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Mare Infinitum - Cryosleep (2022)
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Mare Infinitum - Alien Monolith God (2015)
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Mare Infinitum - Sea of Infinity (2011)
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Heavydeath - Sarcophagus in the Sky (2017)
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Heavydeath - In Circles We Die (2016)
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Dorje - Catalyst (2015)
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Dorje - Primordial Audio Chronicle (2012)
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Dadaroma - Dadaism#5 (2019)
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Dadaroma - Dadaism#4 (2018)
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Dadaroma - This Is ”Live” (2018)
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Rave in Fire - Square One (2026)
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Rave in Fire - Sons of a Lie (2022)
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Rave in Fire - Chronicle of a Timeless End (2018)
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Chaos Magic - Emerge (2022)
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Chaos Magic - Furyborn (2019)
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Omnipotent Hysteria - Abattoir of Slain Deities (2016)
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Omnipotent Hysteria - Forged in the Embers of Monolithic Devastation (2013)
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Coscradh - Carving the Causeway to the Otherworld (2026)
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Abnormal Inhumane - Consuming the Infinity (2016)
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Abnormal Inhumane - Disgusting Cruelty of Homicide (2011)
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Stam1na - Apnea (2026)
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Stories - Void (2013)
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Juodvarnis - Tėkmės (2026)
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Juodvarnis - Nerimo Dienos (2020)
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Juodvarnis - Mirusio žmogaus kelionė (2016)
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Winter Eternal - Unveiled Nightsky (2026)
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Winter Eternal - Shadows Upon Athens (2024)
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Misotheist - De Pinte (2026)
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Bronze Hall - Embers of the Dawn (2026)
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Darchon - Οἰωνός (Oionos) (2019)
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Karloff - The Appearing (2021)
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Polaris Experience - Drifting Through Voids (2026)
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Witheria - Infinite Recollection (2017)
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Witheria - Devastating Return (2014)
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Witheria - Vanishing Order (2011)
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Stories - The Youth to Become (2015)
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Shields - Death & Connection (2026)
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Shields - Life in Exile (2018)
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Shields - Shields EP (2013)
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Radical Noise - Plan-B (2000)
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Psychopomps - Six Six Six Nights in Hell (1995)
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Psychopomps - Pro-Death Ravers (1993)
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Ad Inferna - Trance:N:dance (2009)
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Elyose - Reconnexion (2018)
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Elyose - Ipso facto (2015)
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This was a favorite of mine when I started listening to more extreme metal, but it has fallen off quite a bit. It's a great listen overall, pretty fun stuff, but I think it really lacks memorability down the road. The opening track is obviously a classic and I do think it's great, but except for some really great parts (specially Drowned, the end of Bitter Loss and the awesome bridge on Morbid Devourment) I can't recall much of the rest of the album even just after listening to it, and it pretty much feels like the same song for half an hour. That is something to be somewhat expected from death metal, specially the old school stuff, but it's overly present here.
Also, a note on comparisons with Dismember: this is very frequently compared to LaEFS as they are the two most famous swedeath albums, but I think they're really not that similar. This is way more crude and rock n' roll-ish, maybe foreshadowing Entombed's later rock tendencies, whereas LaEFS has a more melodic and technical nuance. Production-wise, LHP is more chaotic and harsh and I think sometimes it's even a bit hard to understand what's going on, while LaEFS is more tame and controlled, resulting in something more cohesive and a fair bit more brutal. Also, Dismember's vocals are way more controlled and honestly better overall.
Maybe the definition of a kick-ass album. Through the first songs the only thing that I picture in my mind is endless mosh pit madness, because DAMN this is the perfect combination to bang your head to a wall. The absolute best of the swedeath signature guitar tone, chonky and relentless, and just awesome and fun punk infused death metal with some melodic stuff sprinkled over to give it an interesting twist. The only reason I deduct a half-star from this is because I think the album dips a fair bit on tracks 5 to 7, but the first four are perfectly intense and heavy, and they fortunately comeback with In Death's Sleep as a closer, which is one of my favorite death metal tracks ever. Just beautiful.
A step down from Shrine from a few years ago. The individual songs have become less focused and do not have any pazazz when it comes to ear catching melodies. The album undoubtedly feels more like a "vibes" album where the strong sound of a melodic metalcore foundation with a death metal tinge is going to be the aspect that listeners will remember the most. Zenith has ambitions of being a more complete project from Shrine and that comes through in some really intense production which is highlighted by a far improved vocal performance. Scott Kennedy's vocals have always been a bit of a presence when the harsh death metal screaming comes out, but his singing was quite lackluster on the previous record. This time around, the clean vocals are greatly improved; the rasp in the timbre fits well with the instrumental style and does not create this weird hybrid effect where it feels like you're listening to two songs at once. I wish that I could have enjoyed Zenith as much as Shrine, but the heightened expectations of how impressed I was by Shrine left me feeling a little bit empty here. The texture of the album can only work so much when your audience already knows your playbook. At some point, Bleed From Within are going to have to broaden their scope.
Best Songs: In Place of your Halo, Zenith, Immortal Desire, Dying Sun
Montréal's Big Brave are a band I'm only recently getting into. This, their fifth album, is a mix of drone metal and post-metal with huge-sounding, pounding drum beats and discordant guitar work interwoven with some gorgeous female vocals that sound like a mixture of Siouxsie Sioux and Bjork. It's five tracks span less than forty minutes, so this isn't a long drawn-out affair unlike many drone-adjacent releases, but is focussed and kind-of to the point, for drone metal anyway. The band manage to cram a lot in and squeeze a lot out of their forty minutes, conjuring up haunting visions of crumbling edifices and long-deserted streets, especially on the title track, for a style I want to call post-human metal.
























































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