With The Old King of Witches, Old Tower delivers a masterful new chapter in dark music that feels both steeped in tradition and eerily alien. The project has long wandered through hinterlands of dungeon synth, blackened ambience and occult narrative; here those impulses crystallize into a focused deconstruction of regression as transformation from man to beast. What once flickered at the edges of earlier works steps fully out of the shadows: an obsession with fictional reality and time stasis, with worlds that seem permanently dusk‑lit and slightly out of joint. Old Tower shaves everything down to the bone, trimming the fat of the carcass so that only incantation remains - relentless, unresolved.
Sonically, the album resurrects the dying breed of classic dark ambient by feeding it with ‘90s deep electronics, then pushes that hybrid toward a new form of DARK MUSIC rather than mere homage. Long, submerged tones, spectral pads and low‑frequency rumbles recall an era when ambient was a tool for conjuring spaces rather than offering background comfort; yet the structures feel sharpened, ritualistic, and narrative‑driven. Themes emerge through subtle harmonic shifts and recurring motifs rather than overt hooks. Each piece moves like a slow procession, as if lit by torches: narrow, focused, intent on guiding the listener deeper into a specific, imagined terrain.
Conceptually, The Old King of Witches follows “a stranger” entering a derelict domain. It is a land of old and rotten pine trees, scattered rocks overgrown with dark green moss, and strange, reclusive inhabitants who seem half‑visible, half‑remembered. Among them are witches who worship an ancient evil roaming this place. Through forbidden magic, they gradually pull the stranger deeper into their forest world, and the album traces his journey across woods, caverns, fields and groves. Sound becomes path: each track a new clearing or corridor, each modulation a hint that the stranger is passing a threshold he may not fully notice until it’s too late.
The “old king” is not a figure who appears as a character in the usual sense. He is the ruler of this land, but not as a physical manifestation. Instead he functions as a symbol - the concentrated allure of the mysterious and the dark, the gravitational pull that keeps the stranger moving forward instead of fleeing. As the record unfolds, this symbolic presence thickens the atmosphere: drones feel heavier, melodies more minor and inward, distant chimes and muffled rhythms like echoes of ceremonies happening just out of sight. The listener, like the stranger, starts to sense that the forest is less a setting than a sentient system, and that the king is simply its most focused intention.