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ASCENSION

Paradise Lost

Title
ASCENSION
UPC
4065629750350
Genres
Release Date
Sep 19, 2025
Format
LP
Packaging
LP (100g)
Weight
1.727
Price
$211inc. GST
Ships From
Melbourne, AU
Delivery
Special order. Import item. Usually dispatched within 2 to 3 weeks.
Ascension (2LP in Crystal Amber, Digipak, 7, 12 art print of cover, 12 page vinyl size booklet) Five years after the triumphant Obsidian (#2 in Germany, #4 Switzerland, #5 Austria), British kings of doomngloom are back! Blending Metallica-esque riffage, Type-O heaviness, and Nick Holmes vocals between Gahan, Eldritch and death growl, PARADISE LOST and their new album Ascension are a shining example that some bands get better with age! More than three decades into their career, and with over two million albums sold, Paradise Lost remain the undisputed kings of metals dark side. Formed in Halifax in 1988, the band quickly became noted as the pioneers of gothic metal through their early groundbreaking albums like 1991s aptly-titled Gothic, a mixture of heaviness intertwined with shadowy melody and atmosphere. Never a group to remain creatively static, across their career theyve explored a myriad of avenues of dark music, from sludgy doom-death roots, to conquering the metal mainstream with the enormous, lush sounds of 1995s Draconian Times, to more experimental, electronic leanings, leaving an influence on a trail of artists as varied as Cradle Of Filth, HIM, Gatecreeper and Chelsea Wolfe. Now, in 2025, the Yorkshire quintet return with their staggering 17th album, Ascension, a record that sees their crown continue to gleam as it underlines just how they attained their position. Produced by guitarist Gregor Mackintosh at Black Planet studios in East Yorkshire, with drums and vocals captured at NBS and Wasteland studios in Sweden, its 10 tracks traverse the multitude of sounds in the bands arsenal, from full-bore heavy metal to sky-high melody, all the while keeping a minor-key melancholy that remains irresistible. People should expect us to get more miserable, jokes frontman Nick Holmes when asked what fans might anticipate from Paradise Lost in 2025. Explaining the albums title and the lyrics, however, its clear that they remain masters of their art when it comes to delivering on such things. The album title is taken from the belief in rising to the better place, in fiction from Earth to heaven, and all the requirements that go with that, he elaborates. In real life, people are often striving to get to a better place from birth, trying to be a better person, regardless of the fact that the only reward is death. The lyrics deal with everything that life throws at us, he continues. Its never predictable, and within that it can also be terrifying. How people deal with death, the crutches they turn to, and how the mental state is affected by life changing situations is always intriguing. As is the music itself. Album opener Serpent on The Cross begins with a gloriously doomy riff, before halfway through shifting gears into thundering classic metal, powered by double bass drumming and an almost Metallica-ish riff. On Silence Like The Grave, Nick sings about the pointlessness of war, point scoring for the sake of humankind over a perfect flourish of gothic metal. Tyrants Serenade, meanwhile, shows the bands engrained expertise with making simplicity sound enormous, topped by Gregors signature haunting guitar leads, while Lay A Wreath Upon The World starts as a quiet elegy before building to a mournful climax, and closer The Precipice leads with piano lines before drawing things to a stately conclusion. It all masterfully shows the breadth of what Paradise Lost have done and can do, in a manner that still no other band can make work quite the same. After 35 years, everything is conscious, says Nick. Its difficult not to be 100% sure of where everything is coming from having such a vast varied back catalogue, but ultimately it simply comes down to if we like the music we are creating or not. If we do, it stays! That hasnt changed since we were teenagers. Ascension stands proud in Paradise Losts canon. The misery never stops but, says Nick, thats how they like it. Ironically, he laughs,

Tracklisting

  1. Serpent On The Cross
  2. Tyrants Serenade
  3. Salvation
  4. Silence Like The Grave
  5. Lay A Wreath Upon The World
  6. Diluvium
  7. Savage Days
  8. Sirens
  9. Deceivers
  10. The Precipice
  11. Serpent On The Cross
  12. Tyrants Serenade
  13. Salvation
  14. Silence Like The Grave
  15. Lay A Wreath Upon The World
  16. Serpent On The Cross
  17. Savage Days
  18. Sirens
  19. Deceivers
  20. The Precipice
  21. This Stark Town
  22. A Life Unknown
  23. Side B
  24. This Stark Town
  25. A Life Unknown
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