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Endlesshade - Wolf Will Swallow the Sun

Endlesshade - Wolf Will Swallow the Sun (2015)

Added: February 09, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Malignant Aura - Where All of Worth Comes to Wither

Malignant Aura - Where All of Worth Comes to Wither (2026)

Added: February 09, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Malignant Aura - Abysmal Misfortune Is Draped Upon Me

Malignant Aura - Abysmal Misfortune Is Draped Upon Me (2022)

Added: February 09, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Oceanwake - Lights Flashing in Mute Scenery

Oceanwake - Lights Flashing in Mute Scenery (2019)

Added: February 09, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Oceanwake - Earthen

Oceanwake - Earthen (2017)

Added: February 09, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Legion, I - Pleiona

Legion, I - Pleiona (2015)

Added: February 10, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Pickpocket - Uyan

Pickpocket - Uyan (2013)

Added: February 10, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Pickpocket - Hayalle Gerçek Arasında

Pickpocket - Hayalle Gerçek Arasında (2008)

Added: February 10, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Karnivool - In Verses

Karnivool - In Verses (2026)

Added: February 10, 2026
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 1
Site Rating
4.0
Clan Rating
4.0
Juice - Beauté

Juice - Beauté (1998)

Added: February 10, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Therion - Con orquesta

Therion - Con orquesta (2026)

Added: February 10, 2026
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
4.5
Clan Rating
4.5
Tailgunner - Midnight Blitz

Tailgunner - Midnight Blitz (2026)

Added: February 10, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Fortress (CA-USA) - Death Is Your Master

Fortress (CA-USA) - Death Is Your Master (2026)

Added: February 10, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Bullet (SWE) - Kickstarter

Bullet (SWE) - Kickstarter (2026)

Added: February 10, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Ethernity - The Human Race Extinction

Ethernity - The Human Race Extinction (2018)

Added: February 10, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Carnivorous Voracity - The Impious Doctrine

Carnivorous Voracity - The Impious Doctrine (2015)

Added: February 12, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Carnivorous Voracity - Debasement Incarnated

Carnivorous Voracity - Debasement Incarnated (2011)

Added: February 12, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Abyss - Heretical Anatomy

Abyss - Heretical Anatomy (2015)

Added: February 12, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Defaced - Forging the Sanctuary

Defaced - Forging the Sanctuary (2015)

Added: February 12, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Defaced - On the Frontline

Defaced - On the Frontline (2012)

Added: February 12, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Hirsch Effekt, The - Der Brauch

Hirsch Effekt, The - Der Brauch (2026)

Added: February 12, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Iridium - Hell Is Just a Halfway House

Iridium - Hell Is Just a Halfway House (2026)

Added: February 12, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Kovtun - Black Goat

Kovtun - Black Goat (2026)

Added: February 12, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Qasu - A Bleak King Cometh

Qasu - A Bleak King Cometh (2026)

Added: February 12, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Ethernity - The Human Race Extinction

Ethernity - The Human Race Extinction (2018)

Added: February 10, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Dead in the Manger - Cessation

Dead in the Manger - Cessation (2015)

Added: February 15, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Dead in the Manger - Despondency

Dead in the Manger - Despondency (2018)

Added: February 15, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Dead in the Manger - Transience

Dead in the Manger - Transience (2014)

Added: February 15, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Mayhem (NOR) - Liturgy of Death

Mayhem (NOR) - Liturgy of Death (2026)

Added: February 15, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Vargnatt - Grausammler

Vargnatt - Grausammler (2015)

Added: February 15, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Annexation - Inherent Brutality

Annexation - Inherent Brutality (2020)

Added: February 15, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Annexation - Jackhammer Treatment

Annexation - Jackhammer Treatment (2019)

Added: February 15, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Appalachian Terror Unit - Greenwashing

Appalachian Terror Unit - Greenwashing (2008)

Added: February 15, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Trials - This Ruined World

Trials - This Ruined World (2015)

Added: February 15, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Trials - In the Shadow of Swords

Trials - In the Shadow of Swords (2013)

Added: February 15, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Ends in Tragedy / Dance - A Dance; a Tragedy

Ends in Tragedy / Dance - A Dance; a Tragedy (2026)

Added: February 15, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Yellow Sign, The - Post Oblivion

Yellow Sign, The - Post Oblivion (2011)

Added: February 15, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Yellow Sign, The - Ancient

Yellow Sign, The - Ancient (2009)

Added: February 15, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Yellow Sign, The - Swamp

Yellow Sign, The - Swamp (2007)

Added: February 15, 2026
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0.0
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0.0
Yellow Sign, The - Necromantic Rites

Yellow Sign, The - Necromantic Rites (2021)

Added: February 15, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Psychopomps - Six Six Six Nights in Hell

Psychopomps - Six Six Six Nights in Hell (1995)

Added: February 05, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Psychopomps - Pro-Death Ravers

Psychopomps - Pro-Death Ravers (1993)

Added: February 05, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Ad Inferna - Trance:N:dance

Ad Inferna - Trance:N:dance (2009)

Added: February 02, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Elyose - Reconnexion

Elyose - Reconnexion (2018)

Added: January 27, 2026
Ratings: 0
Reviews: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Elyose - Ipso facto

Elyose - Ipso facto (2015)

Added: January 27, 2026
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0

Clans

The Fallen
The Fallen

Members: 226

Releases: 8511

The Gateway
The Gateway

Members: 87

Releases: 3412

The Guardians
The Guardians

Members: 226

Releases: 10214

The Horde
The Horde

Members: 285

Releases: 14326

The Infinite
The Infinite

Members: 169

Releases: 6962

The North
The North

Members: 235

Releases: 15715

The Pit
The Pit

Members: 241

Releases: 6071

The Revolution
The Revolution

Members: 60

Releases: 5460

The Sphere
The Sphere

Members: 44

Releases: 1253

Blood Seed

In terms of my exploration of The Fallen clan, one sub-genre that is noted as “not for me” is drone metal. Unable to fathom the appeal of Sunn O))), Earth or Khanate despite numerous attempts, I soon got to the opinion that this was never an area of music that I was going to gel with. Then I remembered Wolvserpent. I recalled how I had become lost in the ethereal beauty of their Perigaea Antahkarana and Aporia:Kala:Ananta releases from over a decade ago. How the haunting strings of violins played by a seemingly melancholy soaked set of troubled spirits had soothed my frantic thoughts before a crashing riff came in to wipe away any lingering fears in my soul.

As soon as I put Blood Seed on recently, I quickly found myself in the exact same space. This is the debut from the now defunct duo, from back in 2010 when the pair had been around for five years prior as Pussygutt. Brittany McConnell handled the drums as well as that tormented violin sound and Blake Green covered guitar and vocals. Not that vocals play a big part in the debut (or indeed any other release from Wolvserpent), the band have always been about the music, and this was set out very clearly on their first release. Side A is a single track, ‘Wolv’ and the ‘Serpent’ track makes up side B. I can imagine a wolf or two padding around some dark forests, hunting for prey, searching for signs of life to take from unsuspecting animals to the first track. The choral style howls and guttural gurns perhaps imitating the language between the menacing pack of predators (or maybe the screams of the victims?). At over twenty-two-minutes long, this track requires attention to fully embrace the magic of it, yet I find this a very easy ask to comply with.

‘Serpent’ lands a little shorter in duration at the eighteen-minute mark. Straight out the blocks, I can envisage a coiled snake, slowly unfurling itself to the nightmarish atmospheres that open the track. Brittany’s violin is accompanied by some distant howls (the ‘Wolv’ I suspect) courtesy of the guitar of Blake and a tense atmosphere permeates between the instrumentation. You may have noticed by now dear reader, that for someone who opened this review by remarking how little they like drone metal, I have managed to wax lyrical about a drone metal release for over two paragraphs thus far. In my defence, I think Wolvserpent are a different offering to any of the other bands that I mentioned above. They have more obvious “sections” to their tracks, incorporating varied elements of sludge (around the six-minute mark of track 2), doom, dark folk, chamber music as well as drone also of course.

Although repetition is still a mainstay here, there is enough going on at any given time to keep me focused entirely on Blood Seed, which is the similar experience that I have of their other releases I am familiar with. In short, all of drone may well not be a write off for me after all.


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Vinny Vinny / February 16, 2026 10:39 AM
Lunarterial

“Caverncore”, the 2010’s movement borne out of bands taking the sounds of Incantation and maxing out the reverb was my bag at the time. Having notched up around two decades of listening to death metal already, this sub-genre at least gave me something new to listen to that walked the fine line between blackened death metal and death doom. Except, depending on the levels of saturation the average death metal fan was willing to go to into this realm, the frantic squall of Portal was to be found in the darkest corners of this new soundscape. Bands like Finland’s Swallowed, had zero qualms about taking the extremity of metal’s most alienating sounds and incorporating them alongside more traditional tropes.

My theme for the feature releases I have picked this month has been single album bands who split thereafter. A “tragedy” themed month, I guess. This certainly resonates with Swallowed. The duo of Ville Kojonen (drums and vocals) and Samu Salovaara (guitars and vocals) employed a dirge of bassists for Lunarterial as well as guest drummers, guitarists and vocalists. In essence they created a real moment in time record given that not all those same musicians (five of them) would likely be in the same studio as the two mainstays of the band. As such, Lunarterial is a one-of-a-kind record within a one-of-a-kind sub-genre. I have no idea who is babbling the tormented vocals on each track, who is torturing the guitar, punishing the drums or contributing to the maelstrom of chaos that constitutes this beastly record.

Far from being a total abandonment of order, Lunarterial had a very set and individual path set out for itself. The fact that this path may have been an aberration to many potential listeners mattered not. You can easily hear the death metal, you can track the doomy pacing and reel at the blackened, caustic guitar sounds, but can you fathom the depths of depravity behind the heinous mix that is done across the record? Unlike an art-based project, which is how I view Imperial Triumphant, Swallowed simply strive to immerse the listener in chaos, leaving them to fathom what they can. Tracks like the twenty-five-minute closer, ‘Libations’ are a stretch too far even for me, yet I absolutely am not surprised that this album not only takes me to the limits of my love of extremity but also seeks to push me out of my comfort zone.


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Vinny Vinny / February 15, 2026 03:15 PM
Apokalypsens ängel

Sweden, home to Bathory, Morbid, Nifelheim, Marduk, Dissection, Svartsyn, Vinterland and Sorhin. The latter band on that list is the one I am perhaps least familiar with, and so the feature release for The North is truly expanding my horizons. I did get them confused with Dawn at first before I got into Apokalypsens ängel proper, although the similarities are more than obvious. Sorhin, on what has to date been the last full-length release from the band, treat the listener to “101” blueprint of how black metal should be done. Grim, ghastly vocals? Check. Scathing guitar riffage? Check. Blistering drums? Check. For an album released at the turn of the century, it could easily be from the height of the second wave

Holding a largely stable lineup for the duration of their career, with vocalist, Nattfursth and guitarist/bassist (and latterly drummer also) Eparygon having been constants since the band’s inception in 1993, Sorhin sound cohesive. Yes, there is a strong element of a celebration of chaos in their music; obvious throughout Apokalypsens ängel in fact, but this is not a band who are all over the place with their timings and tempos. Sorhin have mastered the art of ordered chaos, taking the charge of Marduk but pairing it back with lashings of melody to keep those hooves from running too rampant. Therefore, Apokalypsens ängel manages to stand out from the dirge of other black metal albums in the traditional style.

Coupling maturity with stinging attack, measure and balance with intensity and burning passion for their artform is the key to Sorhin’s success here. I did have to take a few listens to the album for it to click, but at the third or fourth attempt, it all fell into place nicely enough. The drumming of Zathanel is also worthy of a mention (he is no longer listed as being in the band nowadays), as he gives an assured performance in the background, the mix perhaps not always doing him justice as it does favour the guitar and vocals more. However, he does manage to peak through on occasion, if only to let us know he is still there.

I do have a couple of criticisms of the album however, that peg it’s rating back somewhat. Firstly, it is too long with the version on Spotify having an extra track at the end that takes the whole experience to over fifty-four-minutes. This adds a further problem in that on this version the two longest tracks are at the end, and as such the impact of album closer (proper) ‘Utmarsch - den nya Messias’ is somewhat lost. The arrangement therefore seems to have this sense of slipping over the last two tracks on the record. With most other tracks under five-minutes the concise consistency of the album does tend to come to an abrupt end unexpectedly and the ending experience is disappointing as a result.


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Vinny Vinny / February 15, 2026 02:07 PM
Slumber of Sullen Eyes
For fans of mid-tempo Bolt Thrower-esque death metal and tremolo based Swedeath, this is pretty much as good as it gets. An all around flawless pure, plain and direct death metal record, with not a lot of bells and whistles, no technical wankery or anything, but a ton of awesome riffs and great songwriting in an exemplary lesson in the use of dynamics, tempo and textures to build interesting songs in a somewhat constrained format. The production is also great, with bass and guitars sounding awesome - specially the kinda hollow open string tremolo tone - and nice drum sounds. Vocals are fine too, but nothing to write home about. All in all, I think this record can be used as a sort of measuring stick, a golden standard in this efficient and plain death metal style, meaning you can't do a whole lot more without adding some new element to the style or veering in a different direction. Adding to that, it is pretty impressive viewing this in a chronological sense, as I consider death metal to divorce from thrash and become purely it's own thing at around '89 or '90 with the release of Altars, LHP, Deicide, etc, and in just 3 years we pretty much achieved perfection. Also, this is around the same time we got the first developments in melodeath and brutal death with At The Gates and Suffocation, so this release may very much mark the end of the golden age of OSDM in great style. But what do I know.
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luajaz luajaz / February 15, 2026 02:31 AM
Wretch

Gates of Slumber took a while to land with me.  The vocals of Karl Simon were by far the biggest hurdle following my “pay what you like” Bandcamp download of Conqueror in 2008.  By the time I got around to the self-titled debut album by Wretch, the band that got put together after the initial hiatus being called on GoS, eight years had passed and I was by this stage much more in tune with Karl’s Winoisms.  Wretch and I hit it off from the first listen and it is an album that gets a couple of plays each year nowadays still.

For a doom metal record, it is surprisingly catchy.  In addition to this it has a rich vein of the blues running through it.  Those early Sabbath riffs, sat alongside the obvious Saint Vitus and The Obsessed influences show a band with some firm roots in the founding fathers of the genre and the debut album from Wretch really does sound like it comes from the soul of everyone involved.  The Judas Priest cover works well, even given the full hazy doom treatment.

The band even manage to shine on the two instrumentals that are present here.  I did roll my eyes at the prospect of two tracks without vocals at first but they are so well played, it is hard not to get onboard with them.  The brooding bass of ‘Bloodfinger’ is a wonderfully psychedelic experience set against the bluesy noodling of the guitar.  Not that I have heard all the GoS albums and notwitwstanding the style is perhaps different overall, but I would say that Wretch is my preferred output above even the might of Karl in GoS.  It is a shame that we only got one record out of the project, but at least it is a killer.

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Vinny Vinny / February 14, 2026 10:01 PM

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