The Work Which Transforms God Explained

The Work Which Transforms God
Type:studio
Artist:Blut Aus Nord
Cover:Bluttransform.jpg
Released:March 17, 2003
Length:51:29
Label:Appease Me Records (2003)
Candlelight Records (2004)
Debemur Morti Productions (2012)
Prev Title:The Mystical Beast of Rebellion
Prev Year:2001
Next Title:MoRT
Next Year:2006

The Work Which Transforms God is the fourth studio album by black metal band Blut Aus Nord. It showcases the band incorporating industrial and dark ambient elements into their music.

It was first released on March 17, 2003 through Appease Me Records. It was reissued the following year on Candlelight Records with new artwork, and again in 2005 in a version that included the EP Thematic Emanation of Archetypal Multiplicity as a second disc. It was also reissued on CD and vinyl by Debemur Morti Productions on June 21, 2013 featuring new artwork by Valnoir and Dehn Sora. This reissue also featured a cover of Godflesh's song 'Mighty Trust Krusher', originally only available on the 2003 "Godflesh: Tribute" compilation by Nihilistic Holocaust.[1]

The Work Which Transforms God received positive reviews and is considered to be one of Blut Aus Nord's best releases.

Critical reception

The album was well received. It has been cited as a breakthrough release for the band as well as for the genre as a whole.[2] In Thom Jurek's review of the album for AllMusic, he describes that "Sonically, these guys love dissonance; they love thick heavy atmospheres and feedback and they love to mess with tempos stretching out time and sending it into a void", concluding "The Work Which Transforms God is a compelling and knotty listen; it squeals, plods, cracks, screeches, whirs and wails in differing shades of black."

Personnel

Blut Aus Nord
Additional Musicians
Additional Personnel

Notes and References

  1. Web site: TRIBUTE TO GODFLESH . May 1, 2016.
  2. http://www.vivalavinyl.com/blut-aus-nords-what-once-was-liber-ii-july-2012-in-the-context-of-their-discography/ Blut Aus Nord’s What Once Was… Liber II (July 2012) in the context of their discography