Inception of Eternity: Weight, Space, Story—Evolution
- Fernando Triff

- 4 hours ago
- 2 min read
There is a time before the arrival of the energy waves when the world does not move (it is as if the air had static), and the ashes from burning somethingunknown, settle on the concrete ground from my feet to the ground.

Mother of Dawn begins just before this moment in everything and then Inception of Eternity pulls you under with no hesitation.
Angela has been singing for four years without pause or interruption to create the new sound of this band. She was not singing like other artists; she was commanding an audience with her voice. The contrast between tenderness and strength that is displayed by Angela's performance is like someone who has been to the beginning of civilization and brought it into our time. I cannot describe what it means, only that it cannot be defined by word— it is primal energy.
Mother of Dawn denotes an intentional shift away from earlier releases that embraced the chaotic collision of metalcore and techno by holding to a clear, consistent form of pure symphonic metal without external stimulation. Mother of Dawn is all about weight, space, and story. It's a calculated choice but it doesn't come across as premeditated; rather it feels like an evolution of necessity.
The mythology exists throughout this album—nature reclaims, reshapes, and reminds us of what was lost. There's tension present; beauty versus brutality, melody versus collapse. You can hear that tension, feel it, and hold onto it.
If the core emotions found throughout Mother of Dawn serve as the heart of the forthcoming full-length release from Inception Of Eternity, they will have taken a significant step in changing their musical evolution. Instead of searching for noise, they're creating an experience that lingers silently on you (quietly), only to eventually hit you in one powerful moment (all at once).





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