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Northern Graves - Derelict Heart

Northern Graves - Derelict Heart (2026)

Added: June 08, 2026
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Godthrymm - Projections

Godthrymm - Projections (2026)

Added: June 08, 2026
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Godthrymm - The Light

Godthrymm - The Light (2024)

Added: June 08, 2026
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Bevar Sea - The Timeless Zone

Bevar Sea - The Timeless Zone (2022)

Added: June 08, 2026
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Bevar Sea - Invoke the Bizarre

Bevar Sea - Invoke the Bizarre (2015)

Added: June 08, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Evanescence - Sanctuary

Evanescence - Sanctuary (2026)

Added: June 08, 2026
Ratings: 1
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4.5
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0.0
VCTMS - Pain Processing II

VCTMS - Pain Processing II (2026)

Added: June 08, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Moon Tooth - Bastard

Moon Tooth - Bastard (2026)

Added: June 08, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Acid Blitz - Nouveau Son

Acid Blitz - Nouveau Son (2002)

Added: June 08, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
gibkiy gibkiy gibkiy - 不条理種劇

gibkiy gibkiy gibkiy - 不条理種劇 (2016)

Added: June 08, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Elvenking - Rites of Disclosure

Elvenking - Rites of Disclosure (2026)

Added: June 09, 2026
Ratings: 1
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4.5
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4.5
Unlucky Morpheus - Gate of Hell

Unlucky Morpheus - Gate of Hell (2026)

Added: June 09, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Vanexa - The Last in Black

Vanexa - The Last in Black (2021)

Added: June 09, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Vanexa - Too Heavy to Fly

Vanexa - Too Heavy to Fly (2016)

Added: June 09, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Vanexa - Against the Sun

Vanexa - Against the Sun (1994)

Added: June 09, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Dissentient - Black Galactic

Dissentient - Black Galactic (2026)

Added: June 09, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Dissentient - Portal III

Dissentient - Portal III (2019)

Added: June 09, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Dissentient - Black Hole Machine

Dissentient - Black Hole Machine (2011)

Added: June 09, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Dissentient - The Archillect

Dissentient - The Archillect (2013)

Added: June 09, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Discarnated - Deus Misereatur

Discarnated - Deus Misereatur (1993)

Added: June 09, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Kolm - Yūgen

Kolm - Yūgen (2026)

Added: June 11, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Dark Millennium - Come

Dark Millennium - Come (2026)

Added: June 11, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Impure Wilhelmina - Le Sanglot

Impure Wilhelmina - Le Sanglot (2026)

Added: June 11, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Impure Wilhelmina - Dead Decades

Impure Wilhelmina - Dead Decades (2023)

Added: June 11, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Dissentient - Black Galactic

Dissentient - Black Galactic (2026)

Added: June 09, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Hecate Enthroned - The Corpse of a Titan, a Lament Long Buried

Hecate Enthroned - The Corpse of a Titan, a Lament Long Buried (2026)

Added: June 11, 2026
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0.0
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Totenwache - Der Thron der Uralten

Totenwache - Der Thron der Uralten (2026)

Added: June 11, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Azaghal - Nekrohelios

Azaghal - Nekrohelios (2026)

Added: June 11, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Azaghal - Pedoista ja raadonsyöjistä

Azaghal - Pedoista ja raadonsyöjistä (2025)

Added: June 11, 2026
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0.0
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Zephyrous - Towards...

Zephyrous - Towards... (1999)

Added: June 11, 2026
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0.0
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Neophobia - Nothing...

Neophobia - Nothing... (1996)

Added: June 15, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Neophobia - Fear of the Future

Neophobia - Fear of the Future (1993)

Added: June 15, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Frozen Doberman - Bonsai

Frozen Doberman - Bonsai (1994)

Added: June 15, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Frozen Doberman - Beautiful Day

Frozen Doberman - Beautiful Day (1995)

Added: June 15, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Frozen Doberman - Dying Phase

Frozen Doberman - Dying Phase (1991)

Added: June 15, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Bygones You Had Better Be Bygones - Numerics

Bygones You Had Better Be Bygones - Numerics (2010)

Added: June 09, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
VCTMS - Pain Processing II

VCTMS - Pain Processing II (2026)

Added: June 08, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Obscure of Acacia - The Biggest Lie

Obscure of Acacia - The Biggest Lie (2017)

Added: June 03, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Obscure of Acacia - Eclipse

Obscure of Acacia - Eclipse (2016)

Added: June 03, 2026
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0.0
Obscure of Acacia - The Cornered

Obscure of Acacia - The Cornered (2012)

Added: June 03, 2026
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XIII - hellscapes

XIII - hellscapes (2025)

Added: May 25, 2026
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HEALTH - Addendum

HEALTH - Addendum (2026)

Added: May 09, 2026
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Cat Rapes Dog - Moosehair Underwear

Cat Rapes Dog - Moosehair Underwear (1993)

Added: May 09, 2026
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Pigface - 6

Pigface - 6 (2009)

Added: May 09, 2026
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0.0
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Wheelfall - A Spectre is Haunting the World

Wheelfall - A Spectre is Haunting the World (2020)

Added: May 04, 2026
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Clans

The Fallen
The Fallen

Members: 242

Releases: 8849

The Gateway
The Gateway

Members: 96

Releases: 3579

The Guardians
The Guardians

Members: 245

Releases: 10542

The Horde
The Horde

Members: 307

Releases: 15024

The Infinite
The Infinite

Members: 177

Releases: 7236

The North
The North

Members: 250

Releases: 16490

The Pit
The Pit

Members: 258

Releases: 6232

The Revolution
The Revolution

Members: 65

Releases: 5751

The Sphere
The Sphere

Members: 48

Releases: 1283

Let There Be Dark

These occasional dips back into the heavy metal/traditional metal world seem to be a little easier on the ear than I have come to expect them to be, certainly over the past couple of months or so anyways. Another female-fronted outfit in the form of Tower follow hot on the heels of last months Serpent Rider feature release and they manage to land a bit more successfully it must be said. The spontaneity of Let There Be Dark is hard to not fall for. I recall the debut from this band back in 2021 and how it caused a minor ruckus amongst my online metal peers who celebrated it alongside many a favourable review also. I don’t recall anything particularly standout from the debut record and as such I have viewed Let There Be Dark on its own merits as a standalone record.

Tower give a good acquittal of themselves here, building a consistent and strong track listing that burns with the energy of Chastain without quite crossing into the speedier side of Sölicitör, but also espousing a health nod in the direction of Warlock along the way. The inclusion of two instrumentals feels a dubious choice in an otherwise well-constructed album, but when they focus their efforts into actual songs, Tower are at their very best I would say. Whilst the album may lack any genuinely stunning performances beyond the vocals of Sarabeth Linden, everything is played with competence with the caveat that some aspects (the drums) are a little staid overall.

It is hard for me to get too excited over such a regurgitated sound though. No matter how solidly it is played, this is nothing new to my ears and nostalgia alone is not enough to keep my scores higher than the mid-point for Let There Be Dark. Despite the unnecessary instrumentals, the album is succinct enough however, coming in at just under forty-minutes seems a sensible length to avoid boredom settling in for me and at no point do I scrabble for the skip button. For some, this record will be flying the heavy metal flag high, and I don’t dismiss that purpose. However, it is not one that I am as invested in as I was a few years ago and so it does sound to me like just another heavy metal record.

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Vinny Vinny / June 14, 2026 08:08 PM
Ace of Spades

Ah, Motörhead. I can't tell you how heavily obsessed with this band I was in my secondary school days in the latter part of the 1970s. Lemmy, Eddie and Philthy were the absolute fucking peak of musical rebellion for me back then. Punks thought they were rebelling, but they were just glorified clothes horses. Nah, bikes, booze and speed as preached by this unholy threesome were where rejection of the system and true freedom really lay. Motörhead shows were special, they had a hardcore of fans who always showed up, particularly from the biker community and were a celebration for those who rejected and lived outside of the system. The band had been steadily growing their popularity with each release, but then, all of a sudden in '79 / '80, rock and metal became popular here in the UK and all manner of "normies" started taking notice. Pivotal in that metal explosion here was "Ace of Spades". It became popular here on a level that was unprecedented for UK metal bands (even Sabbath didn't really hit this level of popularity in the general populace). Shit, the 'Head were even there on Thursday night on Top of the Pops for fuck's sake. I was a naive kid and some part of my kid's mind felt betrayed by this sudden "sell out". Of course this was a great album, but my admiration of it was a bit grudging because, much as I loved it, I resented having to share something that had been so personal to me with all these newbies who had no history with the band. Stupid and naive, but my immature mind knew no better. Rather than revelling in the fact that my love of the band had been vindicated by so many others now discovering them, my connection now felt diluted.

So now, as an only marginally more mature-minded old man, what's my take on "Ace of Spades"? Well, I don't think its influence on the future of metal can be understated. Its influence on bands such as Venom is evident and therefore, by extension, on the whole extreme metal scene. It was certainly Motörhead's most truly metal album up to this point and is a long way from the material you would find on their earliest recordings such as the heavy rock 'n'roll of "On Parole". It is also one of the band's most consistent records with few real dips in quality, unlike a lot of their albums which always frustratingly seemed to have at least one "bum" track, think "Vibrator", Step Down" or "I'll Be Your Sister".

The tempo established by the iconic opening title track is maintained pretty consistently throughout the album with tracks like "Fire Fire", "We Are the Road Crew" and "The Hammer" while they shake it up with some variety of pacing as supplied by tracks like "Shoot To Win" and the brooding "Chase Is Better Than the Catch". And over all this booms Lemmy's unmistakeable, thundering basslines whilst Philthy lays into all around him like the "Animal" for which he is named, the duo combining into one of the most devastating and charismatic heavy metal rhythm sections of all times. From what I understand Eddie Clarke was already at this point becoming a little disillusioned with playing second fiddle to Lemmy, yet he was such a consummate professional that you would never guess it as this is probably his all-time best work and his riffs and solos are vibrant and energetic, playing the lightning to Lemmy and Phil's booming thunder. Sure, I will concede, sometimes Lemmy's less-than-serious lyrics can cause the odd grimace, but I think he wrote them with tongue firmly in cheek most of the time.

I don't know if they ever suspected that the title track would become the iconic track it did. I mean it is up there with songs like "Paranoid" and "Smells Like Teen Spirit" in terms of tracks that are so well known people actually become tired of hearing them over time. Whether they did or not, it is one of the best known British metal tracks ever. Hell, even my Elvis-loving mum could be caught singing it occasionally. To be fair she did once sweet-talk a bouncer into letting her in for the last half hour of one of the band's shows at our local fleapit when she came to pick me up. It blew her mind and she always loved Lemmy after that! I digress, but the material on "Ace of Spades" is so strong that even with such a titanic track opening the record, the remainder doesn't feel even remotely disappointing and a couple such as "We Are the Road Crew" and "The Hammer" are even better for my money. Ultimately the top and bottom of it is that this is one of the iconic albums of the UK metal scene alongside "Paranoid" and "Number of the Beast" and no matter what I or anyone else says that ain't changing any time soon.

On a more sombre note, I always use metal-archives as the resource for factual information about the albums I am reviewing and, rather poignantly, I thought, the full lineup page for "Ace of Spades" which includes producer Vic Maile, engineer Trevor Hallesey and even photographer Alan Ballard has R.I.P. next to each name. Fuckin' sad man.

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Sonny Sonny / June 14, 2026 03:27 PM
Every Dog Has It's Day

Sydney thrash metallers Mortal Sin hold a very strong place in my heart, despite never really quite living up to their reputation in my opinion. You see, they were the first local extreme metal band to cross my path when I first became obsessed with the scene in the late 1980's & they gave me the belief that I should try my hand at creating a band of my own. My attention was initially grabbed by their highly regarded "Mayhemic Destruction" debut album which led to me moving onto their 1989 sophomore record "Face of Despair". If I'm being completely honest though, neither of those full-lengths has ever left me convinced that Mortal Sin are worthy of being placed in the top tier of the global thrash heavyweights. In fact, I can't say that I'd even lump them in with the second tier either. To my ears, they're both serviceable & mildly entertaining but rarely get my blood pumping & it's for that reason that I've awarded both a middling 3.5-star rating here at the Academy. Their live shows where another story though & I had an absolute ball in many a Mortal Sin mosh pit over the years. However, I digress because the point I was trying to make is that Mortal Sin were well & truly on my radar when their third full-length "Every Dog Has It's Day" hit the shelves in 1991 which even led to me purchasing the "Every Dog Has It's Day" cassingle in the leadup to the album release. Now prepare yourselves for a hot take because you're about the receive one.

The story behind "Every Dog Has It's Day" (otherwise known as "Rebellious Youth" if you've picked up the Virgin Records release) is that a fair amount of internal turmoil occurred within Mortal Sin's ranks following the release of "Face of Despair" which eventually resulted in the band breaking up altogether. Bassist Andy Eftichiou wasn't satisfied to simply let old dogs lie though, going behind the backs of the other band members to create a completely new version of Mortal Sin. Once the other band members found out about it, they took legal action & it got really messy. The new lineup didn't hang around too long but it did last long enough to record this third full-length which would be the first to be released while I was keeping tabs on the band. Sadly, the majority of the global metal scene gave "Every Dog Has It's Day" a pretty harsh panning at the time & that hasn't improved since but I have to admit that I don't remember the album that way at all & I've recently wondered whether that's due to nostalgia or whether Mortal Sin's diehard fanbase had simply not given the record a chance. This week I decided to find out as it's been decades since I last heard the record in full.

The lineup that recorded "Every Dog Has It's Day" isn't exactly star-studded with a number of relatively unknown new members filling key rolls. In fact, guitarist Dave DeFrancesco was the only one that had anything of significance on their resume, having appeared on the pretty decent "Into Reality" demo tape from local speed/heavy metal outfit Enticer a couple of years earlier. The band perform their roles admirably nonetheless & show themselves to have some pretty reasonable chops in the process. The major talking point though is generally the vocal ability of new front man Steve Sly whose delivery is noticeably more melodic & clean than the James Hetfield-ish voice of Mat Maurer on the two 1980's records. A lot of people claim that Sly ruins "Every Dog Has It's Day" but I simply can't prescribe to that line of thinking as he can certainly sing & delivers a performance that isn't all that uncommon for thrash metal in my opinion. Sure, you may prefer Maurer over Sly but, if you treat the album on its own merits, I think you'll find that there's not anything technically wrong with Sly's voice. The other main talking point is the theory that the new version of Mortal Sin had watered down the intensity of the 1980's lineup with a more accessible & commercialized sound. Once again though, I never really thought of Mortal Sin as being anything all that extreme & the material we receive here is some more than serviceable mid-tempo thrash metal that wouldn't sound all that out of place on a Testament or Xentrix record from the time. The average tempos are a touch slower than previous efforts but so fucking what really. The misguided ballad "Wasted Days" is the exemption to the rule though & is the clear weak point of the album.

But is the songwriting as boring as it's made out to be then? Well, in a word "no", it's simply not. There are plenty of great riffs included with the rhythm section doing a great job at maximizing their weight. Perhaps the Studio 301/Powerhouse production isn't as warm & heavy as a record like "Mayhemic Destruction" but it's certainly not bad. I'm quite a fan of the lead guitar work which is more than capable & it works nicely to provide support for the hooks which, contrary to popular opinion, are memorable enough for me to remember most of this material several decades later. Opener "Inside Out" is a beauty & is my favourite cut on the record while being ably supported by "Side Effect" & single B-side "See No Evil". I honestly don't see the quality being all that different from that of "Mayhemic Destriction" or "Face of Despair" if I'm being perfectly honest & are even going to go so far as to say that I marginally prefer "Every Dog Has It's Day" to "Face of Despair" these days. So look, I'm not asking that you all take my word for it & immediately realign your opinions on this album to be in line with my own but I am going to suggest that you ignore the general perception that's voiced online when going into the record as you might be surprised by the outcome.

For fans of Metallica, Xentrix & Testament.

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Daniel Daniel / June 13, 2026 08:40 PM
Don't Break the Oath

I'm not going to get into the divisive nature of King Diamond's vocals here, I am sure I have addressed that issue elsewhere. Let's just accept for now that I actually do enjoy his idiosyncrasies and move on. The simple fact was, and remains, that Mercyful Fate wrote some absolute killer metal tracks. They gave Iron Maiden and Judas Priest-like melodic riffs a more evil bent with overtly occult lyrics, although still firmly in the literary or cinematic realm rather than the Anton LaVey serious satanism of later black metal bands. This, coupled with KD's histrionic vocals and early version of corpsepaint gave the impression that the Danes were pushing the envelope of sheer metalness ever further. MF were undoubtedly a major influence on the early exponents of extreme metal and the metal landscape may have ended up sounding quite a bit different without them.

I absolutely love the band's debut album, "Melissa" and it has several of not only my favourite Mercyful Fate tracks, but favourites of traditional heavy metal as a whole. Songs like "Evil", "Into the Coven" and "Satan's Fall" have riffs with the ability to get my head nodding and feet tapping whilst King Diamond's vocal hystrionics simultaneously set the hairs on the back of my neck on end. I think it is more than fair to say that there hadn't been anything quite like Mercyful Fate before. The band had a big task on their hands, then, to follow such an impactful record with one of similar quality that would cement their legacy as metal frontrunners. Ten months later they dropped "Don't Break the Oath" onto an expectant public and the rest, as they say, is history.

I think the first thing that hit me about "Don't Break the Oath" is that KD seems to have dialled back the vocal excesses and delivers a more controlled performance behind the mic. That doesn't mean that he took a conventional approach to his singing duties by any means and if you didn't like his vocals on the debut, then this is unlikely to change your mind as he still hits those theatrical falsettos fairly regularly, just not in as over-the-top a manner as on "Melissa". What about the riffs then? Well, DBtO is as jam-packed with riffs as a Snickers bar is with peanuts and every one registers pretty fucking high on Sonny's patented head-bangability scale. These riffs will be bouncing around your brain long after the record has ended, probably getting you very strange looks should you be using public transport at the time. On top of this Shermann and Denner's guitar work is exemplary with an energy and vitality that sounds genuinely thrilling whenever they let rip with those dynamic solos. The songwriting here also sounds more mature than on the debut, the tracks resolving themselves with a little more complexity than before. This ain't prog though and the memorable hooks are still there in vast numbers, they are just not the be all and end all on this album.

This is certainly a worthy follow-up to "Melissa" and is arguably a better record, even though the hooks on the debut are incredible, but there feels to be a bit more meat on the bones here which, when coupled with King's more restrained performance add up to one of the best traditional heavy metal records of the 1980s.

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Sonny Sonny / June 13, 2026 03:50 PM
Fire Down Under

Riot kind of passed me by at the time, never penetrating my 1980s musical bubble and, frankly, this doesn't possess the energy or aggression that is likely to to draw much of my attention all these many decades later. To me this sounds like a product of its time with way too much hard rock catchiness for my comfort. I mean, come on, "Feel the Same" and "Don't Bring Me Down" are Aerosmith tracks surely. This feels like AOR metal to me, written with US FM radio play in mind and not to provide any aggression or adrenaline as that may negatively affect record sales. Basically this is SAFE and safe is not a word I want attached to my metal listening thank you very much. I guess you want a bit more from me but, frankly, I don't want to waste too much time on this because listening to it is like staring at a blank wall for thirty-seven minutes. It gives me nothing and I shall return that with nothing of my own. If this is what was passing for metal in the US back in the early 80s prior to the thrash boom then I can understand why Def Leppard became so big over there (and you were welcome to them).  I guess "Swords and Tequila" is kinda fun and "Run for Your Life" is passable, but the rest is anodyne and meaningless to me. 

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Sonny Sonny / June 12, 2026 02:38 PM

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