On their 2018 album
Heir to Despair, avant-metal innovators
Sigh incorporated traditional Japanese instruments into their uncategorizable sound, additionally delving into some of the most radical electronic collage experimentation of their multi-decade career. Beginning the fourth cycle of their acrostic album-titling scheme (all their major releases sequentially start with a letter of the band's name),
Shiki continues what could be thought of as
Sigh's vision of folk-metal, with hand percussion, flutes, and shamisen present along with saxophones, synthesizers, and the more typically metal guitars and drums.
Sigh's work since the early 2010s has had far more in common with progressive metal than the band's black metal roots, but this feels like their bleakest, and at times rawest, material in a while. "Kuroi Kage" starts out closer to doom metal than the group is known for, yet it soon erupts into frenzied blastbeat convulsions. "Shikabane" is highlighted by a battle between several different types of drums, and "Satsui - Geshi No Ato" contains operatic vocals, a horror-synth breakdown, and a wild tape collage outro. Final instrumental track "Touji No Asa" is a surprising turn toward soothing, raga-like drone.
Shiki doesn't quite reach the same level of surrealness as the band's 2001 opus
Imaginary Sonicscape, but it's still a magnificent work that spans a wide range of styles and emotions. With the exception of one or two misfires (which are still interesting, at the very least),
Sigh's entire discography is remarkable and well worth exploring, and
Shiki is another powerful release from one of the world's most unique bands. ~ Paul Simpson