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Merchant - Beneath

Merchant - Beneath (2017)

Added: March 31, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Merchant - Suzerain

Merchant - Suzerain (2016)

Added: March 31, 2025
Ratings: 1
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Site Rating
4.0
Clan Rating
4.0
Doomicidal - Shadow of the Gallows

Doomicidal - Shadow of the Gallows (2019)

Added: March 31, 2025
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
3.5
Clan Rating
3.5
Doomicidal - Spawned in Hell

Doomicidal - Spawned in Hell (2016)

Added: March 31, 2025
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
3.5
Clan Rating
3.5
Rothadás - Töviskert... a kísértés örök érzete... lidércharang

Rothadás - Töviskert... a kísértés örök érzete... lidércharang (2025)

Added: March 31, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Memphis May Fire - Shapeshifter

Memphis May Fire - Shapeshifter (2025)

Added: March 31, 2025
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
4.0
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4.0
Dark Halo, A - Omnibus One

Dark Halo, A - Omnibus One (2023)

Added: March 31, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Yaksa - 我即是

Yaksa - 我即是 (2019)

Added: March 31, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Yaksa - 暗流

Yaksa - 暗流 (2015)

Added: March 31, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Yaksa - Fuck! Fuck! Fuck!

Yaksa - Fuck! Fuck! Fuck! (2002)

Added: March 31, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Gaia Epicus - Seventh Rising

Gaia Epicus - Seventh Rising (2020)

Added: March 31, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Gaia Epicus - Alpha & Omega

Gaia Epicus - Alpha & Omega (2018)

Added: March 31, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Gaia Epicus - Dark Secrets

Gaia Epicus - Dark Secrets (2012)

Added: March 31, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Gaia Epicus - Damnation

Gaia Epicus - Damnation (2008)

Added: March 31, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Gaia Epicus - Victory

Gaia Epicus - Victory (2007)

Added: March 31, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Arch Enemy - Blood Dynasty

Arch Enemy - Blood Dynasty (2025)

Added: April 02, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Teitanblood - From the Visceral Abyss

Teitanblood - From the Visceral Abyss (2025)

Added: April 02, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Caustic Phlegm - Purulent Apocalypse

Caustic Phlegm - Purulent Apocalypse (2025)

Added: April 02, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Fleshless - Doomed

Fleshless - Doomed (2018)

Added: April 02, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Fleshless - Devoured Beyond Recognition

Fleshless - Devoured Beyond Recognition (2015)

Added: April 02, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Hortus Animae - Secular Music

Hortus Animae - Secular Music (2014)

Added: April 02, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Hortus Animae - The Blow of Furious Winds

Hortus Animae - The Blow of Furious Winds (2005)

Added: April 02, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Hortus Animae - Piove Sangue - Live in Banská Bystrica

Hortus Animae - Piove Sangue - Live in Banská Bystrica (2018)

Added: April 02, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Invent Animate & Silent Planet - Bloom in Heaven

Invent Animate & Silent Planet - Bloom in Heaven (2025)

Added: April 02, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Deafheaven - Lonely People With Power

Deafheaven - Lonely People With Power (2025)

Added: April 02, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Hortus Animae - The Blow of Furious Winds

Hortus Animae - The Blow of Furious Winds (2005)

Added: April 02, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Hortus Animae - Waltzing Mephisto

Hortus Animae - Waltzing Mephisto (2003)

Added: April 02, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Hortus Animae - The Melting Idols

Hortus Animae - The Melting Idols (2000)

Added: April 02, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Hortus Animae - There's No Sanctuary

Hortus Animae - There's No Sanctuary (2016)

Added: April 02, 2025
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Hortus Animae - Live at Velvet - April the 14th, 2001

Hortus Animae - Live at Velvet - April the 14th, 2001 (2018)

Added: April 02, 2025
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0.0
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Incapacity - Chaos Complete

Incapacity - Chaos Complete (2003)

Added: April 02, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Turbo - 40th Anniversary - Greatest Hits

Turbo - 40th Anniversary - Greatest Hits (2020)

Added: March 31, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Yaksa - You Are Not the Loser

Yaksa - You Are Not the Loser (2010)

Added: March 31, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
SpiritWorld - Helldorado

SpiritWorld - Helldorado (2025)

Added: March 26, 2025
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 1
Site Rating
3.5
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0.0
Mononc' Serge & Anonymus - Métal canadien-français

Mononc' Serge & Anonymus - Métal canadien-français (2024)

Added: March 26, 2025
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0.0
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Invent Animate & Silent Planet - Bloom in Heaven

Invent Animate & Silent Planet - Bloom in Heaven (2025)

Added: April 02, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Labrat - Ruining it for Everyone

Labrat - Ruining it for Everyone (2003)

Added: April 02, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Bodybox - 3

Bodybox - 3 (2025)

Added: March 31, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Yaksa - 我即是

Yaksa - 我即是 (2019)

Added: March 31, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Yaksa - You Are Not the Loser

Yaksa - You Are Not the Loser (2010)

Added: March 31, 2025
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0.0
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0.0
Mechina - Bellum Interruptum

Mechina - Bellum Interruptum (2025)

Added: March 31, 2025
Ratings: 1
Reviews: 0
Site Rating
4.0
Clan Rating
4.0
Dark Halo, A - Omnibus One

Dark Halo, A - Omnibus One (2023)

Added: March 31, 2025
Ratings: 0
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0.0
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0.0
Andromida - Hellscape

Andromida - Hellscape (2021)

Added: March 25, 2025
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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
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Clans

The Fallen
The Fallen

Members: 180

Releases: 7578

The Gateway
The Gateway

Members: 68

Releases: 2899

The Guardians
The Guardians

Members: 191

Releases: 9457

The Horde
The Horde

Members: 238

Releases: 12450

The Infinite
The Infinite

Members: 141

Releases: 6153

The North
The North

Members: 193

Releases: 13753

The Pit
The Pit

Members: 203

Releases: 5616

The Revolution
The Revolution

Members: 46

Releases: 4579

The Sphere
The Sphere

Members: 34

Releases: 1105

Big Ole Album Vol. 1

Ah yes, A Day To Remember. How could I ever forget? One of the 2010's most mainstream and pop friendly metalcore bands. They have returned with their first album since 2021's abysmal You're Welcome and showed just why ADTR (A Day To Remember) are so unnecessary  in 2025. Here we have a band doing the exact same thing that Architects tried with their last album as they sheepishly modulate back-and-forth between modern metalcore trends, while staying close to their comfort zone that made them so popular with Homesick. And I guess on a purely sonic level, Big Ole Album Vol. 1 can be a promising listen. Unfortunately, ADTR have forgotten the most important part of easycore, which is the pop adjacent choruses. They might still be here in practice, but in execution, they are severely lacking. Some of them are okay (i.e. "Flowers" and "Miracle"), but more often than not this album turns into monotonous mush. Whether it be the painfully generic breakdown structure, the weak electronic percussion, the poor low end in the mixing, or the atrocious volume modulation that persists throughout the entire album! There is no way that anyone who has worked with a rock band before (or ever recorded anything in their life) would think that consistently adjusting a tracks volume in the middle of recording/mixing was a good idea. But, like Architects, it butchered whatever good graces the last three albums may have had, and mostly does the same here. The bands intent to not be taken seriously is at least a more promising takeaway than Architects, or any other modern metalcore act, but it does become less fun when the songs are this formless. 

P.S. "Die For Me" is a poor excuse of a country rock crossover, probably due to the Hardy collaboration a couple of years ago. I would call it bad, but that would be too generous.

Best Song: Flowers, Silence

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Saxy S Saxy S / April 02, 2025 02:42 AM
Eschaton Magicks

2025 has seen me take the unusual step of tracking new releases for at least two of my clans. The Fallen and The North between them are keeping me highly entertained as it happens, and it seems that my usual reluctance to seek out new music had little grounds for the burnout I feared would occur. The real bonus though is the discoveries I am making. In the past three weeks or so, I have picked up on some real gems, with Norway’s Nachash being one such discovery. It is not unusual to find a black metal band from Norway that I like of course, however this trio blend a crude mix of thrash, speed and black metal that reminds me of both modern and classic reference points. There is just as much Bathory in here as there is Mortuary Drape for example. There is a warmth to the sound that reminds me of Varathron at times though. Equally, I could see these boys slugging it out with Nekromantheon or Condor in terms of the more recent examples of the sound explored here.

Eschaton Magicks manages to pummel the old ears consistently well for over forty-minutes. Showing a punk bounciness to some of the percussion at times, this is an album for any thrash/speed metal fan who likes a darker take on things. It unapologetically sticks to a quickly established blueprint, using guitar melodies to maraud the listener. Despite those Varathron vibes and the melodies described above, Eschaton Magicks still possesses a coldness all of its own. Whilst there most certainly is not any icy atmospheric black metal here, the coldness comes from the oppositional stance that the band postures with here. It feels like a punk album as well as occasionally sounding like one.

I enjoy the immediacy of this record, as well as its honesty to be able to stick to what it does best. Everything is clear in the mix without loss of the murk that you would expect from such a record in this sub-genre. You can hear the bass just as well as the drums, guitar and vocals. Each component part contributes to the urgent tempos and the overall threat of the record. Do not be fooled into thinking that this is a collection of three-and-a-half-minute blackened speed metal tracks though. We have some tracks here that go over the six and eight-minute mark. The band know how to write solid songs and can maintain their energy for as long as required. Listen to the high-speed rumble of the bass on ‘Death’s Mordant Blaze’ as it dances over the top of the drums and guitar, showing there is some real rattle and hum behind the sound (not a U2 reference though). Nachash have produced a real treat here on their second album. No sophomore slump here folks.


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Vinny Vinny / April 01, 2025 07:57 PM
Solemn

The most recent album from Nordic progressive death metallers In Vain is quite the variety of sounds isn't it? While the album certainly retains its progressive tag throughout the hour runtime, the directions it takes to get there is quite varied. I really enjoyed the inclusion of a full brass section during the the albums highlight moments, such as "Eternal Waves" and "Shadows Flap their Black Wings". For an album that uses such a booming foundation, In Vain are not scared to embellish Solemn with bright/sharp tones; it gives the album a sense of direction that is not as dominant on other similar sounding death metal albums. The vocal styles change on a whim from Steven Wilson-esque hushed vocals, towering Einar Solberg cleans (complete with harmonic counterpoint), then alternating the rest of the time between low death gutturals and the occasional death metal screech. This all sounds like a lot to digest when you see it written down on a screen, but I promise that it is not as difficult of an album than I am describing it. In Vain have a skill of developing their foundation instead of becoming a new band on every track. It is also helped by the record not being quite extreme. At its core, Solemn is a death doom album with the occasional blast beat and tremolo guitar riff. This is what you might get if Wilderun and early Katatonia had a baby. The technique is solid too; granted the production might have a couple of minor hiccups here and there, Solemn remains incredibly consistent with its sound engineering. If anything, I think that the guitar harmonies might be a little too subdued throughout. I'm surprised it took me as long as it did to come around on this record, but I'm sure glad I did.

Best Songs: Shadows Flap their Black Wings, Season of Unrest, At the Going Down of the Sun, Beyond the Pale, Eternal Waves

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Saxy S Saxy S / April 01, 2025 03:11 PM
Time Requiem

‘Time Requiem’ is the 2002 self-titled debut album by Swedish progressive power metal band, Time Requiem. Formed by keyboard player Richard Andersson, the band plays a style very typical of progressive metal, with a strong neoclassical influence, and an emphasis on powerful vocals and fantasy-themed lyrics.

The most prominent aspect of Time Requiem’s music is shredding, and it comes in boatloads! Andersson and guitarist Magnus Nordh are absolute beasts on their instruments, furiously ripping up the chromatic scale at every opportunity. It makes for some lavishly flavoured riffs and colourful solos, but sadly it does get a little repetitive after a while.


Most of the songs are very strong and well-written, but also rely on similar tropes. At times, they sound very reminiscent of other bands, such as Symphony X, Dream Theater and Stratovarius. But if you can accept a group wearing its influences on its sleeves, then you might just enjoy tracks such as ‘Watching the Tower of Skies’, ‘Time Requiem’, ‘Milagros Charm’, ‘Visions of New Dawn’, ‘The Aphorism’ and the absolutely psychotic instrumental, ‘Brutal Mentor’.


‘Time Requiem’ can be challenging to sit through in one go, especially if you’re not keen on the sheer technicality of the music, but perseverance and repeated listens can be rewarding. Over time, the album grew on me, and while the band offers nothing new or unique, this is a very solid debut, and I’m excited to hear where things will go with future releases.


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MartinDavey87 MartinDavey87 / April 01, 2025 02:32 PM
Witchburner

Sweden's Mercy are best known for being fronted by a pre-Candlemass Messiah Marcolin, especially as they struggled after he left, eventually splitting up in 1988. This, however, is a bit unfair on the rest of the guys because Witchburner is actually a very cool early doom metal record. It still retained a significant amount of heavy metal DNA, much like most mid-80's doom acts, except maybe Saint Vitus. It kicks off very strongly with the head-turningly-titled "I'm Your Pervert Priest" which possesses a crawling and portentously doomy riff which is topped off by Messiah's instantly recognisable vocals and marks the first time that a genuinely gifted and expressive vocalist was featured on a doom metal track, providing ample proof why Leif Edling wanted Messiah to join Candlemass after Johan Langquist refused to commit beyond the recording of "Epicus Doomicus Metallicus". What may surprise Candlemass fans is that Messiah was only seventeen at the time of recording and also played drums on "Witchburner"putting in a decent shift behind the kit, being basic, but effective. Lyrically, the track is obviously mocking of established religion, a theme that became well-established within metal circles, here given a sardonic and humorous slant rather than the out-and-out vitriolic attacks that became de rigeur within metal lyricist circles.

At this time Mercy had been reduced to a trio with three of the five that recorded the S/T debut having departed before the recording of "Witchburner" and remaining members Messiah and guitarist Andrija Veljaca being joined by second guitarist Jörgen Horst who also handled bass duties on the new record. The guitar sound on Witchburner is based on the "Tony Iommi" sound, but has a bit more of the grittiness of Saint Vitus' filthier intonation than heard on albums like Trouble's S/T or any of Sabbath's material. Where it does have more in common with these is in the songwriting, the slow, doomy material still being countered by a fair bit of traditional metal riffing, although that filthier, distortion-heavy guitar sound makes the faster riffs sound great. This was actually Mercy's sophomore full-length and I find it inconceivable that they hadn't received any exposure to the more doomy acts emerging, particularly from the US, between the recording of their 1984 debut and this because the two are worlds apart. The S/T takes its cues from the NWOBHM with the band coming off like a swedish version of Saxon for the most part, but "Witchburner" was much darker-sounding and had shed all the hard rock influences of the earlier record, becoming a much heavier album as a result.

The riffs are pretty memorable and Messiah's enunciation is excellent as usual, making "Witchburner" one of those albums that sticks around in the old grey matter and that people may find you singing along with later. The two guitarists are also impressive with some terrific soloing, the incendiary and blistering fretwork of the solo at the midpoint of Pain of Golgata, is just one example of a solo that would be salivated over had it come from KK Downing or his like and here provides a searing contrast to the plodding dirge of the main riff.

Whilst the three tracks of side one are undoubtedly the doomier and for me personally the better, the second side also has it's moments and is interesting for different reasons. The opener on side two, "Welcome to My Graveyard" is virtually speed metal and with that filthy guitar sound it actually sounds really good, so if you have always wondered what Messiah would sound like singing in a speed metal crew then here is your chance to find out. After that, "Judgement Day" has a bouncy "Children of the Grave" riff and may be the "catchiest" track on the album - all together now, "No one gets away... on Judgement Day". The penultimate track "Voodoo Kills" is for my money the weakest here being a little all over the place and not terribly well put together, but it is still listenable enough all the same. Closing out with the eight-minute title track, the ponderous ominousness of side one makes a welcome return and we are thrust into the doom-laden world of seventeenth century religious zealotry and witch huntings which was destined to become pretty standard doom metal lyrical fare.

All-in-all I think this is actually a very good example of early traditional doom metal which deserves far more attention than it has received. I would take this over Trouble's "Psalm 9", for example, which may or may not be a hot take, but is my heartfelt opinion as I think this sits much nearer to the Saint Vitus debut than to Trouble's and I would hold SV's self-titled up as the flagbearer for early trad doom. Sure this does step into trad metal and even speed metal territory occasionally, but the doominess of the three tracks on side one and the closing title track are ample proof that these Swedes were committed to playing and exploring doom metal further. It is a shame that we never really heard much more from Mercy, but as I said they struggled after Messiah left and their later output doesn't live up to this earlier promise with 1989's King Doom being a major disappointment. So, as it stands, "Witchburner" is an interesting development in the european take on doom metal and allows us to glimpse the early career of one of doom metal's iconic vocalists, making it a worthwhile listen which should be of interest to any serious student of doom metal and its history.

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Sonny Sonny / March 29, 2025 02:04 PM

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