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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Stark, primitive, yet emotive brutality
It's become almost a cliche when reviewing this album to say that it was not initially impressive. I tried to approach this album as death metal and was disappointed by the fuzzy production and lack of clearly defined riffs. Then I realized that this, of course, is BLACK metal( it epitomizes it, in fact!). The focus here is on chilling, dark atmosphere, which the murk...
Published on April 29, 2002 by Phil Avetxori

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Well, it's okay...
I do not believe this to be as epic, much less good as most tend to make it out to be. This album is simply good, nothing more. Although I do take much more pleasure in listening to this over the tunes of the likes of other kvlter and tr00er bands, this is over worshipped. This is another black metal band which practices minimalist art, which isn't necessarily a bad...
Published on September 1, 2004 by Matt Pullen


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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Stark, primitive, yet emotive brutality, April 29, 2002
This review is from: Transylvanian Hunger (Audio CD)
It's become almost a cliche when reviewing this album to say that it was not initially impressive. I tried to approach this album as death metal and was disappointed by the fuzzy production and lack of clearly defined riffs. Then I realized that this, of course, is BLACK metal( it epitomizes it, in fact!). The focus here is on chilling, dark atmosphere, which the murk contributes to immeasurably. The shifting wall of guitar noise actually manages to trick your ears into hearing orchestral/choral washes that aren't really there, a neat aural illusion that inevitably suggests conjuring demons out of thin air, and for once adds a hint of authenticity to the usual "evil" posturing. Not to mention that this shredding, pounding, thrashing golgothic slime creature of an album simply KILLS with it's single-minded assault, and Nucturno Culto's rotting larnyx delivers the most feral death grunts I've ever heard. Most of the lyrics are in Norwegian, adding to the sense of arcane mystery (well,to non-Norwegians at least). These guys come across as ignorant morons in interviews, but paying attention to their political views is giving them too much credit: these idiots-savant are at their best when they channel their frozen-vikings-thawed-in-modern-sanitized-Scandinavian-post-DeStijl confusion through a wall of cruddy amps, creating this deliciously unholy mess.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars COLD, RAW, UGLY, EVIL, February 3, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Transylvanian Hunger (Audio CD)
Superior! the greatest black metal work of all time, it sits pleasantly next to Bathory's 'Under the Sign..' as the definitive black metal album. Pure ugliness and cold hatred, true misanthropy. trebley guitars shred over Fenriz racing drums and horribly trollish ugly hatefilled vocals from Nocturno Culto. a perfectly drunken recording for misanthropes. horribly atmospheric with terrible production complete with monochrome aesthetics. Fenriz and the Count write some excellent lyrics as usual. This surpasses any of their previous or latter work...pure evil.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars awesome atmospheric black metal, February 17, 2000
This review is from: Transylvanian Hunger (Audio CD)
The only negative comment I e ver hear about this album is repetitive. I know it might seem like a paradox, but yes it is, in a good way. The riffs seem to be pounded into your head to the point of where you let the atmosphere soak in. The vocals on this album are awesome, the guitar riffs very bleak and black. Black metal at it's finest.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Hail to the true intense Vampires -"Fenriz: Darkthrone", March 25, 2000
This review is from: Transylvanian Hunger (Audio CD)
Gee, I'm pretty sure that most of you have heard of this nordic BM band that deliver nothing but raw & harsh BM! It's true, and this album displays their ugliness! This whole CD rules, IMO! Some rrreal highlights are (I'll be damned if I'm going to type them out, lol) Numbers... 1 (Duh! ), 2, 3, 4, 7! This IS what BM in Norway use to be ALL about!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Well, it's okay..., September 1, 2004
This review is from: Transylvanian Hunger (Audio CD)
I do not believe this to be as epic, much less good as most tend to make it out to be. This album is simply good, nothing more. Although I do take much more pleasure in listening to this over the tunes of the likes of other kvlter and tr00er bands, this is over worshipped. This is another black metal band which practices minimalist art, which isn't necessarily a bad thing. I happen to like minimalism in many cases, but in this instance you may as well take the first sixty seconds of each song and then replay it for another two or three minutes; you'll get the same effect as listening to an entire song.

Minimalism is not bad. Lack of variety is what erodes the greatness of this album and only forces me to ponder about how good this could have been. The band had the right idea; they just needed to expand upon it a little bit with more riffs. On the level of skill, I'm sure any guitar newbie could learn any of these songs, they aren't hard to play. What makes this attractive more or less is the sheer nature of this recording.

The blurry production gives Darkthrone a bit of an advantage for their quest to sound as if they recorded Transilvanian Hunger while camping out in a forest on a snowy winter night. Actually, this sounds more like it was recorded in a studio, then that recording was recorded on a tape player if you want to be realistic. The vocals sound like a growl in vein of a rasp; Nocturno Culto somewhat resembles the late Mayhem singer, Dead, during songs like "Slottet I Det Fjerne" with his "ARRRGH!" Like the guitar playing, the drumming is pretty simple; Fenriz mainly just uses mid-paced blast beats. However, I happen to have a soft spot for the drumming here because of the way the non stop pounding adds a nice dosage of chaos to this album.

Even though the guitars are just fast strumming, there is a lot of melody within the simplicity. Yeah, the sound is cold and grim, but even that isn't an excuse to cut corners like this. The guys in Darkthrone have a knick for creating good melody with little effort involved, but I know they could have done more with less recursive riffs to make this album really scream `epic.' This is worth owning if you're a fan of black metal, without a doubt, but I wouldn't call this essential by any means. If you hate repetitive minimalism then you may want to download this before you consider purchasing it.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Startlingly bleak, yet with a certain mood of sadness and be, January 2, 2002
By 
Frank Simonelli (Biddeford, Maine) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Transylvanian Hunger (Audio CD)
This is one of those albums that pretty much defines Norwegian black metal, mainly by including many actually "beautiful"sounding passages amongst the more savage riffs. The atmosphere of this has to be heard to be described. It is incomparable and yet brilliant.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Transilvanian Hunger Power, March 21, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Transylvanian Hunger (Audio CD)
This CD is a perfect example of Raw powerful black metal. The vocals are perfect for the recording very raspy and dark. The music is a little repetitive but sounds good. The Best song of Course is Transilvanian Hunger. Without that song the cd would only rate at a three star. Fenriz is again a god on the drum set. His lyrics are also very good.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The back excerpt says it all... TRUE NORWEGIAN BLACK METAL..., October 22, 2005
This review is from: Transylvanian Hunger (Audio CD)
Dude...you guys don't know black metal...there are so many bad reviews about this album that it makes me sick to my stomach! DarkThrone is one of the pioneers of norwegian black metal along with MayheM (with Oystein and Per Yngve. DarkThrone gave up the whole trendy death metal scene to become the UNHOLY darkthrone and ever sense then, they NEVER made a bad album. The production of this album added to the dark, grim atmosphere of the album, and i do not regret buying it at all. The album is sung entirely in Norwegian which kicks soooo much @$$!! I think all music should be sung in its native language. Swedish, Danish, Norwegian, German, Polish whatever...BLACK METAL IST KREIG!!!
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Dark purity, July 21, 2004
By 
Chet Fakir (San Francisco) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Transylvanian Hunger (Audio CD)
This is Black Metal distilled to its grimmest, darkest purity. The guitars meld together in a slowly shifting black harmonic wall. The riffs are repetitive but I found them mesmerising. The drums have been stripped down to their basics, no fills for Fenriz, and act as a solid blasting foundation for the guitars. The vocals are placed perfectly within the music and are savage. That most of the songs are sung in Norwegian adds to the evil angry experience.

The lyrics written by Fenriz and Count Grishnakh - Varg Vikernes of Burzum, are darkly poetic and evocative, capturing in words an essence of horror that few other bands ever achieve. At least the two songs in English do. This is dark, evil music, to call it grim doesn't begin to describe the emotion Darkthrone achieved on Transylvanian Hunger.

I didn't buy this album for some time as I heard of its primitive production, my bad.
Yes the production is intentionaly "bad", but the lo-fi sound really does help to create a palpably dark, cold atmosphere. It only adds to the cold wall-of-noise aesthetic Darkthrone were attempting. "Blaze In The Northern Sky" and "Under A Funeral Moon" are both excellent albums but sound "spiky" to me: there are things that stand up out of the mix, be it a guitar or Fenriz's highhat. On "Transylvanian Hunger" the sound has been honed/refined into a blasting wall. It just sounds more unified than Darkthrone's previous two black metal releases, (not better, just different)

"Transylvanian Hunger" is the music of ice, stone and anger, an innovative album from some of the true innovators in black metal. Certainly one of Darkthrones best and the quintesence of the Norwegian underground black metal sound. When I first got it I played it twice through in a row, at work no less. Listen to it loud in headphones at night, it will send chills down your spine.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars AVE DARKTHRONE, October 8, 1999
This review is from: Transylvanian Hunger (Audio CD)
While no Darkthrone album should be overlooked, this is my favorite. Favorite Darkthrone, favorite black metal album. It is what black metal should aspire to, completely raw and grim soundscapes of misanthropy. To say it may change your life is not an understatement.
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Transylvanian Hunger
Transylvanian Hunger by Darkthrone (Audio CD - 1995)
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