The album is produced by the band and Emil Nikolaisen of Serena-Maneesh at Malabar Studio in Oslo and features nine tracks of ugly rock 'n' roll played on heavy metal equipment and with a punk attitude. Simple and profound.
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Okkultokrati was concieved when members from Haust and a bunch of other Oslo-based underground bands joined forces with the aim to create fast and ugly music that was not hardcore - and definitely not metal! Together with Haust, Dark Times and a handful of other bands, Okkultokrati constitutes the Black Hole Crew-scene, famed for their reluctancy to be associated with anything else but themselves. -A serious cultural crime in social democratic norway, where bands don't exist if they're not as much dudes and buddies as they're musicians.
While their first album was produced by Haust's Ruben Willem, Okkultokrati asked Emil Nikolaisen of Serena Maneesh to record the follow-up.
"The recording was pretty much just a matter of getting mikes and valves on fire. Just with one guitar down Okkulto sounded huge." Emil comments.
Musically, Snakereigns is a great leap for the band. Building their anthems on straightforward punk beats with the filth of unholy rock n' roll running through their veins, Okkultokrati proudly let their influences from the masters of the genre bleed through, yet their spine-crushing anthems speak for themselves with unique guitar atmospheres and a mix of high/low-end riffage busting through the thunderous percussion and gnarled vocals.
The lyrical themes deal with the great end on three levels: The end of the universe, the end of the world and the end of self.
The artwork is made by Esben Titland (who also did Haust's Ride the Relapse and the Black Hole Xmass split)
Tracklist:
01: No Ouroboros
02: Snakereigns
03: Invisible Ley
04: I Thought Of Demons
05: Acid Eagle One
06: Unconscious Mind
07: We So Heavy
08: Let the Sun Receive Her King
09: Nothing Awaits