True to that, as much as any record in recent memory, a single-sitting playthrough of Umbra feels like an epic odyssey. Sure, Gévaudan seem to have pulled back from some of their most progressive flourishes on 2019’s Iter, but that’s solidified a more coherent through-line onto which listeners can latch, like a slow zipchord into the unknown. From UK legends My Dying Bride and Anathema to the likes of Pallbearer and YOB from the other side of the Atlantic, there is no shortage of flattering sonic comparisons to be drawn. Perhaps the biggest compliment, though, is that, with Umbra, Gévaudan are back on a path to be funereal genre greats in their own right.
Verdict: 4/5
For fans of: My Dying Bride, Candlemass, Pallbearer
Umbra is out on October 13 via Meuse Music