About Court In The Act.

No albums are hosted here. All files must be deleted 24 hours after download, as they are for review and criticism purposes only - provided you follow this guideline, downloading from Court In The Act is legal as per s30(1) of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. If any copyright holder has a problem with their material being posted here, get in touch and I will remove it. Let me know if any links are broken, I'll remove the post to prevent future annoyance, and will attempt to re-upload the file.

Comments make our work worthwhile. If you really enjoyed an album, tell us about it, we'd love to hear from you. If you hated it, tell us why.

Although music is a major part of all of our lives, we all have some form of external life. If there are periods in which no posts are added, I'm sorry, but that's how things happen. Even though I love blogging like this, sometimes I can't muster up the desire within myself to write about yet another album.

I'd like to say too that Court In The Act will never be run for personal profit. This means no advertisement, no premium schemes, and no LinkBucks. Megaupload is used because it strikes a fair balance between ease of upload and ease of download.

Monday, 27 February 2012

Re-upload: Miles Davis - Kind Of Blue [1959]

The reason why this is tagged with 'legal' is that the copyright of a sound recording expires 50 years after initial publication, so the copyright for this expired in 2009.

This is an all-time classic, not just within its genre, but in all of music. Miles Davis is my favourite jazz musician, and for good reason. This album should be heard by everybody.

128 kbps

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Repost notes: New legislation being pushed through might bring this back into copyright. Download it while you can and fight the legislation.

Saturday, 25 February 2012

Sunn O))) - Candlewolf Of The Golden Chalice (The Peel Session) EP [2004]

Okay, so Sunn O))) might have been hipster fodder a couple of years back and are therefore now universally hated by anyone who hates things without understanding them (90% of the human population), but they do produce some seriously unnerving music. This is their famous session with the late, great, BBC Radio 1 DJ John Peel. It is worth a listen just to hear Peel's introduction to the music (there is a lot about toilets in it). But the main event, the 19 minute drone of the title track, is great as well. The ambience of said drone and the low end like some form of sonic behemoth combine to create music more unnerving than any ever used in horror films. Best listened to in a dark room, although Court In The Act is not responsible for any nightmares it may cause.

192 kbps

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Thursday, 23 February 2012

Re-upload: Bastard Priest - Under The Hammer Of Destruction [2010]

Bastard Priest are one of the bands spearheading the new wave of old school death metal, and they do it damn well. Coming from Sweden, it's natural to hear a little bit of hardcore/d-beat influence in their music, and so you do. 'Total Mutilation' could be the DM anthem of recent years.

~180 kbps VBR

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Wednesday, 22 February 2012

REVIEW: Wyrdforge - Wyrdforge demo [2012]


Full disclosure: The instrumentalist on this demo is a friend of mine (and a contributor to this blog, in fact). I believe my opinions to be impartial though.

The opening chords of this, Wyrdforge’s first (and only, thus far) demo, scream of Triptykon. It’s a bit of a false introduction in that way, because the rest of the demo has very little to do with that style. Anyway, this intro/opening track (it could conceivably be viewed as a full song) gives little indication of the style which is to come. In fact, it’s probably the weakest track on the demo, which is a shame, as many will hear this, presume it’s intended as a full song, and move on to their next bitesize chunk of music. It offers very little variation – only one riff is used, and it’s not particularly exciting.

Starting with track two, however, the demo is very exciting stuff indeed. ‘Invisible Mastery’ opens with a riff that could quite easily be prime-era Slayer, and continues with a display in sheer aggression balanced with sufficient melody to keep this from becoming a mud of indistinguishable riffs. The production is appropriately raw for this sort of release, and complements the varied vocal style (from standard OSDM style grunts to harsher, blackthrashy screams).

The centrepiece, ‘Necromancy And Napalm Bombings’ is clearly the best track of the demo. Juxtaposing a thrashy style with blasts and truly catchy riffwork, one hears d-beats blended seamlessly into blastbeats and thrash beats and fills, without any sense of the disjointedness that is often produced by this sort of attempt. Again, it’s clear that Wyrdforge are at their best when going at full tilt; the effectiveness of the more mid-paced songs is hampered a little by the lack of the exhilaration that’s often needed for this sort of thing to work well.

What this is not is original. If you want new, original albums, go listen to Abyssal or Dodecahedron. If what you want is old-school worship which wears its influences on its sleeves and is well-written, then Wyrdforge will please you a lot. The main similarities are the aforementioned Slayer, with a little bit of Aura Noir and perhaps Kreator in there as well. This is a tried and tested combination, but one that Wyrdforge use to devastating effect. The occasional blastbeat with a more melodic riff bears heavy resemblance to Fukpig’s Belief Is The Death Of Intelligence.

When you reach the closer, ‘Leeching Spell’, you’ll realise that it’s essentially the culmination of all the bases visited across the duration of the previous tracks. Perhaps the dilution of these styles reduces their effectiveness a little, but it’s a catchy tune, and one that will stay in your head for a while. My main problem is the abrupt ending – although I was assured this was intentional, I don’t think it works – it seems that the song simply cuts out where some kind of more musical progression to end the demo would be more appropriate. Put it this way – it gives the impression of the band shouting ‘there’s our ideas guys, now fuck off’ at the end. A small problem, but one that leaves a slightly bitter taste in the mouth.


Satanic Malfunctions/SM-70 - Born To Lose, Out To Lunch split [1988]

I've been listening to the new Napalm Death pretty much constantly since it leaked yesterday (I'm not posting it here just now, it's not hard to find), and it rules. Also, sorry for the delay in posts the blog's had, my lethargy has caused this somewhat. Anyway, I've got something somewhat rare, but awesome for you here. I was recommended this by an old curmudgeon on last.fm after I asked for proto-grind/powerviolence in the vein of Siege (well, he recommended Satanic Malfunctions). And boy, it does that job damn well. Satanic Malfunctions, a band from a town only about 30 miles from where I live, are certainly the faster, and probably better of the two, but the German SM-70 are no slouches either - the former is probably a little closer to Siege and early Napalm Death, whilst the latter has a fair amount of mid-80s European Oi! influence. I love splits, and this is an excellent example why.

128 kbps

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Re-upload: Running Wild - Black Hand Inn [1994]

Contrary to popular belief, Alestorm were not the world's first 'pirate' metal band. Indeed, they were beaten by some 30 years by Running Wild, who, on this album, continued both their own fine tradition, and that of Germany's heavy/power metal scene.

Re-upload notes: Seriously, this is a quintessential power metal album - and one that should also appeal to those who aren't usually fond of power metal but like other forms of trad metal.

128 kbps

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Saturday, 18 February 2012

Re-upload: A Tribe Called Quest - People's Instinctive Travels And The Paths Of Rhythm [1990]

Another one that may surprise some of you, but I never promised that this music would feature exclusively metal, or indeed extreme music. This is my favourite hip hop album, as it shows a time when rap wasn't about violent lyrics, it was an extension of the blues which was largely about rhythm and having fun.

Varied bit rate, but most tracks are 128 kbps (simplistic music)

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