Le secret (EP) explained

Le secret
Type:ep
Artist:Alcest
Cover:File:Alcest-le_secret.png
Recorded:2005
Genre:Blackgaze[1]
Length:27:19
Label:Drakkar
Prev Title:Tristesse hivernale
Prev Year:2001
Next Title:Souvenirs d'un autre monde
Next Year:2007

Le secret (French for "The Secret") is an extended play by French blackgaze band Alcest, released in 1 May 2005 through Drakkar Productions. It is Alcest's first release with creator Neige as sole member, as former members Aegnor and Argoth both left after the 2001 demo Tristesse hivernale, and the only release with Neige as sole performer.

Background and release

According to Michael Nelson, Neige was a pioneer of the fusion genre blackgaze, classifying Le secret as "the birth of blackgaze". He noted that it sounded "like a Cocteau Twins/Burzum collaborative split" and that "[r]oughly half the time, vocals were delivered in an angelic coo; the other half, they were a raw, distant shriek".

Neige wrote the title track when he was 17 years old and considers it the first song he wrote for Alcest, without considering the songs written for Tristesse hivernale.[2] The lyrics of the track "Élévation" come from the eponymous poem by Charles Baudelaire's from his 1857 volume of poetry Les Fleurs du mal. The album was re-recorded and re-released in 2011, with the involvement of drummer Winterhalter.

Critical reception

Although the original release received little to no attention from critics, the 2011 re-recorded version of the EP received positive reviews. Thom Jurek of AllMusic, stated that "it remains a very special record, as it lays out in total the first aural manifesto that all the work of Alcest to date was based upon, and shows just how far apart the unit is, in content and form, from other shoegaze metal acts. This is the door to a powerful, poetic, unsettling world of bliss that still challenges the sense of hearing even as it delights".

Personnel

Original
2011 version

Notes and References

  1. Nelson. Michael. Deconstructing: Alcest's Shelter and Metal in a Post-Deafheaven World. Stereogum. 3 January 2014. 1 June 2023.
  2. Blum. Jordan. Alcest's 10 Most Emotionally Ravaging Songs, According To Neige. Kerrang!. 10 October 2019. 1 June 2023.