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Rebirth in Despair

Atone

This was an excellent Doom album that seemed to come to life with each passing note. Emotions also doubled along the journey and ATONE was able to squeeze the songs for as much impact as possible. You will find rage, regret, hatred, and loneliness here, as well as an impending sense that your days are numbered.
April 5, 2026

From Bandcamp, "ATONE is a Funeral Doom Metal band formed in 2024 in Lisbon (Portugal). The project is built around a single obsession: humanity's self-inflicted collapse. The band does not write songs. It constructs visions. The band's core proposition is uncompromising: despair is inherited, illusion is chosen, and transcendence is possible only through recognition. The music exists to force that recognition. "Rebirth in Despair" unfolds as a premonitory dream where creation, illusion, decay, and rebirth repeat without mercy. Each track is a fractured scene rather than a linear chapter. Order is irrelevant. Meaning emerges only at the end, when the dreamer wakes." The album has five songs, and the title track is first. It eases in, then takes root, with a lot of weight in the riff and devastatingly harsh vocals. At times they roar, like the alpha male of a lion's pride. It's one of those sounds that keeps sinking…deeper and deeper into the darkness of the swamp.

"Labyrinth of Sundered Grace" begins with a bit of feedback, and then that towering riff drops right onto your head. Every once in a while, they do let brief rays of sun penetrate the darkness, but they are no match for its intensity. There is even the infamous "devil's fifth" riff used made famous by BLACK SABBATH on their debut. "Eidolon's Remnant" features some solemn, clean vocals intermixed with guttural harsh. They provide just a bit of breathing room for the listener until the gravity of sound returns. It's another song where the weight builds on your back slowly until the burden proves too much for even one more step. "Asylum for the Unmoored" begins with clean tones that are quickly dashed by horrid harsh ones. There are some gentle piano notes, and they exist to provide some contrast with the emotional weight of the song.

The final song is the longest; a 15-minute journey. Following a nursery rhyme opening, darkness takes over. In some ways, the thick, reverberating bass notes sum up the visual of spreading blackness. There is rage in these vocals in addition to despondence. Although they are two different emotions, they can produce a similar result. Like any good torture sequence, they drag it out for what seems like days, weeks, even months. Once you reach that point of numbness, they have done their job. This was an excellent Doom album that seemed to come to life with each passing note. Emotions also doubled along the journey and ATONE was able to squeeze the songs for as much impact as possible. You will find rage, regret, hatred, and loneliness here, as well as an impending sense that your days are numbered.

8 / 10

Excellent

Songwriting

8

Musicianship

8

Memorability

8

Production

8
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"Rebirth in Despair" Track-listing:

1. Rebirth in Despair

2. Labyrinth of Sundered Grace

3. Eidolon's Remnant

4. Asylum for the Unmoored

5. Living Ghosts in the Shattered Dome

 

Atone Lineup:

Maze – Vocals

Ashen – Lead Guitar & Keyboards

V.S. – Rhythm Guitar & Bass

Flame – Drums

 

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