim!8/10[11]
Pitchfork7.8/10[2]
PopMatters6/10[12]
Sputnikmusic3.8/5[13]

Rheia was well received by music critics upon release. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 76, based on five reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[10] Exclaim!'s Natalie Zina Walschots thought that the band has released "a vast and complex record that doesn't just react toward but actively embraces the aesthetics of doom and sludge."[11] Andy O'Conor of Pitchfork said of the album: "While still fairly beholden to black metal, Rheia shares a core ideal with Cobalt's Slow Forever and Deafheaven's New Bermuda: They broke out of black metal's stylistic confines, using it as a launching pad more than a set of totalitarian marching orders, and in the process became emotive, powerful metal albums."[2] PopMatters critic Chris Conaton described the record as "wonderful in terms of contrasting black metal fury with quieter moments," but thought that the songwriting lags behind the atmosphere."[12] Sputnikmusic staff critic Tristan Jones described the album as "a swan song," writing that the record "demonstrates the band's evident progress instrumentally and vocally and [Jack] Shirley's influence takes them to new heights, and chasmic lows."[13]

Accolades

PublicationCountryAccoladeRank
Treble[14]USThe Top 50 Albums of 201650
Consequence of Sound[15]USThe Top 10 Metal Albums of 20169
Terrorizer[16]UKAlbums Of The Year 20163
Noisey[17]USThe 100 Best Albums of 201620

Track listing

All music and lyrics written by Oathbreaker.[1]

No.TitleLength
1."10:56"2:11
2."Second Son of R."5:55
3."Being Able to Feel Nothing"7:08
4."Stay Here / Accroche-Moi"5:12
5."Needles in Your Skin"7:14
6."Immortals"8:52
7."I'm Sorry, This Is"4:14
8."Where I Live"7:01
9."Where I Leave"8:52
10."Begeerte"6:43

Personnel

Rheia personnel adapted from CD liner notes.[1]

Oathbreaker

  • Lennart Bossu - Guitars
  • Ivo Debrabandere - Drums
  • Gilles Demolder - Guitars, Bass
  • Caro Tanghe - Vocals

Additional musicians

  • Wim Coppers – drums on "Second Son of R.," "Being Able to Feel Nothing," "Needles in Your Skin" and "Where I Live"
  • Treha Sektori – electronic arrangements on "I'm Sorry, This Is," "Where I Live" and "Where I Leave"

Production

  • Jack Shirley – recording, producing, engineering, mixing and mastering
  • Oathbreaker – production

Artwork

  • Hemel – art direction
  • Jeroen Mylle – photography
  • We Became Aware – layout, design

Charts

Chart (2016)Peak
position
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[18]104

References