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Consummatum Est - Hypnagogia

Consummatum Est - Hypnagogia (2010)

Added: March 01, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Lord Elephant - Ultra Soul

Lord Elephant - Ultra Soul (2026)

Added: March 01, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Lord Elephant - Cosmic Awakening

Lord Elephant - Cosmic Awakening (2022)

Added: March 01, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Hoaxed - Death Knocks

Hoaxed - Death Knocks (2026)

Added: March 01, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Hoaxed - Hoaxed

Hoaxed - Hoaxed (2021)

Added: March 01, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Goodbye to Gravity - Goodbye to Gravity

Goodbye to Gravity - Goodbye to Gravity (2012)

Added: March 05, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Rob Zombie - Halloween Horrors

Rob Zombie - Halloween Horrors (2024)

Added: March 05, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Clawfinger - Before We All Die

Clawfinger - Before We All Die (2026)

Added: March 01, 2026
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
5.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Atlas - Sunder

Atlas - Sunder (2026)

Added: March 01, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Mirrorcell - Long Nights in Lovescape

Mirrorcell - Long Nights in Lovescape (2026)

Added: March 01, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Zepter - Zepter

Zepter - Zepter (2026)

Added: March 02, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Zepter - Inferno

Zepter - Inferno (2024)

Added: March 02, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Greyhawk - Warriors of Greyhawk

Greyhawk - Warriors of Greyhawk (2026)

Added: March 02, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Michael Sweet - Heart & Sacrifice

Michael Sweet - Heart & Sacrifice (2023)

Added: March 02, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Michael Sweet - Reborn Again

Michael Sweet - Reborn Again (2021)

Added: March 02, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Intricated - Apocalyptic Metamorphosis

Intricated - Apocalyptic Metamorphosis (2021)

Added: March 03, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Intricated - The Vortex of Fatal Depravity

Intricated - The Vortex of Fatal Depravity (2016)

Added: March 03, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Intricated - Chronofrustration (The Extermination of Humanity)

Intricated - Chronofrustration (The Extermination of Humanity) (2011)

Added: March 03, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Intricated - From Extermination to Depravity

Intricated - From Extermination to Depravity (2019)

Added: March 03, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Teramobil - Magnitude of Thoughts

Teramobil - Magnitude of Thoughts (2016)

Added: March 03, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Fractal Cypher - The Human Paradox

Fractal Cypher - The Human Paradox (2016)

Added: March 03, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Fractal Cypher - Prelude to an Impending Outcome

Fractal Cypher - Prelude to an Impending Outcome (2018)

Added: March 03, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Domhain - In Perfect Stillness

Domhain - In Perfect Stillness (2026)

Added: March 03, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Jack the Joker - The Devil to Pay in the Backlands

Jack the Joker - The Devil to Pay in the Backlands (2025)

Added: March 03, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Jack the Joker - Mors Volta

Jack the Joker - Mors Volta (2016)

Added: March 03, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Incandescence - Hors Temps

Incandescence - Hors Temps (2026)

Added: March 04, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Nazghor - A World Ablaze

Nazghor - A World Ablaze (2026)

Added: March 04, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Thy Worshiper - Demony Wschodu

Thy Worshiper - Demony Wschodu (2026)

Added: March 04, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Infamous - Muttos pro s'aristocratzia

Infamous - Muttos pro s'aristocratzia (2019)

Added: March 04, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Infamous - Tempesta

Infamous - Tempesta (2015)

Added: March 04, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Rob Zombie - The Great Satan

Rob Zombie - The Great Satan (2026)

Added: March 05, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Cryptic Shift - Overspace & Supertime

Cryptic Shift - Overspace & Supertime (2026)

Added: March 03, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Cryptic Shift - Return to Realms

Cryptic Shift - Return to Realms (2023)

Added: March 03, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Sewercide - Severing the Mortal Cord

Sewercide - Severing the Mortal Cord (2015)

Added: March 03, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Mizery - Absolute Light

Mizery - Absolute Light (2016)

Added: February 25, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Worm Shepherd - Dawn of the Iconoclast

Worm Shepherd - Dawn of the Iconoclast (2026)

Added: March 05, 2026
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
4.5
Clan Rating
4.5
Goodbye to Gravity - Mantras of War

Goodbye to Gravity - Mantras of War (2015)

Added: March 05, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Goodbye to Gravity - Goodbye to Gravity

Goodbye to Gravity - Goodbye to Gravity (2012)

Added: March 05, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Until We Die - Before the Decay of Time

Until We Die - Before the Decay of Time (2016)

Added: March 05, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Until We Die - A World in Flames

Until We Die - A World in Flames (2016)

Added: March 05, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Rave the Reqviem - EX-EDEN

Rave the Reqviem - EX-EDEN (2023)

Added: March 05, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Rave the Reqviem - Stigmata Itch

Rave the Reqviem - Stigmata Itch (2020)

Added: March 05, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Rave the Reqviem - FVNERAL [sic]

Rave the Reqviem - FVNERAL [sic] (2018)

Added: March 05, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Rave the Reqviem - The Gospel of Nil

Rave the Reqviem - The Gospel of Nil (2016)

Added: March 05, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Rave the Reqviem - Remix the Reqviem

Rave the Reqviem - Remix the Reqviem (2015)

Added: March 05, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0

Clans

The Fallen
The Fallen

Members: 231

Releases: 8580

The Gateway
The Gateway

Members: 88

Releases: 3433

The Guardians
The Guardians

Members: 228

Releases: 10261

The Horde
The Horde

Members: 289

Releases: 14466

The Infinite
The Infinite

Members: 170

Releases: 7036

The North
The North

Members: 240

Releases: 15907

The Pit
The Pit

Members: 243

Releases: 6091

The Revolution
The Revolution

Members: 60

Releases: 5518

The Sphere
The Sphere

Members: 45

Releases: 1265

Action Now, Assured Future

When I check out the RYM charts, it's generally pretty clear that older releases receive much higher ratings than modern ones. The reasons why that occurs is a discussion for another time, but it might help explain why I get pretty excited when I see a recently released album moving right up the charts. Vothana's Action Now, Assured Future was sitting at number 50 on the all time black metal release chart when I stumbled across it, holding a position just below Wolves in the Throne Room's Two Hunters and just above Darkspace's Dark Space III. Anything sitting amongst that sort of company must be pretty special....right?

Having listened to this release a bunch of times over the past couple of weeks, I can only express my utter bewilderment. I'll give the album credit for sounding unlike anything I've heard before, but I think there's a good reason for that. If a controversy-seeking history teacher convinced the high school band to perform an 80 minute National Socialist black metal opus in Vietnamese, I can only imagine that it might sound something like this. The vocals are loud yet repetitively indistinct, the drums switch between typical black metal battery and a completely un-black metal marching band oompa skip, and while a decent black metal riff occasionally pops up, the vast majority appear to replicate the sort of rousing, pompous propaganda music you might hear at a old school pro-war march. If that somehow sounds interesting to you, then go for you life, but I have much better ways to spend 80 minutes of my time.

Read more...
Ben Ben / March 06, 2026 02:39 AM
The Blue Nowhere

If you thought Colors II was the most anticipated BTBAM album, that would then be surpassed by this one, The Blue Nowhere! The album came out last September after a long 4-year interval. It is partly due to their separation from longtime rhythm guitarist Dustie Waring. After finding out about some sexual abuse allegations towards him in 2023, the band began touring without him. The allegations were proven false, and Waring suspected that it was all part of an extortion plot against him, as well as his firing being for unworthy reasons. With that, he threatened to sue the band. Long story short, the matter dropped and the band continued with a touring replacement in Tristan Auman. Waring was pretty much almost as salty as Mastodon guitarist Brent Hinds was after his departure from that band (before Hinds' tragic death, RIP). For this album, The Blue Nowhere, founding lead guitarist Paul Waggoner performed all the guitarwork by himself. It takes a real music examiner to tell the difference between Waggoner's rhythm guitar playing and that of Waring. Either way, although there can be some slight predictability that made me burned out of BTBAM in the first place years ago, we have another terrific display of the band's deathly progressive metal/rock that they've mastered since Colors.

Keeping up their conceptual tendencies that they had since Colors, the album is set in the eponymously titled hotel The Blue Nowhere. It dives into existential quandaries in a more abstract form of storytelling, as abstract as that Star Wars Visions short "BLACK". Those lyrics are, as usual, sung and growled by vocalist/keyboardist Tommy Rogers, and they take on thoughts that range from fleeting to chaotic. They're not about the story, but rather about the feeling. As you listen, you can imagine yourself in your own world away from reality, one that only you and no one else would know.

"Things We Tell Ourselves in the Dark" opens the album as both the first track and single. It's one of the most enjoyable tracks in years. It kickstarts the album right away without an intro, and doesn't follow the heaviness of the two Colors albums, but instead the wackiness of the albums in between. The song has a modern take on 80s prog, blending those bouncy hooks with doses of technical chaos. And the vocal interplay really heats it up. Then the band goes more industrial in "God Terror". The riffs, vocals, and percussion leans into something Pitchshifter would do. "Absent Thereafter" is the first of three 11-minute epics, and boy does it hit hard! It sounds so heavy while adding in some funk and other genres. It's basically almost this album's equivalent to "Ants of the Sky" and "Disease, Injury, Madness"!

"Pause" is an aptly titled pause from the action with just synthy ambience and soft yet mysterious singing from Rogers. "Door #3" has darker groove and more mental-sounding vocals by Tommy. All this makes the sound like a demented carnival. Also while I enjoy his occasional falsetto, it can be a little annoying when appearing out of nowhere. I guess that's one reason why I can't add that half-star needed for the album's perfect score. "Mirador Uncoil" is one more short interlude. I don't have much to say about that one. The second 11-minute epic "Psychomanteum" has fun energy. When Tommy Rogers bellows the song title "PSYCHOMANTEUM" at the two-minute mark, that really hit me hard, along with the h*lla heavy riffing less than a minute later. A minute after that, the extremeness is lowered down for some soft beauty. That goes on for a couple minutes, rising up to a brief wacky moment of drums, piano, and vocals. Some of that heavy riffing hits less than a minute later, heavier than the earlier riffing. Nearly a couple minutes after that, the soft beauty comes back in the form of Opeth-like ambience and guitar fiddling by Paul Waggoner, followed by more of that beautiful mood.

"Slow Paranoia" is the last 11-minute epic. As much as I enjoy this one though, I start to realize how self-copied it is. It's still wonderful, yet some sections sound like they've been done to death. That track can appear in any of the band's past albums, and no one would bat an eye or ear. With that, while this album won't reach a perfect 5-star rating from me, the 4.5-star rating is still intact. This is especially the case for these final two tracks that should've just been indexed as a two-part 14-minute suite, probably greater than the epics from the previous few albums (Coma Ecliptic, Automata, Colors II), starting with the title track. It's one of the catchiest and most radio-friendly songs by the band, like a classic-sounding ballad that I actually love. Other progressive metal artists that would do that are Devin Townsend and Haken. "Beautifully Human" ends it all by reflecting on everything the band has had here, all in the guitars, keys, vocals (both clean and harsh). Thus concludes another journey on a high note!

The Blue Nowhere can very well attract newcomers to the world of BTBAM. It can also impress longtime fans, though a little more originality would've been ideal to make this album 100% percent and get me back onboard that train. Excellent but too familiar, like having fast-food two or 3 times per week (eat healthy, kids and adults!). Nonetheless, BTBAM have made their excellent comeback, even after cutting ties with one of their longtime members. I don't know what will come next for them, but I can't wait!

Favorites: "Things We Tell Ourselves in the Dark", "Absent Thereafter", "Psychomanteum", "The Blue Nowhere", "Beautifully Human"

Read more...
Shadowdoom9 (Andi) Shadowdoom9 (Andi) / March 05, 2026 11:23 PM
Le cloître

Canada continues to be a consistent source of quality black metal for my listening requirements. I keep going back, looking for more discoveries, believing on each visit that the well is surely close to running dry by now. However, upon each dip of my toes into the icy cold depths of the unfathomable lake of black metal that the country seems to have, I come away with a new discovery. This time around, Givre are the gift I have been given, and the present comes in the form of their 2024 album, Le Cloître. A forty-one-minute plus exploration of the atoning side of pain in Christian history, the tracks are the titles of six female saints, with the lyrical content being created from their hagiographies (which are all in French). Clearly a band who put a lot of research into their music, Givre are an instant source of intrigue for me. In taking such a niche subject matter for their album theme and embodying it in such an impassioned display of raging black metal, with elements of dissonant death metal as well as resonating post-metal, Le Cloître soon made the short journey from my Bandcamp wishlist and into my collection.

This is an album that somehow suggests an intimacy with the pain it explores. It is after all a record that is telling stories and thus it should carry some stimulus from the lives of these women that resonates with anyone who has experienced suffering. It is not just an album of choral chants and atmospheric keys by any means (although they do both make an appearance of course), instead there is a robustness to the messaging of this album, and as a result it comes across as a very modern sounding take of its historical content. Givre do not just relay the stories and written content, they put real emotion behind the performance. Most obvious in this is the harrowing and at times demented vocals of all three members of the band who contribute across the album. The shriller cries are the same individual I suspect, whilst the more death metal orientated vocal signatures belong to another member altogether, I would guess. David Caron-Proulx seems to be undertaking the bulk of the heavy lifting on the record with him credited with songwriting, claviers (any stringed keyboard instrument – harpsicord, clavichord etc), guitars and vocals. The research duties seem to sit with drummer and vocalist Jean-Lou David whilst bass and vocals reside with Mathieu Garon.

This contained unit digs into the depths of black metal and beyond, to the point where you can almost hear all the effort they have gone to research, record and release this record. Le Cloître feels like a very complete experience, dare I say a journey by the time you reach the end of it? It sounds mature without being boring or too arty even. It exudes an authenticity in its subject matter exploration, one that only adds to my enjoyment. Perhaps only guilty of not having any real standout moments over the record it is hard to find any other real fault with this record.


Read more...
Vinny Vinny / March 05, 2026 06:33 PM
OM

I first encountered Romanian black metallers Negură Bunget through the tape trading scene back in the mid-1990's with their 1996 "Zîrnindu-să" debut release not doing very much for me to tell you the truth. I wouldn't encounter them again until Ben introduced me to their fourth full-length "OM" upon my return to metal from a decade-long hiatus in 2009 & I have to admit that I initially found it to be a challenge for a few reasons. Time saw me warming to it though & I now find myself returning to "OM" semi-regularly, if not claiming it to be the masterpiece that many punters would have you believe it is.

"OM" possesses a very clear personality that's all its own with its array of different sounds & influences being presented in a fairly coherent way throughout & the main attraction being the full, lush synthesizer sounds of front man Hupogrammos (Dordeduh/Sunset in the 12th House) & fellow guitarist Sol Faur (Dordeduh/Sunset in the 12th House). Hupogrammos' vocal performance is passionate & authentic too which fits the requirement nicely. Unfortunately, all is not roses though with the thin rhythm guitar tone & weak snare sound leaving a little to be desired & not doing a very good job at masking the instrumentalist's obvious technical limitations. The six-string performances of both men are fairly sloppy at times while drummer Negru's blast beats are an absolute rabble that should never have been attempted on the evidence presented here. Thankfully though, the atmospherics on display throughout "OM" are generally quite stunning which allows the album to overcome those deficiencies reasonably comfortably. It certainly helps that the opening three tracks are nothing short of marvelous & it's a little disappointing that the quality dial never quite reaches those heights again for the remainder of this lengthy 67-minute release. Progressive folk metal number "Hora soarelui" is the only genuine disappointment included though with its bouncy folk melodies being a little too much for this battle-hardened extreme metalhead to cope with.

For all its failings, I find "OM" to be an endearing listen these days, as well as being the clear career high-point of Negură Bunget's inconsistent recording career overall.

For fans of Dordeduh, Marțolea & Darkestrah.

Read more...
Daniel Daniel / March 03, 2026 07:38 PM
Lunarterial

An initial listen to Swallowed's "Lunarterial" left me somewhat dumbfounded and confused I must admit. From Vinny's effusive description of the album in the feature thread's introduction this was apparently right up my street, yet I really wasn't feeling it. The disconnection was so pronounced that I really doubted my own ears and my interpretation of what I had heard. Determined to get to the bottom of this, I persisted and have now clocked up four or five listens over the last few days, both through intently concentrated listenings and as background whilst doing other tasks. Whilst my initial reticence has been alleviated somewhat, the truth is, I am still not completely sure how I feel about this, or even if I will ever be able to make a definitive judgement on my appreciation of it. I think this is one of those albums where there are moments that make me think "OK, right. Now here we go" when things click and fall into place and show glimpses of the album I envisioned getting at the beginning, but on the flipside there are also parts of seeming random chaos that literally make me want to turn it right down in order to lessen the discomfort I am feeling.

Anyway, this is an album that draws on a number of extreme metal influences, old-school death metal, death doom, disso-death, war metal and even drone metal, all combining to produce an, undoubtedly intentional, disconcerting feeling that all is not well or right with the world. To this end, at least with me, this was inordinately successful, although the effect was to alienate me from what I was hearing rather than drawing me into its aural maelstrom. The transitions from doomy oppressiveness to outright blackened violence overlayed with jagged shards of dissonance just overwhelm me I am afraid. At times the band sound a lot like Mayhem at their most experimental, a phase of the norwegian black metal legends that I have never been a big fan of. In an inversion of Vinny's view it seems, my favourite track is actually the 25-minute closer, "Libations" which appeals to the doom and drone fan in me and within the drone-y confines of which the band's tendencies towards dissonance makes more sense to me and if it had been released as a stand alone EP I may even have toyed with the idea of purchasing it.

I would claim to be a fan of extreme metal, but I guess an album that really pushes deeply into unconventionalism such as this, makes me question whether that is truly the case. Things still have to make sense to me and for many stretches "Lunarterial" really doesn't. "Libations" aside, which is actually really growing on me, I can't in all honesty say that I would return to this in the future.

Read more...
Sonny Sonny / March 01, 2026 02:25 PM

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