Milanku is a quintet from Montreal, having released two full-lengths prior to À l’aube. 2018’s Monument du non-être & Mouvement du non-vivant fully embraced the trademark “unbearable lightness” of the act’s muse, Czech author Milan Kundera. This ended up feeling like a Mono album with harsh vocals, which were blasted minimally anyway, begging the question of whether Milanku belongs within metal ranks (Metal Archives says no). While metal traditionally conveys frustration, crisis, and desperation, À l’aube is content dwelling in its melancholy.1 While the density of post-metal acts like Alaskan and We Lost the Sea is undeniably present here, the beauty takes center stage, emerging from the crushing weight of memory with a notable limp. Contrary to its solid but whimsical predecessor, À l’aube is world-weary and jaded, and all the better for it.
Milanku’s assertions of melody are deeply embedded in the Godspeed You! Black Emperor school of thought, emphasizing texture through an injection of just enough ugliness. Opener “À l’aube; de leurs silences,” like any grand opener, is the closest Milanku gets to Through Silver in Blood or Panopticon in its pulsing bass lines and plodding riffs,2 although its interwoven shimmering leads and simple melodies have a simultaneously hypnotic and raw effect, and signal the approaching dream. Each track flaunts organicity and expertly honed dynamics through intertwined melody from its dueling guitar leads and thunderous bass, drums are the tether that keeps À l’aube in memory of earth, vocals sparse and emotion aplenty. The contrasting distorted bass and angelic melodies of “À l’aube; il sera déjà trop tard” suggest innocence and grieving,3 while tragedy bleeds through the driving rhythms, crashing climaxes, and wailing tremolos of the quietly apocalyptic “À l’aube; prêchant la mauvaise nouvelle.”4 Melody is simple and amorphous, but always memorable throughout À l’aube.
While expertly composed crescendos, exploratory songwriting, and moods of bittersweet and tragedy are no strangers to post-metal, Milanku shows its true character and insane potential in its concluding pieces. While considered a bit of an intermitting calm before the storm, the jangly electronics and disembodied layers of voices of “À l’aube; de la grande tristesse” paints Milanku with a twisted brush – any qualms of pretty post-rock with harsh vocals cast aside.5 Closer “À l’aube; nous sommes disparus” presents a gradual and devastating crescendo of Milanku’s most vulnerable and crushing sides, letting the disembodied voices lead the ascent to our final lull.6 Enter the pulsing bass and pounding plods, the grounding agents, and the wailing, the gnashing of teeth, and the commanding barks – a swan song that reflects terror and desperation in humanity’s last breaths. Through this final track, the unbearable lightness takes full force in À l’aube, its building melodies and unflinching stare a clear ascent from its predecessors, and a challenge to post-metal today.
Milanku’s third full-length is a thing of beauty and terror. Its dichotomy of clean and harsh is endlessly intriguing, allowing exploration through a garbled shimmer that chokes and sputters across its thirty-nine minutes. While the ubiquitous Isis and Neurosis comparisons are partially fair, you’ll be more apt to recall Holy Fawn or Novarupta of yesteryear; its emphasis on organicity lends itself to minimalist sprawl rather than mammoth brutality. Somehow, though, the unbearable lightness of Milanku’s sound feels more punishing than any riff can provide. While certainly not for everyone and the nuanced post-rock influence takes many listens to unpack, this ascent through the roaring thunderclouds in the pinkish glow of dawn is worth every wound or scar that brought you here – it is an invitation to just be.
Rating: 4.0/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 256 kbps mp3
Label: Moment of Collapse Records | Folivora Records
Websites: milanku.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/milankuband
Releases Worldwide: March 31st, 2023