Infinity seems to be one of these bands that no matter how efficiently they execute their well-done black metal, nobody really notices them. Is it the overused and unimaginative band name, or rather the overused and unimaginative style of black metal, I’m not sure, but despite all unoriginality that one might find from the band’s fifth full-length Non De Hac Terra, it can’t be overlooked that they’ve done their homework here, and that they have crafted a qualified piece of modern, extreme black metal.
Right from the first rhythms of the eponymous “Non De Hac Terra”, the album introduces its sharp and tight instrumentation. Every instrument is played with such care and determination, only augmented with clear studio production, that the listener’s focus is directed more to the coating, the surface of things, rather than the content. The real meat, beneath the sweet and utterly precice playing, might not be so mind-blowing in its Keep of Kalessin and The Legion influences, but every now and then I do enjoy to put on something like this and just enjoy the straightforward ride, like watching a simple movie and not expecting it to provide any deep personal revelations or catharsis.
What I like the most about Non De Hac Terra is that it’s consistently good through its 50-minute playing time. There are no weak links, and if there is any fluctuation between songs, it’s because of their varying style rather than quality: whereas a track like “The Opponent” simply slaughters in its speed and “The Grey Stone Monument” kills everyone mercilessly in its convulsing riffs and beats, “Reginam Aeternum Noctis” brings some folkish, upbeat melodies into the field and “The Inevitable Darkness” balances nicely between hopeful and despondent melodies. So there is plenty of variation, yet never excessively, making the album a pleasant listen.
An album like Non De Hac Terra isn’t recommendable to the most uncompromising purists of the genre; Infinity is clearly inclined towards a more modern, melodic, heroic branch of black metal, and would hence be ideal for those who demand (production-wise as well as musically) a more professional touch from their music. Even I am able to enjoy the album, and quite much actually, so this is not an over-polished wankery fest at all.
3.5 / 5