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Merchant - Beneath (2017)
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Merchant - Suzerain (2016)
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Doomicidal - Shadow of the Gallows (2019)
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Doomicidal - Spawned in Hell (2016)
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Rothadás - Töviskert... a kísértés örök érzete... lidércharang (2025)
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Memphis May Fire - Shapeshifter (2025)
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Dark Halo, A - Omnibus One (2023)
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Yaksa - 我即是 (2019)
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Yaksa - 暗流 (2015)
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Yaksa - Fuck! Fuck! Fuck! (2002)
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Gaia Epicus - Seventh Rising (2020)
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Gaia Epicus - Alpha & Omega (2018)
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Gaia Epicus - Dark Secrets (2012)
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Gaia Epicus - Damnation (2008)
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Gaia Epicus - Victory (2007)
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Arch Enemy - Blood Dynasty (2025)
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Teitanblood - From the Visceral Abyss (2025)
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Caustic Phlegm - Purulent Apocalypse (2025)
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Fleshless - Doomed (2018)
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Fleshless - Devoured Beyond Recognition (2015)
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Hortus Animae - Secular Music (2014)
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Hortus Animae - The Blow of Furious Winds (2005)
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Hortus Animae - Piove Sangue - Live in Banská Bystrica (2018)
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Invent Animate & Silent Planet - Bloom in Heaven (2025)
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Deafheaven - Lonely People With Power (2025)
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Borgne - Renaître de ses fanges (2025)
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Darkness (GBR) - As the Last Star Falls From Heaven (2003)
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Darkness (GBR) - Darkness (2002)
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Ravendust - Life/Death (2025)
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Ravendust - The Gold of the Aura (2021)
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Incapacity - Chaos Complete (2003)
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Turbo - 40th Anniversary - Greatest Hits (2020)
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Yaksa - You Are Not the Loser (2010)
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SpiritWorld - Helldorado (2025)
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Mononc' Serge & Anonymus - Métal canadien-français (2024)
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Invent Animate & Silent Planet - Bloom in Heaven (2025)
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Labrat - Ruining it for Everyone (2003)
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Bodybox - 3 (2025)
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Yaksa - 我即是 (2019)
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Yaksa - You Are Not the Loser (2010)
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Mechina - Bellum Interruptum (2025)
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Dark Halo, A - Omnibus One (2023)
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Andromida - Hellscape (2021)
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Sinisstar - Future Shock (2002)
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Fange - Purulences (2025)
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Not as bad as reviews on other websites might suggest. Shrapnel are a U.K. thrash band who have decided to go more mainstream with their fourth studio album, In Gravity. For starters, this is a huge departure for the band since it contains next to nothing in true thrash texture. This is much closer to mid 200s metalcore/post-grunge than anything in the bands previous discography. As someone who was not aware of Shrapnel before In Gravity, this actually doesn't bother me since I can view this album from a neutral position. Perhaps the album gets a bad reputation by putting two of its slowest songs, "In Gravity" and "Amber Screams" right at the top. The record does include some faster grooves and has some pretty solid ones too, such as "Breaker" and "Follow The Cold", but those seem to be the outliers in an album that is much more subdued than previous efforts. The vocals sounds like a cross between Alter Bridge's Myles Kennedy and Machine Head's Rob Flynn. And the instrumentals can be fun at times; as mentioned previously, some of the grooves are quite solid on the album, but they are at their best when they break away from the standard thrash or even nostalgic metalcore mold.
All that being said, this album fumbles the songwriting hard. As a former thrash band, I cannot say that I'm surprised. Some of the tracks on this record are painfully put together and have no real sense of direction. Even though I do like "Breaker", something about the final chorus feels off; almost like its missing a buildup to the chorus instead of just jumping right into it out of the bridge. Same can be said for "Guardian". "So Below" is arguably the worst culprit of disastrous songwriting, where the verse and chorus riffs do not coalesce together at all. They feel like two different songs that have been sheepishly thrown together in an attempt to save time, or to simply save the riffs from becoming forgotten B-sides. While I do appreciate the change in direction for Shrapnel on In Gravity, they lost their sense of identity, and showed the listener just how forgiving we (as listeners) are towards poor songwriting when the riffs are ferocious.
Best Songs: Breaker, Follow The Cold, Absolution
A Dark Halo made a second album after 17 years in the void. And this time, they have a full 5-member lineup to make a solid cyber/alternative metal offering. A phenomenon that has sadly yet to caught on...
For those wondering what this blend would sound like in A Dark Halo's perspective, imagine the electronic/metal mix of Fear Factory put together with the mainstream gothic-ish tendencies of Evanescence. Vocalist/bassist Dave Lowmiller and guitarist Jonesy have continued the project with guitarist Abe Robertson, drummer Kaye Papale, and vocalist/guitarist Mel Rose (from Mechina) by their side. You can also expect some melodeath, djent, and pop-core here, a similar cauldron to Amaranthe.
We start off strong with the great "Thin Be the Veil" with splendid vocal melodies. The glorious "Starfall" is my favorite of them all. Nothing I can say can do that perfect song justice. "Vector Unknown" is darker and heavier, featuring Anna Hel. The softer cleans and heavier screams alternating between each other sound so haunting. It's like a lurking menace in the space of tranquility, turning it intense and bleak. The cleans still shine, along with the creativity in the music. The band is never afraid to explore the unknown, and as a result, we have another wonderful standout!
"Flame Betide" can also please me with some influences from Fear Factory and Scar Symmetry. The one track I would consider somewhat weak is "I, Revenant", the only song here that's under 4 minutes.
"It Never Sleeps" is another one of my favorites, sounding haunting while having the lovely clean singing of Mel Rose. The beautiful ballad-ish track "Afterworld" practically combines the late 90s eras of Paradise Lost and Fear Factory, while having some deathly heaviness. The album ends with the 6-minute epic "The Disquiet", filled with hammering metal to remind you that the journey was worth it.
The only things I would object to in this great album is one or two tracks having some slight weakness, and there probably could've been a couple more tracks added here. Nonetheless, I approve of this long-awaited comeback album for A Dark Halo. Maybe the future flame of cyber metal never be extinguished....
Favorites: "Starfall", "Vector Unknown", "It Never Sleeps", "The Disquiet"
The brand new Mechina album Bellum Interruptum has made me curious about that band's new harsh vocalist Dave Lowmiller's previous band A Dark Halo. This band has already had some ties with Mechina whose clean vocalist Mel Rose joined A Dark Halo for their new album Omnibus One. The first album A Dark Halo is an amazing gem of industrial/cyber metal for fans of the genre and Mechina!
Catalyst was released in 2006, 17 years before their next album. Their brand of industrial/cyber metal is basically what Fear Factory had at the time but made better and more futuristic. Still the music here is quite unique and can get listeners hooked with the synths and guitars.
One of my favorite tracks here is the first one, "Burn It All", having lots of groove and energy from the intro onwards. Then we have the mighty "Beyond Recall" with some of the best choruses in the album. "Dust and Ashes" has some heavier riffing, but the mid-tempo pace seems to take things closer to the alt-metal territory of early 36 Crazyfists and, very later on, Any Given Sin.
We then reduce the speed with the slow verses of "Silence", a ballad-ish highlight that can still be heavy. Then we have the piano/synth intermission of "Reformatting..." Unusual but a well-needed break.
"Nucleus" has more of the heavy industrial metal without going as extreme as Strapping Young Lad. "Apex Realized" has a nearly similar vibe to 2010s All That Remains while really industrializing that later sound. "Unbreakable" is an incredible ending track, as heavy guitars and beautiful synths continue to duel each other for an industrial/cyber metal tune that should really catch on along with the others.
It's not everyday you can find a practically unknown album that can make your day with its music and lyrics of coldness and loss. Catalyst is a special album to listen to. A dash of melancholy for your industrial/cyber metal heart!
Favorites: "Burn It All", "Beyond Recall", "Silence", "Unbreakable"
If they have achieved nothing else, Pothamus have introduced me to a new instrument in the Shruthi Box, an instrument predominantly used in Indian classical music. It is deployed here on single, ‘Ykavus’ where it adds a droning presence to proceedings. Fortunately, this is not my only take from Abur, although it is a distance away from my usual diet, it is still a very entertaining record. There is still some familiar features to compare with the backdrop of my usual listening habits, but the duration of this record in the main is time spent away from my comfort zone. The sludge tag it has on Metal Academy has some relevance most certainly, but it is the post-metal tag that fits the majority of the record better. On top of this though, there are those hints of drone as well as a sense of Middle Eastern infusion.
After a few listens through to Abur with the tribal percussion and dense atmospheres, coupled with echoing chants and expansive keys, it is obvious that a lot of thought has gone into the record. Whilst it might not have an immediate argument for frequent revisits (this very much a mood record) it is a very professional sounding yet artistically endearing album. Where the band are most definitely skilled is in the ability to combine multiple elements on one track, not necessarily blending them, just very capable at arranging them. The title track absolutely feeds off the atmospherics before breaking off into some of the denser sludge content present on the album. When in full flow, the atmosphere here is reminiscent of an Akhlys album, minus the horror of course.
I cannot fight the haunting and ethereal charms of Abur. It is such an accomplished sounding album that is in many ways a shame that it only fits a more serious mood. I will come back to this album when I feel enclosed or suffocated by my existence. When I am sensing my boundaries are the same four walls far too often and I need reminding of how far outside of my comfort zone I can actually go. This is where Pothamus will come into their own for me, occupying the same ‘open when needed space’ as Russian Circles, Wardruna and Forndom.
Well I got this one wrong didn't I?
Returning to their atmospheric black metal form on records like Sunbather and Ordinary Corrupt Human Love, Deafheaven make their harrowing return in 2025. I heavily criticized the bands previous album, Infinite Granite, for axing its heavier sounds for its more post-rock style. Not because they were bad, instead because Deafheaven's principal feature was the uplifting nature of their black metal; a genre that is well known for being the antithesis of uplifting. I also said that I figured that this would be the direction that Deafheaven would continue down the foreseeable future.
Well that didn't happen. Lonely People With Power is a monstrous album in both its length as well as intensity. Like previous albums, Deafheaven are not going to overwhelm the listener with a typical black metal display of relentless tremolo picking, blast beats, and vocal screeching for just over an hour. The album is filled with atmospheric breaks and interludes, the metal portions are diversified with half-time style changes and more melodic guitar leads, as well as clean vocals. And as someone who cares very much about padding on an album, this record does not falter. There may be sections that could have been trimmed down (such as the intro on "Winona"), but overall, Lonely People With Power has enough diversity to keep it interesting, but without a lot of the self indulgence that plagues modern progressive metal.
The sound of this record is well done also. This is the first Deafheaven album published through Roadrunner Records. Now I've always viewed this record label as the "Gentlemen's Club" of metal record labels given their reputation. And even though Roadrunner is not particularly well known for its publication of black metal albums, Deafheaven fit right in. The albums have always sounded more mature and it continues here with the mixing. George Clarke's shrieking is still heavily condensed behind a wall-of-sound and acts more as a secondary instrument on songs like "Heathen" and it does work a little better than expected. Some albums like this put heavy emphasis on their vocals to make a statement, but here the vocals are more metaphoric in presentation and you don't really need them to get the full experience of this record.
All of that being said however, it's hard for me to enjoy Lonely People With Power more because it feels like Deafheaven are sinking into the status quo of modern atmospheric black metal. As I mentioned off the top of this review, Deafheaven are known for their uplifting textures and sharper tone quality. What I noticed here is that the tone quality has been quietly flattened; way more minor key signatures and chordal progressions, and more walloping foundational grooves. And even though the songwriting on this album is very good, it doesn't take long to realize that Deafheaven are seceding themselves to Alcest in that regard, when it was only a few short years ago their positions were reversed.
This is probably a nitpicky criticism of Lonely People With Power from me, but I think it is very important. The reason I constantly return to tracks like "Dream House" and "Canary Yellow" all of these years later is because of how unique they are within the black metal framework, and Deafheaven did this without incorporating a folk gimmick like Panopticon or Saor. Now, without that bottom line of "this is Deafheaven" for most of this album (only really saved by the final two tracks), it becomes harder to find songs here that are truly timeless. We shall see what the future brings but for now, Lonely People With Power is a good record and deserving of its early praise, but it should be a lot better.
Best Songs: Magnolia, The Garden Route, Body Behavior, Winona