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Cradle of Filth - The Screaming of the Valkyries

Cradle of Filth - The Screaming of the Valkyries (2025)

Added: March 23, 2025
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Sunrot / Body Void - Sunrot / Body Void

Sunrot / Body Void - Sunrot / Body Void (2024)

Added: March 23, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Guiltless - Teeth to Sky

Guiltless - Teeth to Sky (2025)

Added: March 23, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Guiltless - Thorns

Guiltless - Thorns (2024)

Added: March 23, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Stone Wings - Bird of Stone Wings

Stone Wings - Bird of Stone Wings (2003)

Added: March 23, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
SOM - Let the Light In

SOM - Let the Light In (2025)

Added: March 24, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Bloodywood - Nu Delhi

Bloodywood - Nu Delhi (2025)

Added: March 24, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Gore. - A Bud That Never Blooms

Gore. - A Bud That Never Blooms (2024)

Added: March 24, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Stoopi - Unspoken Word

Stoopi - Unspoken Word (2002)

Added: March 24, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Chances - Chances

Chances - Chances (2023)

Added: March 24, 2025
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Prehistoria - Cryptic Halo

Prehistoria - Cryptic Halo (2025)

Added: March 24, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Prehistoria - Cursed Lands

Prehistoria - Cursed Lands (2022)

Added: March 24, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Blackslash - Heroes, Saints & Fools

Blackslash - Heroes, Saints & Fools (2025)

Added: March 24, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Blackslash - No Steel No Future

Blackslash - No Steel No Future (2022)

Added: March 24, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Blackslash - Gladiators of Rock / The Power

Blackslash - Gladiators of Rock / The Power (2020)

Added: March 24, 2025
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Wombbath - Beyond the Abyss

Wombbath - Beyond the Abyss (2025)

Added: March 25, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Bio-Cancer - Revengeance

Bio-Cancer - Revengeance (2023)

Added: March 25, 2025
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Neuropsychosis - Scourging Homicidal Premonitions

Neuropsychosis - Scourging Homicidal Premonitions (2024)

Added: March 25, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Neuropsychosis - Indulging the Depraved

Neuropsychosis - Indulging the Depraved (2023)

Added: March 25, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Imperial Triumphant - Goldstar

Imperial Triumphant - Goldstar (2025)

Added: March 25, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Imperial Triumphant - Goldstar

Imperial Triumphant - Goldstar (2025)

Added: March 25, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
SOM - Let the Light In

SOM - Let the Light In (2025)

Added: March 24, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
SOM - Faith

SOM - Faith (2023)

Added: March 24, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Guiltless - Teeth to Sky

Guiltless - Teeth to Sky (2025)

Added: March 23, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Guiltless - Thorns

Guiltless - Thorns (2024)

Added: March 23, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Minas Morgul - Nebelung

Minas Morgul - Nebelung (2023)

Added: March 19, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Minas Morgul - Heimkehr

Minas Morgul - Heimkehr (2021)

Added: March 19, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Minas Morgul - Kult

Minas Morgul - Kult (2017)

Added: March 19, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Minas Morgul - Ära

Minas Morgul - Ära (2012)

Added: March 19, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Minas Morgul - Eisengott

Minas Morgul - Eisengott (2009)

Added: March 19, 2025
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Bio-Cancer - Revengeance

Bio-Cancer - Revengeance (2023)

Added: March 25, 2025
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Prehistoria - Cryptic Halo

Prehistoria - Cryptic Halo (2025)

Added: March 24, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Hirax - Faster Than Death

Hirax - Faster Than Death (2025)

Added: March 20, 2025
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
4.5
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0.0
Warbringer - Wrath and Ruin

Warbringer - Wrath and Ruin (2025)

Added: March 20, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Take Offense - T.O.tality

Take Offense - T.O.tality (2024)

Added: March 20, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
JISEI - Positive Affirmations

JISEI - Positive Affirmations (2024)

Added: March 25, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Gore. - Angels Like You

Gore. - Angels Like You (2024)

Added: March 24, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Stoopi - Unspoken Word

Stoopi - Unspoken Word (2002)

Added: March 24, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Chances - Chances

Chances - Chances (2023)

Added: March 24, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
As Ashes Fall - Album One: The Implement

As Ashes Fall - Album One: The Implement (2003)

Added: March 24, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Sinisstar - Future Shock

Sinisstar - Future Shock (2002)

Added: March 17, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Fange - Purulences

Fange - Purulences (2025)

Added: March 16, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Body, The & Intensive Care - Was I Good Enough?

Body, The & Intensive Care - Was I Good Enough? (2025)

Added: March 16, 2025
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Akira Yamaoka / Sota Fujimori - Shin Contra Original Soundtrack

Akira Yamaoka / Sota Fujimori - Shin Contra Original Soundtrack (2002)

Added: March 12, 2025
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Bong-Ra - Black Noise

Bong-Ra - Black Noise (2025)

Added: March 05, 2025
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0

Clans

The Fallen
The Fallen

Members: 179

Releases: 7556

The Gateway
The Gateway

Members: 68

Releases: 2886

The Guardians
The Guardians

Members: 191

Releases: 9434

The Horde
The Horde

Members: 237

Releases: 12393

The Infinite
The Infinite

Members: 140

Releases: 6120

The North
The North

Members: 193

Releases: 13716

The Pit
The Pit

Members: 203

Releases: 5603

The Revolution
The Revolution

Members: 46

Releases: 4552

The Sphere
The Sphere

Members: 34

Releases: 1102

Among the Living

Released in 1987, ‘Among the Living’ is the third studio album by American thrash metal band Anthrax, and is hailed by fans as one of the genres greatest albums. Much like the other members of thrash metal’s “big four” (look ‘em up if you don’t know), Anthrax were at this time, riding an upward trajectory of both creative and critical success. Their previous outing, ‘Spreading the Disease’, solidified them as one of metal’s most promising bands, and this follows on exactly from where they left off.

With the same line-up of musicians, having toured and played together for a number of years now, it’s no surprise that everyone is firing on all cylinders here. The twin-guitar assault sounds even tighter than before, with rapid-fire thrash riffs that refuse to slow down. The bands tongue-in-cheek approach is here in spades, in particular with vocalist Joey Belladonna’s performances, sometimes serious, oftentimes humorous, all the time impressive. All the ingredients for a great Anthrax record are here.

The production sounds good for its time, though nothing overly remarkable, it sounds pretty much as you’d expect an 80’s thrash album to sound, and it holds up well to this day. With fist-pumping anthems such as ‘I Am the Law’, ‘Indians’, ‘Caught in a Mosh’, ‘Among the Living’ and ‘Efilnikufesin (N.F.L.)’, there’s an abundance of Anthrax classics here, helping make ‘Among the Living’ an essential album that belongs in every metal fans collection.


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MartinDavey87 MartinDavey87 / March 24, 2025 05:09 PM
Black Rain Falls

Wren is one of the most unmetal sounding band names that could be picked really. One step up from Sparrow or Dunnock I suppose but still leans heavily on the lame side of the bird world. Whilst it may not be the most threatening name in the world metal, Wren does fit the atmospheric sludge of this London four piece as they explore a vast and dense landscape across their third album, Black Rain Falls. Foraging through punishingly slow riffs, flitting between ethereal density and atmospheric ecosystems and nesting in the rafters of the solid structures of the seven tracks on offer.

Describing themselves as a ‘blackened noise band’ (at least according to the Spotify bio anyway) could not be further from the truth, as there is no noisy element to this record. The agonising pace of album highlight, ‘Toil in the Undergrowth’ is testimony to how captivating atmospheric sludge is. By the time the first riff lands we are three minutes into the track. Those hoarse and tormented vocals heralding the arrival of the track proper perfectly as that riff crashes in behind them. This album is full of Neurosis and Isis influences, and as a result had me hooked from the off. Songs feel like they are expanding even though there is little in the way of variation to suggest this is naturally the case. Any progression is deliberate and measured, feeling organic and unforced.

Tracks often end feeling like very little has happened in the way of change once the established format has been engineered, but still, I get sense of total satisfaction from the majority of what is on offer here. The interlude in the middle of the record feels a bit out of place though, even though it does in some ways introduce the dense, bassy opening of ‘Metric of Grief' nicely. Album closer ‘Scorched Hinds’ is one of the more obvious Neurosis sounding tracks, with its shifts and swells accompanied by chiming guitar notes that remind me of Kowloon Walled City. There is a lot to like in the simplicity of Black Rain Falls and it stands out as one of my happier new finds in The Fallen clan of late.


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Vinny Vinny / March 24, 2025 01:55 PM
Saṃsṛ

I am making a few black metal discoveries of late. Some of them known to me as artists already, others - like Skaldr – being completely new to me. Hailing from Virginia, at first glance it looks like the band is made up of a trio of former live musicians who worked with the band Asagraum around 2022. However, vocalist/bassist Carey Vaughn was in the legendary Sacramentum on bass duties as late as 2023. Harry and Brent who cover guitar duties, seem to have settled on Skaldr as being their main project now touring duties with Asagraum are done with. On Saṃsṛ, the band show their experience well, producing a fine slab of melodic, folk-tinged bm in the process.

Mixed and mastered by none other than Dan Swanö himself, this record has a certain pedigree about it. Whilst it does get a little cumbersome in arrangement in places (opening track ‘The Sum of All Loss’ feels a bit rushed in places), overall, there is more than enough satisfaction here for my North clan tendencies. Walking that fine line between melodic yet not entirely accessible black metal, this is a record that shows strong elements of control and restraint to me. Although I cannot find the full instrument listing for the record, there is more being deployed here than just guitars, bass, drums and ghastly vocals. I hear a bayan at least once and I also suspect there is a banjo in the mix here somewhere on occasion.

That aside, the core bm elements are great. Lush tremolos and progressive bass lines take their place alongside galloping and charging tempos, led by blastbeats galore. Even the acoustic interlude, Liminal is well-placed on the track listing to give a brief respite before the final two tracks on the album get introduced. Album closer, and by far the standout track here, ‘The Cinder, the Flame, the Sun’ is a beast of a closing track that shows how effective well-written melodic black metal can be at over the seven-and-a-half-minute mark, and how it can retain that excitement for the full duration of the song. Saṃsṛ is an exciting record overall though, well-paced and yet it manages this without sacrificing intensity.


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Vinny Vinny / March 23, 2025 04:00 PM
Death Penalty

Witchfinder General were formed at the onset of the NWOBHM in Stourbridge on the outskirts of England's "Second City", Birmingham. What set them apart from most of the new movement was that they took inspiration, unsurprisingly given where they hailed from, of Black Sabbath rather than the Judas Priests, Motorheads and Budgies of their contemporaries. They released a 7" single in 1981 that saw "Burning a Sinner" backed by "Satan's Children" which failed to make much of a splash and which is now incredibly rare. The following year saw the release of the three-track "Soviet Invasion" EP, which did see the band finally gaining a little traction. It contained a faux live version of "R.I.P.", recorded in the studio with crowd noise added later, at the behest of the label's head honcho, Paul Birch. This would be the track which also closed out "Death Penalty", albeit in a re-recorded and superior form.

Finally, in the autumn of 1982, Witchfinder General released their debut full-length to a mostly positive response from the UK's metalheads and the rest, as they say, is history. Grabbing the attention of every male teenage metal fan in record stores by featuring a famous Page 3 model in a churchyard and in a decided state of undress on the cover, the band then had to deliver within said album's grooves to match the hype thus generated. Fortunately, they did so and their brand of simplistic and youthful Sabbath worship saw them gain a dedicated following within the wider UK metal movement. It is actually a very slight album, its seven tracks barely managing to scrape past a thirty-minute runtime, but each minute is well spent and such is the quality that it is impossible to feel short-changed. The short runtime actually gives the material an immediacy and vitality that some later, more bloated releases just couldn't replicate.

As an aside, the band that recorded "Death Penalty" is actually a three-piece, with bassist Kevin "Toss" McCready having left after the "Soviet Invasion" recording sessions, to apparently be replaced by a guy called Woolfy Trope. In fact, the band hadn't replaced McCready by the time they went into the studio to record the album so the bass parts were supplied by guitarist Phil Cope, and the wholly fictitious Woolfy Trope was credited, with a roadie standing in as "Woolfy" for publicity photos.

I think it is actually a stretch to tag "Death Penalty" as a genuine doom metal album, it was very much a product of its time, with Sabbathian riffs run through a NWOBHM filter resulting in a version of doomy, downtuned heavy metal which does nevertheless provide something of a bridge between Sabbath's 70s psych influences and the grittier 80s UK metal scene with a DIY sensibility resulting from the influence of late 70s punk rock on the UK metal community. To this end I think it is fair to say that "Death Penalty" isn't exactly a lesson in complex songwriting or technical adroitness, but it is chock full of cool and memorable riffs and has a singular personality with a street-level perspective that sets it apart from the crowd. Most of the tracks are mid-paced affairs, with only the title track and, to a lesser extent, "Burning A Sinner" slowing to doom metal pacing, but the downtuned riffs pioneered by Tony Iommi are most definitely present and it is a truth that the earliest traditional doom metal bands very often switched it up to classic heavy metal velocity. Phil's soloing is also a product of intense study of Tony Iommi's technique, sometimes piling note upon note in a fretboard firestorm, as per the opening of "No Stayer" or soaring sky high like the solo at the end of the title track. Drummer Graham Ditchfield channels Bill Ward's blunt style, but I think it is also evident that he doesn't have the technical skill level that the often under-estimated Sabbath drummer possessed, although it still works very well in the context of this album. Then there is Stourbridge's answer to Ozzy in Zeeb Parkes who, like Ozzy, isn't technically a great singer, but who imbues his vocals with such personality that it is easy to forgive him his shortcomings and just go along for the ride. The production is a bit muzzy with a fair degree of echo, as opposed to Sabbath's much more professionally produced efforts where, presumably, much more money was thrown at them, but I think this actually works in Witchfinder General's favour, giving them more of an underground vibe.

Despite the band name and the imagery of the album cover, they aren't so much a horror / satanically-themed band, often with much more prosaic and down-to-earth lyrical themes such as drug-taking, drinking and fucking taking their place alongside the witch hunting of "Witchfinder General" or "Burning A Sinner". As a very young man from a strong working class background at the time of this album's release, these lyrics espousing a love of hokey horror movies, getting hammered and trying to get off at weekends absolutely captured the essence of life for me at the time. I know I may have a severe case of rose-tinted spectacles when it comes to "Death Penalty" and others may well scratch their heads in bemusement at my fanatical advocacy for it, but simple fact is that this is an album I still spin regularly to this day, forty-plus years later and every time I enjoy it immensely, so what more could I possibly want from a record?

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Sonny Sonny / March 23, 2025 02:24 PM
Angel Seed XXIII

Skrew, the band led by Adam Grossman, took a decade off from their career, reforming in 2009 and having a new album released 5 years later. The temporary split-up was due to lack of label support as a result of poor attention for this album Angel Seed XXIII. And I can understand that...

There are some things in this album that have skrewed with fans (pun somewhat intended). The earlier guitar attack is reduced, adding a bit more industrial in the industrial metal. And while the earlier riffing is still around, it has slowed down from the earlier thrash. It sounds a little closer to groove metal or, dare I say, nu metal. So there aren't as many sharps as there are dulls in the guitarwork.

Opening the album is the bumpy groove track "Open Up". Then we have the dark sludgy "Sea Man". It rolls through reminding some of Soulstorm, with nothing monotonous compared to some of the other tracks. Things get more dynamic in the loud "Seventh Eye".

It leads to the next track "King of the Hole" which tries to make some harmonic aggression but ends up becoming a poor Pantera rip-off. The band's ravaging side is toned down for the industrial ballad "Porcelain". Balancing things out again by galloping through dynamics is "Kosmo's Seed". Then we have more of the slow sludge in "Sputnik", great for a motorcycle ride in the night.

The KMFDM EDM usage in "Angel Suck" is a little too much. I'm annoyed by the machinery used in "Horsey (Man)" in their attempt to sound like Godflesh. "Slip" is a slip into an acoustic sound that sounds too f***ing dull for me. After some silence and a couple outtakes, "Helter Skelter" begins. A kick-A industrial metal cover of a Beatles classic!

Angel Seed XXIII was, similarly to a Metallica song from the same year that uses the same drop D-flat tuning as the majority of this album, a BAD SEED for many listeners. After the band's decade-long split, they would return 5 years after reforming with Universal Immolation, an album that shows a more deathly sound while maintaining the industrial roots. But for now, Angel Seed XXIII is a bittersweet taste of their industrial metal sound gone less thrashy. A decent album, yet not a total winner....

Favorites: "Sea Man", "Seventh Eye", "Kosmo's Seed", "Sputnik", "Helter Skelter"

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Shadowdoom9 (Andi) Shadowdoom9 (Andi) / March 23, 2025 06:17 AM

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