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Temple of Void - The Crawl

Temple of Void - The Crawl (2026)

Added: March 09, 2026
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
1.5
Clan Rating
0.0
Temple of Void - The First Ten Years

Temple of Void - The First Ten Years (2023)

Added: March 09, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Agenbite Misery - Remorse of Conscience

Agenbite Misery - Remorse of Conscience (2026)

Added: March 09, 2026
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
2.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Verdun - Astral Sabbath

Verdun - Astral Sabbath (2019)

Added: March 09, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Verdun - The Eternal Drift's Canticles

Verdun - The Eternal Drift's Canticles (2016)

Added: March 09, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Femme fatale - Arcana

Femme fatale - Arcana (2014)

Added: March 08, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Goodbye to Gravity - Goodbye to Gravity

Goodbye to Gravity - Goodbye to Gravity (2012)

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

Rob Zombie - Halloween Horrors (2024)

Added: March 05, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
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: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
2.5
Clan Rating
0.0
Cabeza de Caballo - Dölmenn

Cabeza de Caballo - Dölmenn (2016)

Added: March 09, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
R.I.P. - Dead End

R.I.P. - Dead End (2020)

Added: March 08, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
R.I.P. - Street Reaper

R.I.P. - Street Reaper (2017)

Added: March 08, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
R.I.P. - Live from Death Row

R.I.P. - Live from Death Row (2018)

Added: March 08, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Zepter - Zepter

Zepter - Zepter (2026)

Added: March 02, 2026
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
4.0
Clan Rating
4.0
Mädätys - Kuoleman ulottuvuudet

Mädätys - Kuoleman ulottuvuudet (2026)

Added: March 09, 2026
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
2.5
Clan Rating
0.0
Intricated - Apocalyptic Metamorphosis

Intricated - Apocalyptic Metamorphosis (2021)

Added: March 03, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Intricated - The Vortex of Fatal Depravity

Intricated - The Vortex of Fatal Depravity (2016)

Added: March 03, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Intricated - Chronofrustration (The Extermination of Humanity)

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

Added: March 03, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Intricated - From Extermination to Depravity

Intricated - From Extermination to Depravity (2019)

Added: March 03, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Boghaunter - Writhe

Boghaunter - Writhe (2018)

Added: March 09, 2026
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
3.5
Clan Rating
3.5
Fractal Cypher - The Human Paradox

Fractal Cypher - The Human Paradox (2016)

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

Fractal Cypher - Prelude to an Impending Outcome (2018)

Added: March 03, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Domhain - In Perfect Stillness

Domhain - In Perfect Stillness (2026)

Added: March 03, 2026
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
2.0
Clan Rating
2.0
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
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Ill Omen - Æ.Thy.Rift

Ill Omen - Æ.Thy.Rift (2016)

Added: March 09, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Ill Omen - Enthroning the Bonds of Abhorrence

Ill Omen - Enthroning the Bonds of Abhorrence (2014)

Added: March 09, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Ill Omen - Divinity Through Un-Creation

Ill Omen - Divinity Through Un-Creation (2011)

Added: March 09, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Ill Omen - The Grande Usurper

Ill Omen - The Grande Usurper (2018)

Added: March 09, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Ill Omen - Remnant Spheres of Spiritual Equilibrium

Ill Omen - Remnant Spheres of Spiritual Equilibrium (2013)

Added: March 09, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Rob Zombie - The Great Satan

Rob Zombie - The Great Satan (2026)

Added: March 05, 2026
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
3.5
Clan Rating
3.5
Cryptic Shift - Overspace & Supertime

Cryptic Shift - Overspace & Supertime (2026)

Added: March 03, 2026
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
3.5
Clan Rating
3.5
Cryptic Shift - Return to Realms

Cryptic Shift - Return to Realms (2023)

Added: March 03, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Sewercide - Severing the Mortal Cord

Sewercide - Severing the Mortal Cord (2015)

Added: March 03, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Mizery - Absolute Light

Mizery - Absolute Light (2016)

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

Worm Shepherd - Dawn of the Iconoclast (2026)

Added: March 05, 2026
Ratings: 2
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
3.8
Clan Rating
4.5
Goodbye to Gravity - Mantras of War

Goodbye to Gravity - Mantras of War (2015)

Added: March 05, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Goodbye to Gravity - Goodbye to Gravity

Goodbye to Gravity - Goodbye to Gravity (2012)

Added: March 05, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Until We Die - Before the Decay of Time

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

Added: March 05, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Until We Die - A World in Flames

Until We Die - A World in Flames (2016)

Added: March 05, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Rave the Reqviem - EX-EDEN

Rave the Reqviem - EX-EDEN (2023)

Added: March 05, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Rave the Reqviem - Stigmata Itch

Rave the Reqviem - Stigmata Itch (2020)

Added: March 05, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Rave the Reqviem - FVNERAL [sic]

Rave the Reqviem - FVNERAL [sic] (2018)

Added: March 05, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Rave the Reqviem - The Gospel of Nil

Rave the Reqviem - The Gospel of Nil (2016)

Added: March 05, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0
Rave the Reqviem - Remix the Reqviem

Rave the Reqviem - Remix the Reqviem (2015)

Added: March 05, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
0.0
Clan Rating
0.0

Clans

The Fallen
The Fallen

Members: 231

Releases: 8613

The Gateway
The Gateway

Members: 88

Releases: 3434

The Guardians
The Guardians

Members: 228

Releases: 10265

The Horde
The Horde

Members: 290

Releases: 14467

The Infinite
The Infinite

Members: 170

Releases: 7037

The North
The North

Members: 241

Releases: 15914

The Pit
The Pit

Members: 244

Releases: 6091

The Revolution
The Revolution

Members: 60

Releases: 5518

The Sphere
The Sphere

Members: 45

Releases: 1265

The Delusional Mystery of the Self Part II

Despite my well-publicised obsession with chilean thrash metal and the fact that Mental Devastation have been around for well over a decade and a half, I haven't crossed swords with these guys before and so went into it with great anticipation. Now strictly technical thrash metal doesn't always appeal to me so much, as I like my thrash to have an inherent aggression and fire, that I think is often lost amongst excessive technicality. As is usually the case with chilean thrash, though, this certainly delivers on the passion and aggression front, whilst also displaying an impressive level of technical ability. The usual chilean hallmarks are all present, breakneck pacing, vicious vocals and pronounced basslines, all well-represented by a nice, clean production job.

Following a brief anticipatory intro the opener proper, "Symbiosis", tears out of the blocks with a riff that proceeds to tear any unprepared listener a new one. With exuberant, energetic guitar soloing and bassist Alejandro Lagos' aggressive vocal delivery this is proper celebratory and whiplash-inducing stuff. They are perfectly capable of dialling it back a little though with "Judge and Jury" initially hitting a more mid-paced tempo. It is at these lower speeds, however, that Lagos' limitations as a vocalist are exposed as he maintains the ragged delivery he uses on the blisteringly fast tracks, which doesn't really suit the mid-paced stuff at all well and feels a bit like a sonic splinter in the thumb of the album. They also attempt something a bit more progressive on "Pulsions" but the gentle opening section exposes the vocal shortcomings even more.

I don't think that the technical aspect of "The Delusional Mystery of the Self Part II" is especially pronounced, certainly as far as the songwriting goes as the riffs still rule the roost here. For my money, dual guitarists Matías Morales and Felipe Espinoza are the guys who provide the secret sauce. Their riffs are pretty good, but their soloing is the real draw for me, delivering a great line in short, sharp shocks without sapping the momentum from the tracks by becoming too self-indulgent, even during the track "Primitive Paths" where they really go to town. All-in-all this is a very enjoyable slab of chilean thrash with enough energy and aggression to keep pace with my favourites from that neck of the woods, but which is robbed of my highest marks by the vocal limitations which I occasionally found too jarring to excuse and the superfluous instrumental "Dõ" which, for me, had no place being here at all.

Read more...
Sonny Sonny / March 09, 2026 02:01 PM
Love Is Not Enough

I read somewhere recently that Jacob Bannon did not necessarily think that the world needed a new Converge record, but that the band themselves did. There was a time, not too long ago when I would have probably deemed that I never needed a Converge record at all, but that has been well documented on Metal Academy already. The tides have turned and I find myself on much less turbulent terms with some of the content of The Revolution clan, to the point where I can enjoy the harder sounding metalcore releases. As it turns out then, Love Is Not Enough is right up my street.

It sounds like a lot more of a riffy affair than I remember from previous outings with the band’s releases. The start of 'Bad Faith' shows this particular trait well I find. Likewise, the grinding sensibilities of 'Distract and Divide' is an absolute treasure. These short bursts of fury that cover the first four tracks of the album create a real sense of momentum early in the listening experience. As a result, the instrumental 'Beyond Repair' almost sucks some life from proceedings, However, I find it is a very clever little track. Its broken percussion befits the track title superbly when you take time to listen under a more critical mindset.

That raging aggression is soon back alongside those big riffs for the remainder of Love Is Not Enough. It is an accomplishment to cram such a rewarding listening experience into a little over half an hour. I find it has appeal for its scathing honesty and the bluntness of its messaging also. Love Is Not Enough as an album title tells you all you need to know really. This is a record with a lot of bitterness that is borne out of suffering, told by souls who no longer wish to stay silent on the matter. Probably the best metalcore album I have ever experienced.


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Vinny Vinny / March 08, 2026 12:26 PM
Gravity

As I listen to Gravity, I sense that there is a history of music represented here that I am not all that close too. The heavy-psych elements to Saturnalia Temple’s sound suggest to me at least one foot in the heady days of the 70’s and beyond, but at the same time I get a lot of modern Darkthrone in the sound as well. Add to this, aesthetic the creeping darkness of black metal that seeps into the occasional track and before I knew it, I was completely in love with this month’s feature release for The Fallen clan. In my weed smoking days (long, long since done with), I would have enjoyed Gravity on a whole different level, I am sure. It feels like a record that can, with the right tools deployed, unlock outer dimensions of the listener’s inner consciousness, if you know what I mean.

This transcendental potential is by no means wasted when listened to in an entirely clean and sober headspace mind. Using simple repetition and atmospheres, alongside a near-constant menacing rumble of bottom-end loaded bass, Saturnalia Temple make for an otherworldly experience without the need for chemical assistance. The whole album sounds a bit clunky to me, but this is part of its natural charm and is what helps keep it in the higher echelons of the appeal stakes. I can listen to the damaged soundtrack to a thousand sci-fi horror movies that is Elyzian Fields all day long, and the droning indulgence of Between the Worlds right after it help make the mid-point of the record particularly strong for me.

Although Gravity has many recognisable traits to it, I cannot help but feel that the album feels like an introduction to something new. Even though many if not all its roots are found in the past, somehow there is still an element of there being an aberration present in many regards. As the tracks pass by, they carve sigil like etchings into my brain, meaning the memorability factor is high. High enough in fact for me to be able to enjoy the record as both background music as well as a more critical listening session. Great find.


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Vinny Vinny / March 08, 2026 08:58 AM
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.

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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"

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Shadowdoom9 (Andi) Shadowdoom9 (Andi) / March 05, 2026 11:23 PM

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