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Ethereal Darkness - Echoes (2026)
Ratings: 1
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Bong-Ra - Esoterik (2026)
Ratings: 1
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Hanging Garden (FIN) - Isle of Bliss (2026)
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Palace of Worms - Cabal (2023)
Ratings: 0
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Summit - The Winds That Forestall Thy Return (2016)
Ratings: 0
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Stitched Up Heart - To the Wolves (2023)
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Stitched Up Heart - Darkness (2020)
Ratings: 0
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Stitched Up Heart - Never Alone (2016)
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Reviews: 0
Stitched Up Heart - Skeleton Key (2014)
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Stitched Up Heart - Escape the Nightmare (2011)
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Powerwolf - Wildlive (Live at Olympiahalle) (2026)
Ratings: 2
Reviews: 0
Vandor - The Ember Eye Part II: The Portal of Truth (2026)
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Leaves' Eyes - Song of Darkness (2026)
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Myrath - Wilderness of Mirrors (2026)
Ratings: 2
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Black Label Society - Engines of Demolition (2026)
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Grond - Worship the Kraken (2016)
Ratings: 0
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Grond - Howling From the Deep (2013)
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Grond - Cosmic Devonian (2015)
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Grond - Steel Coffins (2010)
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Guttural Corpora Cavernosa - You Should Have Died When I Killed You (2016)
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Deadtrees - New World (2026)
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Deadtrees - 十万肉喇叭 / One Hundred Thousand Meat Horns (2025)
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Cartoon Theory - Feel (2022)
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Cartoon Theory - Yokai Orchestra (2019)
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Cartoon Theory - Planet Geisha (2016)
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Hellripper - Coronach (2026)
Ratings: 1
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Winterfylleth - The Unyielding Season (2026)
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 1
Enisum - Autumn Embrace (2026)
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Mossgiver - Renewer (2026)
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Antrisch - Expedition III : Renitenzpfad (2026)
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Hellripper - Coronach (2026)
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Exodus - Goliath (2026)
Ratings: 2
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Exodus - British Disaster! The Battle of '89 (Live at the Astoria) (2024)
Ratings: 0
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Black Moriah, The - Desert Hymns & Funeral Grins (2023)
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Black Moriah, The - Road Agents of the Blast Furnace (2019)
Ratings: 1
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Sevensins - Natural Selection (2020)
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Monosphere - New World (2026)
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Operation Cunt Destroyer - Operation Cunt Destroyer (2016)
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Operation Cunt Destroyer - Slam Before Time (2015)
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Stitched Up Heart - Skeleton Key (2014)
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Bong-Ra - Esoterik (2026)
Ratings: 1
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Bong-Ra - To Mega Panopticon (The Dystopic Remixes) (2025)
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Brainchild - Mindwarp (1992)
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 1
Heaven Pierce Her - ULTRAKILL: FRAUD (2026)
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Rave the Reqviem - EX-EDEN (2023)
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Manchester’s Winterfylleth have had a mostly “off” relationship with me (as opposed to an “on/off” relationship that is). Their most enjoyable release for me has always been their acoustic folk record The Harrowing of Heirdom which I thought was fantastic in a kind of underground Fleet Foxes kind of a way, not too commercialised or harmonised either. Fact is that most of their outright black metal records have left me cold, and not in the desired black metal experience kind of “cold” either. I cannot deny that they are a talented bunch of lads, and that they do have a well-established following of loyal fans. The music is never bad when I experience it, yet nor does it come across as being particularly memorable either.
The Unyielding Season caught me off guard therefore. Soon after hearing it through a couple of times, I found myself able to predict songs on subsequent visits. Opening track, ‘Heroes of a Hundred Fields’ has a fantastic section (which I heard called a “breakdown” the other day) after about two thirds of the way through. Likewise, the title track has etched its flow into my memory banks also, much quicker than expected. As with my favourite album of theirs, the two acoustic tracks are probably still my two preferred ones. That favouritism has more to it than nostalgia for the previous release though, the band do have a genuine talent for writing beautiful acoustic pieces I feel and again it is these two moments that stay with me as the most positive experiences of the album.
It is not that the rest of the album is awful, more that these other tracks do seem to blur into one another. This is a trait that only seems to get worse with repeated listens sadly. Even on purely critical listens, it is hard to discern vast quantities of the album as having much in the way of individuality. By far the greatest problem I have though is the poor choice of a cover track that sits right at the end of the album. I am not Paradise Lost’s biggest fan, regardless of the fact that ‘Enchantment’ is one of my least favourite songs of their’s. It was bad enough hearing Nick sing it but the vocalist for Winterfylleth somehow makes the experience worse. Maybe I have overplayed this album in trying to settle on some reasonable understanding of it. Looking at the score I have applied to the rating now, I would have thought it a shade higher upon initial discovery listens. However, the reality over time has proven a different outcome is necessary.
The newest album from Ice Nine Ki... wait... The Gloom in the Corner is a peculiar record and exercise in structure. Right out of the gate, it takes heavy influence from Ice Nine Kills and The Silver Scream records. It's littered with symphonic strings, bombastic and erratic song forms and sequencing and a heightened sense of grandiose. Unlike Ice Nine Kills, The Gloom in the Corner are making this to be it's own standalone movie. Royal Discordance is a concept album, but it's hard to get into the concept from the outset. It's an album that is explosive and at points, dank, so the sardonic and destructive nature of the lyrics and themes feel out of touch. The way the album progresses from "The Problem with Apocalyptic Tyranny" and ends with "Love II: A Walk Amongst the Poppy Fields" almost feels forced.
Part of that inevitably comes from the music as well. Like I said on the outset, because of how heavily influenced Royal Discordance is to Ice Nine Kills, it is a heavy album. Lots of heavy chugging guitars, fat percussion mixing and a healthy dose of aggression in the vocals. I personally think that the vocals are the albums glowing highlight because for every "Nope (Hollow Point Elysium)" there is an equally strong ballad like "Shadow Rhapsody II" and the balancing of the vocal styles is very well done. Besides those vocals, there isn't that much innovative or interesting through the instrumentals. You might occasionally hear a blast beat coming from the percussion which sounds cool and the hardcore riffs are fun, but without a truly special hook locking them into place, it just feels hollow.
Despite the negativity, I didn't hate this album. Just know that it is not my cup of tea when it comes to the type of metalcore that I enjoy. If you like Ice Nine Kills but wanted them to make a concept album for a movie instead of tributes to classic slasher films, you might enjoy Royal Discordance.
Best Songs: You Didn't Like Me Then (You Won't Like Me Now), Short Range Teleportation (A Guide to Guerrilla Warfare), That's Life (Carry Me Home), Love II: A Walk Amongst the Poppy Fields
This was my first time hearing about this Djentcore band from Australia and I enjoyed my time with I Guess It Was Nowhere. My initial impressions were that Above, Below would be following in the footsteps of bands like ERRA with their down tuned guitars and chunky hardcore breakdowns. And while we get a fair bit of that here, Above, Below also throw in some progressive/atmospheric sections as well. Those sections serve as a nice change of pace for the record, so that when the next chunky hardcore breakdown hits, it connects with authority.
I use the word "atmospheric" very strongly here because I believe this album could have used more of that. I kept thinking back to early Astronoid records while entrenched in a dreamy sequence and felt myself getting kicked out of it unceremoniously by the vocals. I like Jacob Wilkes clean singing, but his harsh vocals are too brash and unkept for the clean stylings of djent. I'm quite sure that this was part of the point; highlighting more of the hardcore influence through the vocals so maybe its just a difference of direction, but that doesn't excuse the vocal mixing, which is pushed so far back in the sequence. And Jacob did all of the mixing and mastering on I Guess It Was Nowhere too! Guess he really loves pumping his band up and not himself.
Overall it was pretty good. The time flew by and I enjoyed my time with I Guess It Was Nowhere. The band executes a decent variety of styles and are really good at giving the listener space before the next hardcore assault. Hooks are hit-and-miss; quite a few of them felt too much like alphabet soup instead of clear and concise phrases with catchy melodies, but the album is well played/performed and the mixing (minus the vocals) is superb.
Best Songs: Heat, Starbreather, Collapsing Eden, I Have Lost My Appetite for Spring
While 1993's "Pure Holocaust" sophomore album was the record that cemented Norwegian black metal icons Immortal as a band that commanded my interest, it was third full-length "Battle in the North" that saw them joining the top tier of the genre for me personally & I still regard it as a black metal classic today. I purchased the digipack CD upon release (along with a long-sleeve shirt that I wore around the scene religiously for a while there) & it received a good ol' flogging during the back end of 1995. Immortal upped the brutality significantly once front man Abbath took over the drumming duties on "Pure Holocaust" but this? This was a whole different kettle of fish & still sits amongst the most intense extreme metal releases ever recorded. The riffs are swarming & inhuman, the drumming is relentlessly pummeling & Abbath's signature croaky vocals are demonic & sinister, not to mention ridiculously catchy. There are those critics out there who criticize Abbath's drumming as being incompetent but that's not a valid concern if you know a thing or two about extreme metal drumming. Sure, his kick drum work isn't always super-precise but the clicky kick drum triggers that are right at the front of the mix go a long way to highlighting every blemish & these imperfections aren't anything unusual for black metal drummers. His arms are not a problem at all though & it's really the guitars that struggle to keep up with the frantic rhythms at times. That's what people are complaining about without actually realising the root cause. This minor flaw is not a significant problem for me anyway though with songs like the title track, "Cursed Realms of the Winterdemons" & "At the Stormy Gates of Mist" being some of my all-time favourite black metal numbers. There isn't a weak number amongst the ten on offer & I'm gonna suggest that "Battle in the North" is easily Immortal best album, leaving highly regarded releases like "Diabolical Fullmoon Mysticism", "At the Heart of Winter" & "Sons of Northern Darkness" in the dust.
For fans of Inquisition, Abbath & Mayhem.
Battle Ballads... That's an album title can either be aptly titled and have mostly ballads, or be misleading. Fortunately, it's the latter. I say "fortunately" because it's another good album from these Faroese metallers Tyr. In truth, there are only as many ballads as there are in a DragonForce album; one or two. The rest are power metal anthems with some melodic harmonies and bombastic orchestrations.
Oh yeah, this offering continues the band's later power metal direction, with their earlier progressive folk metal style in fragments. Their power metal side is in clearer display than before. However, the difference has caused less balance in their sound. Still there's a lot to look forward to, particularly in some of the first few tracks.
"Hammered" starts the album as an early hint at this approach. It's quite fun and hammering! Also a great way to introduce their new lead guitarist Hans Hammer, with the song title fitting well for that occasion too. Another 3-minute metal tune follows, "Unwandered Ways", yet it doesn't impress me as much as the surrounding tracks. "Dragons Never Die" is yet another 3-minute track while being another incredible standout. I especially love its chorus.
One of the most diverse songs in the vocals is "Row". While frontman Heri Joensen continues his unique singing, he also tests out some death growling (not as much as in Hel's opening track) and throat singing. Sadly it doesn't reach the heights of those earlier highlights. Still not a bad song though. Up next, "Torkils Dotur" is one of 3 songs with Faroese lyrics. It has quite some climatic emotion for a ballad. "Vaelkomnir Foroyingar" has more of their native language, while having a more straight direction in the music and vocals. However, their attempt at adding speed and heaviness comes out a bit weak and out of line. Thankfully, they still have their power in "Hangman".
"Axes" levels up the quality, showing that they still got it after around 25 years. The somewhat title track "Battle Ballad" is one of the most mighty tracks here. Everything's a small journey in this song! It's almost like Devin Townsend helped produced it alongside the album's actual producer Jacob Hansen. The bass should still be as audible as the rest, honestly. The closing "Causa Latronum Normannorum" starts off promising yet falls flat, compared to at least the previous two albums' ending epics.
Battle Ballads seems to take on the simple tight aspect of songs being mostly 3 to 4 minutes long each, similar to Valkyrja. The problem with their new album is, most of the progressiveness of their previous albums, including Valkyrja and Hel, have been discarded. At least a lot of the unique vocals by Heri Joensen is still around. And the formula they have is never downgraded to generic. Plus I am grateful for those other two albums I've checked out that make me up for more of this band. So although Battle Ballads doesn't reach that amount of greatness, nothing is jinxed, and Tyr is a band I'll never forget....
Favorites: "Hammered", "Dragons Never Die", "Torkils Dotur", "Axes", "Battle Ballad"




















































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