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Fulci - Risorsero dalla tomba e fu... L'apocalisse! (2026)
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Departure - Mired in Descension (2025)
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Spirit Adrift - Infinite Illumination (2026)
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Tid - Giv Akt (2010)
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Tid - Bortom inom (2007)
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Dir En Grey - Mortal Downer (2026)
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GrimSkunk - Set Fire! (2012)
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GrimSkunk - Meltdown (1995)
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Bilmuri - Kinda Hard (2026)
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Avial - Avial (2008)
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Metal Church - Dead to Rights (2026)
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Metal Church - The Final Sermon (Live in Japan 2019) (2024)
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Evermore - Mournbraid (2026)
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Induction - Love Kills! (2026)
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Nanowar of Steel - The Genghis Khan EP to End All Genghis Khan EPs (2026)
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Vomitory - In Death Throes (2026)
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Immolation - Descent (2026)
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Inferi (USA) - Heaven Wept (2026)
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Ecchymosis - Thanatocorporeal Sculptures of Cryogenic Excruciation (2026)
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Gangrenectomy - Cannibalistic Criteria of the Mantis (2020)
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Aristeia - Era of the Omnipotent (2011)
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Aristeia - Man, the Artistic Destroyer (2010)
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Todd Duane - Omnipresent (1999)
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Todd Duane - Rewind (2021)
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Abstracted - Hiraeth (2026)
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Tulus - Morbid Desires (2026)
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Melechesh - Sentinels of Shamash (2026)
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Ambroxiak - Detritus of Elysian Creation (2021)
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Mortuus Infradaemoni - Inmortuos Sum (2022)
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Mortuus Infradaemoni - Imis Avernis (2009)
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Zerre - Rotting on a Golden Throne (2026)
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Zerre - Scorched Souls (2024)
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Chaotic End - Υπόσχεση (Promise) (2017)
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Chaotic End - Μπροστά στην παράνοια In Front of Paranoia (1993)
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Abstracted - Ophidian (2015)
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Bodysnatcher - Hell Is Here, Hell Is Home (2026)
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Milhouse - Obscenity in the Milk (1997)
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Racetraitor - Make Them Talk (1999)
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Triumph of Gnomes - Fear Not, My Wolf Machine (2006)
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Bloodbath in Boston, A - Man-Made Apocalypse (2010)
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Infectious Maggots - Karat Besi Simfoni (2000)
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Infectious Maggots - Unknown (1999)
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Infectious Maggots - Deep Within Our Grief Factory Milk Runs Red (1993)
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Tid - Fix Idé (2016)
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Bong-Ra - Esoterik (2026)
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I will be honest, when I saw this record put forward for a feature release this month, I groaned inwardly. Having tried to understand the hype around this album on many occasions previously, I could never quite fathom its cult status. For me personally, it has always been Empire that is my go-to Queensrÿche album. A factor in my opinion of Operation Mindcrime has always been its arrangement. Metal/rock operas are tedious affairs to me, often where songs get snarled up in acts at various points in the record, completely disrupting the flow of the album usually. Here on this record, there is the double whammy of two, largely non-musical intro tracks to open proceedings, so my irritation soon becomes difficult to control.
Arrangement challenges aside, this outing with album has been much more fruitful than I expected. If I divert my attention away from the actual storytelling, I can acknowledge that there are some fantastic tracks on this record. I recalled that I had always liked ‘I Don’t Believe in Love’, but on this outing the class of ‘Suite Sister Mary’ shone through. I am confident that with future listens I will be able to expand on the list of standout tracks as some made a more subconscious impact this time around.
There are still some gripes, however. I struggle to describe much of this as metal in all honesty. The extravagance of the leads perhaps is all that keeps the sound this side of the hard rock style that I recognise as being more prevalent. I don’t really buy the progressive tag either. I doubt if it were all that progressive, I would have found as much positivity in the album as I have. However, let’s try to keep those positive vibes coming and end on a high note. This has been a successful revisit for me, albeit an unexpected one. I have a feeling if I edit the track listing myself on this, I could even get a higher rating for this album in the future.
At this point in their thirty-eight-year reign, Immolation can almost do no wrong. Whilst they may have had periods of inferior output (Kingdom of Conspiracy, Majesty & Decay), I can think of few bands of such long-established activity who’s output I look forward to. Descent continues this tradition of the Yonkers crew once again creating another distinctive sounding record that is immediately identifiable as their signature sound, backed up with their deft song writing skills and seemingly undying passion for this artform that they have epitomised for so long. It would be very easy for Immolation to sound a little jaded if not downright tired by now. However, whilst not a flawless record, their twelfth studio album shows no lack of energy and no signs of the battery levels even starting to diminish.
Perhaps one of the most consistent death metal legends of recent years, Immolation have made another assured sounding album. The line up of Ross, Robert, Alex and Steve has been stable now for three records now and you can almost feel the unity across these tracks. Great production also helps of course, and the mix here is kind to all elements of the instrumentation with Steve’s drums coming off best in my experience. Those dancing, swarming, and urgent riffs perform their dizzying deeds as always, with that keen ear for marauding melody getting a lot of room to shine also. Ross’ vocals are satisfyingly beastly, without suffering from the artificial edge to them that haunted the bands previous album, Acts of God. Indeed, the only element that is lost here is the bass, which is hardly rare in death metal anyways. Dan Lilker makes another guest vocal appearance on a couple of tracks, just as he did on the previous album.
Once again using the striking artwork of Eliran Kantor, the image that adorns the album cover of an angel immolating into the fiery depths of Hell (perhaps) is a good representation of the content that lies in the album itself. The sacrifice she appears to be making (or be forced to make) appears to have the perfect soundtrack in the instrumental track, ‘Banished’. For once, I find an instrumental track that is not overbearing and is placed in a sensible position on the record as the palate cleanser before the title and closing track. If you have enjoyed any album from Immolation in the last nine years, then Descent will not disappoint you. Whilst there is always an element of predictability to an Immolation record, for now that still presents as familiarity and I still find their sound to be one of the more unique in death metal still.
Okay, so I really tried to like the new Archspire album, even though it should be no surprise that it sits well outside my comfort zone of death metal. Dave Otero, the albums main producer, is an absolute beast here and has found his niche; producing several of the most recent releases by Cattle Decapitation and Allegaeon. Like those bands, this album is super clean and precise. Every single note in the guitars, bass and percussion is delivered with pin point accuracy and the bass carries a lot of the records intensity forward.
Where the album falters is in its lyrical presentation. I'm just gonna come out and say it: I think that early Tom Arraya is ass, so why the hell would anyone want to try and replicate him? I can give Slayer a little bit of credit here, since Tom balanced it out with a few slower passages as well as dueling guitar solos. Archspire have taken the word vomit from Reign in Blood and put it on steroids! Shawn's vocals just sound like gargled mush. In a genre where the intention of the vocals IS to sound like gargled mush, why waste your energy? If it was meant to be a novelty/comedy album then maybe, but this is meant to be taken dead seriously, and the vocals are very technical and flowery. It seems like a poorly thought out idea to me.
Best Songs: Red Goliath, Carrion Ladder, Limb of Leviticus
For Fans Of: Cattle Decapitation, Shadow of Intent, Rings of Saturn
Moody, atmospheric shoegaze that should satisfy on those grunge, hazy filled days during the summer months. It's well performed, has a strong foundation and low end, which really emphasizes the style on display. Vocals have a carefree presentation that is reminiscent of Hum and their 2020 revival album Inlet. Besides that though, True Blue is lacking heavily in substance; a common issue that persists throughout the shoegaze genre of music, but this one is extra dazed. This sounds like Deftones on autopilot. However Deftones have proven that they can still make quality music when they are on autopilot into the 2020s so to be a step below that has to be concerning.
Best Songs: Levitate, Summer Skin, True Blue
For Fans Of: Deftones, Teenage Wrist, Astronoid
As you can see from the rating, The Search is not without its challenges for me. Notwithstanding that this album was recorded nearly forty-years ago and that I suspect that they did not have the most advanced studio to work with, this took me back to the wrong side of the old school, blunting some of the sharper nostalgia that can normally carry a portion of such albums. I mean, I have no experience of Necrosis before this month and so I had no familiarity to work from that may have been triggered somewhere in my aging brain. Hence, the performance, although adept enough, is not captured as well as it could be.
In the main though, I just can't get past the vocals. They are just too weak to the point of being whiny; unable to stack up against the rest of the instrumentation, especially the guitar work which is a good few notches above the vocal performance. Increasingly, as I listened through the record, I found it hard to penetrate the skin of the record and pick out any individual moments to reflect upon. The album as a result just became this mass of thrash music, without any clear delineation between tracks. In short, it soon became a bit of a slog.
In the end I found myself listening to the album to almost try and outrun the vocals, just so I could hopefully get long enough away from them to enjoy the music itself. Alas, I did not have the legs to last the course of that little mindgame and so The Search remains a discovery that I am unlikely to revisit.
























































Vinny


Saxy S

