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As many of us know, the current decade of the 2020s is the ongoing pinnacle of symphonic deathcore with bands like Worm Shepherd and Lorna Shore enhancing it with their grand heavy gems. Meanwhile, two lesser-known bands Synestia and Disembodied Tyrant were putting their own spin to the genre with their collaboration EP The Poetic Edda, 4 tracks of excellent technical symphonic neoclassical deathcore!
Both two-man bands who had each previously made a couple EPs/albums have united for a blend like barely any other. Symphonics, neoclassical leads, and brutality all form a clever cauldron of epic deathcore in a more whimsical while still destructive way than any other band has done.
The beginning track "Death Empress" is total symphonic madness as neoclassical leads and launched forward alongside the deathcore technicality. Then it ends with one of the best, most pulverzing breakdowns I've heard in a long time. Also, while they utilize synthesized strings and choir, rather than a full orchestra, the symphonics sound much closer to film-score orchestra than in any other band of the genre possible. "I, The Devourer" continues taking on the brutal verses and symphonic sections. I love when the hardcore riffing clashes with the metal soloing for a fantastic result. The amount of technical riffs and leads add in some fun modern chaos not too far from Rings of Saturn.
The title track keeps up the sound we've been hearing so far, although this time, it has a couple slight flaws to prevent the album from reaching a perfect 5 stars. Don't get me wrong, everything is solid and deathly especially in the breakdowns. The small issues lie in how tiring they get, particularly in the guitars and strings that are still enjoyable. But it's made for by the guest vocals from Shadow of Intent's Ben Duerr. And eliminating all doubt even further is the grand finale, "Winter", a deathcore reconstruction of the Vivaldi classic, complete with the band's own lyrics. There's no way anyone can review this EP without mentioning this majestic glory. An overused classical composition is given a more brutal treatment filled with blasts and breakdowns. I hope people in the future will know this reimagining as much as the present world knows the original.
So the question is, would this EP be worth adding to The Guardians, given that it has a significant amount of upvotes for neoclassical metal in RYM? I'm gonna go with no. It sounds too brutal for the clan with the death growls, crushing riffing, and breakdowns, despite the symphonics and neoclassical leads are just yearning to allow it in the clan. Dragoncorpse, this is not. Anyway, let's hope for another collaboration EP like The Poetic Edda. Despite one track being a little iffy, this offering is too impressive to lose!
Favorites: "Death Empress", "Winter"
Despite my well-publicised obsession with chilean thrash metal and the fact that Mental Devastation have been around for well over a decade and a half, I haven't crossed swords with these guys before and so went into it with great anticipation. Now strictly technical thrash metal doesn't always appeal to me so much, as I like my thrash to have an inherent aggression and fire, that I think is often lost amongst excessive technicality. As is usually the case with chilean thrash, though, this certainly delivers on the passion and aggression front, whilst also displaying an impressive level of technical ability. The usual chilean hallmarks are all present, breakneck pacing, vicious vocals and pronounced basslines, all well-represented by a nice, clean production job.
Following a brief anticipatory intro the opener proper, "Symbiosis", tears out of the blocks with a riff that proceeds to tear any unprepared listener a new one. With exuberant, energetic guitar soloing and bassist Alejandro Lagos' aggressive vocal delivery this is proper celebratory and whiplash-inducing stuff. They are perfectly capable of dialling it back a little though with "Judge and Jury" initially hitting a more mid-paced tempo. It is at these lower speeds, however, that Lagos' limitations as a vocalist are exposed as he maintains the ragged delivery he uses on the blisteringly fast tracks, which doesn't really suit the mid-paced stuff at all well and feels a bit like a sonic splinter in the thumb of the album. They also attempt something a bit more progressive on "Pulsions" but the gentle opening section exposes the vocal shortcomings even more.
I don't think that the technical aspect of "The Delusional Mystery of the Self Part II" is especially pronounced, certainly as far as the songwriting goes as the riffs still rule the roost here. For my money, dual guitarists Matías Morales and Felipe Espinoza are the guys who provide the secret sauce. Their riffs are pretty good, but their soloing is the real draw for me, delivering a great line in short, sharp shocks without sapping the momentum from the tracks by becoming too self-indulgent, even during the track "Primitive Paths" where they really go to town. All-in-all this is a very enjoyable slab of chilean thrash with enough energy and aggression to keep pace with my favourites from that neck of the woods, but which is robbed of my highest marks by the vocal limitations which I occasionally found too jarring to excuse and the superfluous instrumental "Dõ" which, for me, had no place being here at all.
I read somewhere recently that Jacob Bannon did not necessarily think that the world needed a new Converge record, but that the band themselves did. There was a time, not too long ago when I would have probably deemed that I never needed a Converge record at all, but that has been well documented on Metal Academy already. The tides have turned and I find myself on much less turbulent terms with some of the content of The Revolution clan, to the point where I can enjoy the harder sounding metalcore releases. As it turns out then, Love Is Not Enough is right up my street.
It sounds like a lot more of a riffy affair than I remember from previous outings with the band’s releases. The start of 'Bad Faith' shows this particular trait well I find. Likewise, the grinding sensibilities of 'Distract and Divide' is an absolute treasure. These short bursts of fury that cover the first four tracks of the album create a real sense of momentum early in the listening experience. As a result, the instrumental 'Beyond Repair' almost sucks some life from proceedings, However, I find it is a very clever little track. Its broken percussion befits the track title superbly when you take time to listen under a more critical mindset.
That raging aggression is soon back alongside those big riffs for the remainder of Love Is Not Enough. It is an accomplishment to cram such a rewarding listening experience into a little over half an hour. I find it has appeal for its scathing honesty and the bluntness of its messaging also. Love Is Not Enough as an album title tells you all you need to know really. This is a record with a lot of bitterness that is borne out of suffering, told by souls who no longer wish to stay silent on the matter. Probably the best metalcore album I have ever experienced.
As I listen to Gravity, I sense that there is a history of music represented here that I am not all that close too. The heavy-psych elements to Saturnalia Temple’s sound suggest to me at least one foot in the heady days of the 70’s and beyond, but at the same time I get a lot of modern Darkthrone in the sound as well. Add to this, aesthetic the creeping darkness of black metal that seeps into the occasional track and before I knew it, I was completely in love with this month’s feature release for The Fallen clan. In my weed smoking days (long, long since done with), I would have enjoyed Gravity on a whole different level, I am sure. It feels like a record that can, with the right tools deployed, unlock outer dimensions of the listener’s inner consciousness, if you know what I mean.
This transcendental potential is by no means wasted when listened to in an entirely clean and sober headspace mind. Using simple repetition and atmospheres, alongside a near-constant menacing rumble of bottom-end loaded bass, Saturnalia Temple make for an otherworldly experience without the need for chemical assistance. The whole album sounds a bit clunky to me, but this is part of its natural charm and is what helps keep it in the higher echelons of the appeal stakes. I can listen to the damaged soundtrack to a thousand sci-fi horror movies that is Elyzian Fields all day long, and the droning indulgence of Between the Worlds right after it help make the mid-point of the record particularly strong for me.
Although Gravity has many recognisable traits to it, I cannot help but feel that the album feels like an introduction to something new. Even though many if not all its roots are found in the past, somehow there is still an element of there being an aberration present in many regards. As the tracks pass by, they carve sigil like etchings into my brain, meaning the memorability factor is high. High enough in fact for me to be able to enjoy the record as both background music as well as a more critical listening session. Great find.
When I check out the RYM charts, it's generally pretty clear that older releases receive much higher ratings than modern ones. The reasons why that occurs is a discussion for another time, but it might help explain why I get pretty excited when I see a recently released album moving right up the charts. Vothana's Action Now, Assured Future was sitting at number 50 on the all time black metal release chart when I stumbled across it, holding a position just below Wolves in the Throne Room's Two Hunters and just above Darkspace's Dark Space III. Anything sitting amongst that sort of company must be pretty special....right?
Having listened to this release a bunch of times over the past couple of weeks, I can only express my utter bewilderment. I'll give the album credit for sounding unlike anything I've heard before, but I think there's a good reason for that. If a controversy-seeking history teacher convinced the high school band to perform an 80 minute National Socialist black metal opus in Vietnamese, I can only imagine that it might sound something like this. The vocals are loud yet repetitively indistinct, the drums switch between typical black metal battery and a completely un-black metal marching band oompa skip, and while a decent black metal riff occasionally pops up, the vast majority appear to replicate the sort of rousing, pompous propaganda music you might hear at a old school pro-war march. If that somehow sounds interesting to you, then go for you life, but I have much better ways to spend 80 minutes of my time.
If you thought Colors II was the most anticipated BTBAM album, that would then be surpassed by this one, The Blue Nowhere! The album came out last September after a long 4-year interval. It is partly due to their separation from longtime rhythm guitarist Dustie Waring. After finding out about some sexual abuse allegations towards him in 2023, the band began touring without him. The allegations were proven false, and Waring suspected that it was all part of an extortion plot against him, as well as his firing being for unworthy reasons. With that, he threatened to sue the band. Long story short, the matter dropped and the band continued with a touring replacement in Tristan Auman. Waring was pretty much almost as salty as Mastodon guitarist Brent Hinds was after his departure from that band (before Hinds' tragic death, RIP). For this album, The Blue Nowhere, founding lead guitarist Paul Waggoner performed all the guitarwork by himself. It takes a real music examiner to tell the difference between Waggoner's rhythm guitar playing and that of Waring. Either way, although there can be some slight predictability that made me burned out of BTBAM in the first place years ago, we have another terrific display of the band's deathly progressive metal/rock that they've mastered since Colors.
Keeping up their conceptual tendencies that they had since Colors, the album is set in the eponymously titled hotel The Blue Nowhere. It dives into existential quandaries in a more abstract form of storytelling, as abstract as that Star Wars Visions short "BLACK". Those lyrics are, as usual, sung and growled by vocalist/keyboardist Tommy Rogers, and they take on thoughts that range from fleeting to chaotic. They're not about the story, but rather about the feeling. As you listen, you can imagine yourself in your own world away from reality, one that only you and no one else would know.
"Things We Tell Ourselves in the Dark" opens the album as both the first track and single. It's one of the most enjoyable tracks in years. It kickstarts the album right away without an intro, and doesn't follow the heaviness of the two Colors albums, but instead the wackiness of the albums in between. The song has a modern take on 80s prog, blending those bouncy hooks with doses of technical chaos. And the vocal interplay really heats it up. Then the band goes more industrial in "God Terror". The riffs, vocals, and percussion leans into something Pitchshifter would do. "Absent Thereafter" is the first of three 11-minute epics, and boy does it hit hard! It sounds so heavy while adding in some funk and other genres. It's basically almost this album's equivalent to "Ants of the Sky" and "Disease, Injury, Madness"!
"Pause" is an aptly titled pause from the action with just synthy ambience and soft yet mysterious singing from Rogers. "Door #3" has darker groove and more mental-sounding vocals by Tommy. All this makes the sound like a demented carnival. Also while I enjoy his occasional falsetto, it can be a little annoying when appearing out of nowhere. I guess that's one reason why I can't add that half-star needed for the album's perfect score. "Mirador Uncoil" is one more short interlude. I don't have much to say about that one. The second 11-minute epic "Psychomanteum" has fun energy. When Tommy Rogers bellows the song title "PSYCHOMANTEUM" at the two-minute mark, that really hit me hard, along with the h*lla heavy riffing less than a minute later. A minute after that, the extremeness is lowered down for some soft beauty. That goes on for a couple minutes, rising up to a brief wacky moment of drums, piano, and vocals. Some of that heavy riffing hits less than a minute later, heavier than the earlier riffing. Nearly a couple minutes after that, the soft beauty comes back in the form of Opeth-like ambience and guitar fiddling by Paul Waggoner, followed by more of that beautiful mood.
"Slow Paranoia" is the last 11-minute epic. As much as I enjoy this one though, I start to realize how self-copied it is. It's still wonderful, yet some sections sound like they've been done to death. That track can appear in any of the band's past albums, and no one would bat an eye or ear. With that, while this album won't reach a perfect 5-star rating from me, the 4.5-star rating is still intact. This is especially the case for these final two tracks that should've just been indexed as a two-part 14-minute suite, probably greater than the epics from the previous few albums (Coma Ecliptic, Automata, Colors II), starting with the title track. It's one of the catchiest and most radio-friendly songs by the band, like a classic-sounding ballad that I actually love. Other progressive metal artists that would do that are Devin Townsend and Haken. "Beautifully Human" ends it all by reflecting on everything the band has had here, all in the guitars, keys, vocals (both clean and harsh). Thus concludes another journey on a high note!
The Blue Nowhere can very well attract newcomers to the world of BTBAM. It can also impress longtime fans, though a little more originality would've been ideal to make this album 100% percent and get me back onboard that train. Excellent but too familiar, like having fast-food two or 3 times per week (eat healthy, kids and adults!). Nonetheless, BTBAM have made their excellent comeback, even after cutting ties with one of their longtime members. I don't know what will come next for them, but I can't wait!
Favorites: "Things We Tell Ourselves in the Dark", "Absent Thereafter", "Psychomanteum", "The Blue Nowhere", "Beautifully Human"
Who would've thought epic blackened deathcore would make a global impact as it has in the past few years? In the early 2010s, there was only a small handful of bands of that style, specifically The Breathing Process, Winds of Plague, Make Them Suffer, and Betraying the Martyrs. Later on in that decade, Lorna Shore and Shadow of Intent mastered this blend of deathcore with symphonic black metal elements, with the former band giving the genre a viral boost. Yeah, I owe it all to Lorna Shore for opening my ears to a more epic take on an otherwise brutal genre. And I can almost say the same about this band who has just released a new EP...
Worm Shepherd are back with a new lineup and an EP to start this new era. The only founding member left is guitarist Tre Purdue, and sticking with him since their previous album Hunger is fellow guitarist Harry Tadayon. The 3 new members are vocalist Ian Smith (The Archaic Epidemic), bassist Tom O’Malley (Ingested), and returning drummer Leo McClain (Psycho-Frame). This EP, Dawn of the Iconoclast is the dawn of something new!
"The Omen" starts the album ominously with clean guitar strumming and rising orchestration before the band attacks with their usual deathcore. And what's a deathcore highlight without some ravaging breakdowns? The one in the end is the most BRUTAL. "Soulless Lament" is the most Lorna Shore-sounding track here. The melodramatic choruses are in great contrast with the crushing breakdowns and give any deathcore song a big kick. "Feast" is more mid-paced and atmospheric, but later on, the blackened side of them would snap you in half and tape you back together, even without a single breakdown.
The shorter "Sanctified Rot" is another standout with technical shredding by Tre Perdue. It all comes down to "Whispers of a Buried Land", the grand 7-minute closing epic. From the orchestral/choral grandeur to towering riffing and breakdown, it's a dark glorious experience that should be worth it for any fan of deathcore and/or epic deathcore. It doesn't surpass the previous album's ending epic, but it's very close.
It seems Worm Shepherd have a new journey ahead of them, and all it took was a display of their usual sound performed by new members. Dawn of the Iconoclast has made sure that their epic extreme greatness isn't going anywhere, and there shall be more of that on the horizon!
Favorites: "The Omen", "Sanctified Rot", "Whispers of a Buried Land"
Canada continues to be a consistent source of quality black metal for my listening requirements. I keep going back, looking for more discoveries, believing on each visit that the well is surely close to running dry by now. However, upon each dip of my toes into the icy cold depths of the unfathomable lake of black metal that the country seems to have, I come away with a new discovery. This time around, Givre are the gift I have been given, and the present comes in the form of their 2024 album, Le Cloître. A forty-one-minute plus exploration of the atoning side of pain in Christian history, the tracks are the titles of six female saints, with the lyrical content being created from their hagiographies (which are all in French). Clearly a band who put a lot of research into their music, Givre are an instant source of intrigue for me. In taking such a niche subject matter for their album theme and embodying it in such an impassioned display of raging black metal, with elements of dissonant death metal as well as resonating post-metal, Le Cloître soon made the short journey from my Bandcamp wishlist and into my collection.
This is an album that somehow suggests an intimacy with the pain it explores. It is after all a record that is telling stories and thus it should carry some stimulus from the lives of these women that resonates with anyone who has experienced suffering. It is not just an album of choral chants and atmospheric keys by any means (although they do both make an appearance of course), instead there is a robustness to the messaging of this album, and as a result it comes across as a very modern sounding take of its historical content. Givre do not just relay the stories and written content, they put real emotion behind the performance. Most obvious in this is the harrowing and at times demented vocals of all three members of the band who contribute across the album. The shriller cries are the same individual I suspect, whilst the more death metal orientated vocal signatures belong to another member altogether, I would guess. David Caron-Proulx seems to be undertaking the bulk of the heavy lifting on the record with him credited with songwriting, claviers (any stringed keyboard instrument – harpsicord, clavichord etc), guitars and vocals. The research duties seem to sit with drummer and vocalist Jean-Lou David whilst bass and vocals reside with Mathieu Garon.
This contained unit digs into the depths of black metal and beyond, to the point where you can almost hear all the effort they have gone to research, record and release this record. Le Cloître feels like a very complete experience, dare I say a journey by the time you reach the end of it? It sounds mature without being boring or too arty even. It exudes an authenticity in its subject matter exploration, one that only adds to my enjoyment. Perhaps only guilty of not having any real standout moments over the record it is hard to find any other real fault with this album.
I first encountered Romanian black metallers Negură Bunget through the tape trading scene back in the mid-1990's with their 1996 "Zîrnindu-să" debut release not doing very much for me to tell you the truth. I wouldn't encounter them again until Ben introduced me to their fourth full-length "OM" upon my return to metal from a decade-long hiatus in 2009 & I have to admit that I initially found it to be a challenge for a few reasons. Time saw me warming to it though & I now find myself returning to "OM" semi-regularly, if not claiming it to be the masterpiece that many punters would have you believe it is.
"OM" possesses a very clear personality that's all its own with its array of different sounds & influences being presented in a fairly coherent way throughout & the main attraction being the full, lush synthesizer sounds of front man Hupogrammos (Dordeduh/Sunset in the 12th House) & fellow guitarist Sol Faur (Dordeduh/Sunset in the 12th House). Hupogrammos' vocal performance is passionate & authentic too which fits the requirement nicely. Unfortunately, all is not roses though with the thin rhythm guitar tone & weak snare sound leaving a little to be desired & not doing a very good job at masking the instrumentalist's obvious technical limitations. The six-string performances of both men are fairly sloppy at times while drummer Negru's blast beats are an absolute rabble that should never have been attempted on the evidence presented here. Thankfully though, the atmospherics on display throughout "OM" are generally quite stunning which allows the album to overcome those deficiencies reasonably comfortably. It certainly helps that the opening three tracks are nothing short of marvelous & it's a little disappointing that the quality dial never quite reaches those heights again for the remainder of this lengthy 67-minute release. Progressive folk metal number "Hora soarelui" is the only genuine disappointment included though with its bouncy folk melodies being a little too much for this battle-hardened extreme metalhead to cope with.
For all its failings, I find "OM" to be an endearing listen these days, as well as being the clear career high-point of Negură Bunget's inconsistent recording career overall.
For fans of Dordeduh, Marțolea & Darkestrah.
An initial listen to Swallowed's "Lunarterial" left me somewhat dumbfounded and confused I must admit. From Vinny's effusive description of the album in the feature thread's introduction this was apparently right up my street, yet I really wasn't feeling it. The disconnection was so pronounced that I really doubted my own ears and my interpretation of what I had heard. Determined to get to the bottom of this, I persisted and have now clocked up four or five listens over the last few days, both through intently concentrated listenings and as background whilst doing other tasks. Whilst my initial reticence has been alleviated somewhat, the truth is, I am still not completely sure how I feel about this, or even if I will ever be able to make a definitive judgement on my appreciation of it. I think this is one of those albums where there are moments that make me think "OK, right. Now here we go" when things click and fall into place and show glimpses of the album I envisioned getting at the beginning, but on the flipside there are also parts of seeming random chaos that literally make me want to turn it right down in order to lessen the discomfort I am feeling.
Anyway, this is an album that draws on a number of extreme metal influences, old-school death metal, death doom, disso-death, war metal and even drone metal, all combining to produce an, undoubtedly intentional, disconcerting feeling that all is not well or right with the world. To this end, at least with me, this was inordinately successful, although the effect was to alienate me from what I was hearing rather than drawing me into its aural maelstrom. The transitions from doomy oppressiveness to outright blackened violence overlayed with jagged shards of dissonance just overwhelm me I am afraid. At times the band sound a lot like Mayhem at their most experimental, a phase of the norwegian black metal legends that I have never been a big fan of. In an inversion of Vinny's view it seems, my favourite track is actually the 25-minute closer, "Libations" which appeals to the doom and drone fan in me and within the drone-y confines of which the band's tendencies towards dissonance makes more sense to me and if it had been released as a stand alone EP I may even have toyed with the idea of purchasing it.
I would claim to be a fan of extreme metal, but I guess an album that really pushes deeply into unconventionalism such as this, makes me question whether that is truly the case. Things still have to make sense to me and for many stretches "Lunarterial" really doesn't. "Libations" aside, which is actually really growing on me, I can't in all honesty say that I would return to this in the future.
I introduced Ben to these Chicago industrial metal legends through the more popular tracks from their classic 1992 fifth album "ΚΕΦΑΛΗΞΘ [Psalm 69]" shortly after it was released & those experiences saw him racing out & purchasing the CD post haste. We both went pretty nuts for that record for a long while afterwards & Ben would subsequently go about picking up a handful of other Ministry CDs in the coming months, including 1988's excellent "The Land of Rape & Honey" third album which is the centre of this discussion. It was the first Ministry record to see mastermind Al Jourgensen's signature sound starting to take shape with songs like the brilliant high-octane industrial metal anthem "The Missing" & the very solid industrial rock/metal hybrid "Deity" being closest to the mark. "The Land of Rape & Honey" is very much a story of two halves though with the B side being dominated by more of an electro-industrial sound like we'd heard on a chunk of Ministry's more-than-decent 1986 sophomore album "Twitch". For this reason, I'm gonna suggest that "The Land of Rape & Honey" feels a little like a transition record as it hasn't quite committed to its sound as yet but is still full of high-quality industrial music. Thankfully, I'm more than down for some well-produced electro-industrial material, as evidenced by how nuts I've gone for the powerful dancefloor number "You Know What You Are" this week which I'm pretty devastated I never considered dropping into my club sets while DJing during the 2000's. The quality does fade a little over the last couple of tracks though with electro closer "Abortive" in particular sounding like a bit of a mess.
I'm sure there's probably a bit of a nostalgia factor with how much enjoyment I've gotten out of this release this week but I'm gonna suggest that it's a slightly better record than 1996's highly regarded sixth full-length "Filth Pig" or the previously mentioned "Twitch", even if it doesn't reach the upper echelons of Ministry's potential like the incredible trio of "The Mind is a Terrible Thing to Taste", "In Case You Didn't Feel Like Showing Up (Live)" & "ΚΕΦΑΛΗΞΘ [Psalm 69]" did during their 1989-1992 heyday. Any Ministry fan worth their salt should definitely be well versed in "The Land of Rape & Honey" though because Al hasn't produced anything of this quality for well over three decades now.
For fans of Skinny Puppy, Front 242 & KMFDM.
Ben picked this debut album up on CD back at around the time of release & seemed to like it quite a bit from memory. I traditionally used to struggle with it though so I haven't returned to it since but I thought I'd give it another chance to impress me this week. Parnassus was a one-man solo project from a Swedish gentleman going by the name of Fredrik Söderlund who you may also know as one half of martial industrial act Puissance. "In doloriam gloria" sees him presenting us with a clear musical direction that's built around some fairly unintimidating & positive sounding keyboards that have been consciously brought right to the front of the mix with the lightning-fast, tremolo-picked guitars & continuous bombardment of high-velocity (not to mention quite repetitive) drum-machine blast-beats being left at the back & sounding pretty thin for the most part. The atmosphere is undeniably centred around fantasy with that Lord of the Rings style feel being pretty easy to buy into. Personally, I find most of this to be far too high on lightweight melodies for my taste so I only really find myself enjoying a couple of the eight tracks on offer, namely the half-decent "Void of All Desires" & the hypnotic instrumental interlude "Cum trist issimo dolore". The rest of the tracklisting is more or less none of my business but I'd be overstating things to call it low quality. It's just designed for a fairly niche audience that I'm not associated with so, on this occasion, I'm gonna have to leave Ben to galivant around his bedroom in his Parnassus undies all on his lonesome (not that I'd ever consider joining him in that undertaking anyway because... let's face it... I don't have a plastic Viking sword & helmet worthy of the exercise). After my initial experiences with this debut, I steered well clear of Söderlund's 1997 sophomore album "Let the Stars Fall & the Kingdom Come" so I have no idea how it compares with "In doloriam gloria".
For fans of Dies Irae, Eldrig & Tartaros.
Sorhin's album Apokalypsens ängel is a record that fares a lot better in comparison to other traditional black metal albums of the 1990s. It still suffers heavily from the production issues the plague most of the black metal scene even today, but Sorhin at least do something interesting with the sound. The heavier thrash grooves that appear throughout the record make for a unique sound and a cool change of pace from the straightforward black metal riffing. The songwriting can be hit-or-miss but more often than not the songs do have some solid through lines making them memorable. The downside is that this is a black metal album and the production of those instrumentals is quite lackluster. Above all of the typical concerns, the stereo mixing is super weird. Like you'll hear on tracks like "Ett sista monument ståtligt" a stereo split in the guitars and they sound so fuzzy and uncomfortable. Perhaps that's part of the point, but the feedback is brutal and it never sounded this bad when the guitars are closer to the center of the mix.
This record did mark for a nice change of pace for me and brought to light a lesser known name in the old school black metal sound. But even by my very low standards of that era of music, I cannot rate this any higher while bands like Dissection, Emperor, and Summoning are making albums of greater quality.
Best Songs: Där allt svunnet är, där ingenting är allt, Ett sista monument ståtligt, Misantropi & död, När döden sträcker ut sina vingar
Another Boris album, another slab of noise-drenched, riotous stoner metal. The Japanese crew just sound like they were having so much fun when they recorded this album. Some of the tracks here are just so insanely energetic and anarchic they sound like they have produced the perfect soundtrack to a riot. There are songs that poke their heads above the general mayhem, such as the industrial dance-beat affected Ghostly Imagination, the ominous, sax-laden Blah Blah Blah or the closing piano-led (Not) Last Song, but mostly this is an album to break stuff to! I know we are all supposed to stroke our chins and think deeply then write reams of crap because it's Boris, but fuck that, just slam it on, bounce around the room and have some fun.
Mike Scheidt seems like a nice bloke. Numerous interviews and documentaries that I have seen of late with him present have led me to this conclusion. Having come to understand his roots, influences and musical tastes has helped him to become more than just “that guy out of Yob who nearly died” as I sometime fear the music media typecast him as being. Whilst I have no doubt Mike is every part the survivor he gets portrayed as being, there is an intensity to his live performances that burns brighter than anyone else’s that I have seen over the many years that I have witnessed extreme music. Survival instinct aside, Scheidt’s a warrior when he has a guitar in his hands and a mic in front of his chin. Enduring a tough upbringing at the hands of peers that saw him plunge into the world of punk, metal as well as new wave (which remains a strong favourite of his musical tastes still) I imagine relates him to a lot of folks who didn’t fit with the “in” crowd in their younger years.
As a result of these insights, I feel I have more awareness of the depths present in Yob’s music. Something that may well have been previously lost on me. Understanding how Mike learned to stretch his legs (and hands/fingers of course) to move away from bar chords and pick out notes, becoming unafraid to change things up, has helped me to notice some of the nuances, touches and inflections present in the music of Yob. As a band who have always struck me as a trio who produce music with an enormous amount of structure, Yob have a reputation with me for building enormous soundscapes. Clearing the Path to Ascend was the most vast listening experience I had heard to date with the bands discography. With just four songs taking up over an hour of music, there was clearly little room for error here.
One could argue that with such a short array of lengthy tracks on offer, Yob could just throw the kitchen sink at each song and hope for the best. They don’t. As I mentioned earlier, if there’s one word I would associate with Yob, it’s “structure”. There is a level of patience required to be invested by the listener with this record, one that for me personally reaps some reward. The build ups take their time, but never to the detriment of the songs. My attention does not wane during these moments and let’s be honest, who comes to a doom record to be deterred by repetition? Scheidt’s nasal crooning and his guttural growls are probably the weakest part of Yob’s sound for me, yet I could not see any other style working half as well. They are delivered (like the rest of the music) from the heart. It is all about the riffs and heavy bass presence though for me, even if this does mean the drums are often lost in the fuzzy rumble of the mix of the album. It doesn’t feel like a deliberately obtuse production decision has been made here though, as I could argue more percussion just simply is not needed.
In a genre where most records can sound the same, Clearing the Path to Ascend uses cosmic atmospheres in places to provide “pauses for breath” I guess and to add variety. They are probably the most difficult aspect of the album to contend with for me. I would be happy for them to be ditched in favour of more pummelling for my ears. However, at over an hour long, I can see why the record needs these lulls in intensity. Yob manage to bounce the tracks back each time though, so as undesirable as it may be, I can forgive them at least. Listening to his album led me to the wider discography and I think that in comparison to some other albums, this one lacks any exemplar tracks. As strong an album as it undoubtedly is, there’s only really ‘Marrow” that deserves real note for the absolute poignancy of its delivery. No individual criticisms on a track-by-track basis then, but there are better Yob albums out there.
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.
For this small marathon of deathcore releases to listen to and review, I saved the most brutal one for last. I don't know anyone who has confused this band with Within Temptation because of that name, but it's good that no one has, because they're complete polar opposites. There's no female-vocal symphonic metal here, only brutal slam-infused deathcore. Actually a full-on combination of Within Destruction and Within Temptation's styles would be something in the age of symphonic deathcore. Anyway...
Back then, Within Destruction wasn't the anime-influenced nu metal/deathcore (animetal) band that they would eventually be. In Deathwish, they were really digging deep into the depths of Hell to unleash deadly brutality. And this was around the time Mental Cruelty was doing that as well before their symphonic blackened deathcore direction.
The intro track "External Interference" is just an audio sample where some guy mentions alien invasions that he supposedly found. Interesting setup but skippable. The title track crashes in with guest vocals by Duncan Bentley (Xavleg, Vuvlodynia). And no matter the brutality, the production sounds clearer than other underground extreme metal albums. "False Revelation" follows more typical leads and rhythms in the deathcore genre. Same with "Extinction", but they're all still great.
Occasional leads help balance out the monstrous grooves in "Torture Ritual". The more feral vocals in "Human Defect" are so beastly, in part due to the guest appearance by Infant Annihilator's Dickie Allen. "Downfall of Humanity" exemplifies their sound the best, including an apocalyptic breakdown midway throuh.
That breakdown is nothing compared to that of "Darkness Swallows Life". That and the drums there would f***ing peel you down layer by layer then stitch you back up. "Self Hatred" is more straight with catchy yet heavy riffs, leads, and atmosphere. The soloing is also quite interesting. "Death Awaits Us All" is the 5-minute epic with some great variation. As far as their later sound would go, that one's pretty close. The outro "HMR45" ends the album with a more robotic audio sample.
Deathwish is one of the most extreme deathcore albums I've heard to have clear production. Although I'm quite used to the more muddy albums out there, here things are so polished that it's like I'm in the studio witnessing them record. And it's quite well-written too! Though will it make me a new fan of the band? I'll go with possibly....
Favorites: "Deathwish", "Human Defect", "Downfall of Humanity", "Darkness Swallows Life", "Death Awaits Us All"
Continuing the trend of nu-infused deathcore is Left to Suffer, which is a new band to me as well. I've really only heard one song from this band, which also happens to be in this album, so we'll talk about that when we get there. The band was formed in Atlanta, Georgia in 2019 and have since released 3 albums, with some songs having guest vocalists from bands like Lorna Shore, Ov Sulfur, and Fit for an Autopsy. And today, we'll be checking out their second album Feral.
What an aptly titled name for an album! All you can expect is the headbanging primal aggression of their nu-ish metal/deathcore, which is apparently all the band wanted to make since they first formed. And it looks like they've achieved that goal in just 25 minutes of fire and fury.
We already reach thick depths in the title opener within the vocals and riffs. As the guitar rage bursts through, vocalist Taylor Barber unleashes his growls, with some clean singing in the more melodic sections. Add a couple kick-A breakdowns and we're in for a strong start. If you thought that was brutal, wait until you hear "Artificial Anatomy". Soon the heaviness speeds up and then you hear the fast growling rage of guest vocalist Kim Dracula. Taylor ends the track with a shrieking breakdown that practically makes that song their own "To the Hellfire"! Then it segues to their own "Of the Abyss", "Primitive Urge". I consider it that because of the melodic strings in the background, really adding a magic touch to the heavy aggression of guitar duo of Jacob Gordon and Peter Higgs. Not to mention the growls by Fit for an Autopsy's Joe Bad.
"Break the Fever" has more brutal drumming by Alex Vavra, and greater variety in Taylor's vocals from high to low. Those vocals reach their peak in the middle of the song along with the guitar effects. That part is so f***ed up but in a great way. And with the searing soloing, that marks another excellent highlight. Heading into "Recluse", you can imagine yourself getting ready for a battle motivated by Taylor's shouts and the audible bass of Christian Nowatzki. Full-on nu deathcore hits your face, only calming down for brief moments. I wouldn't be surprised if that song ended up in the DOOM Eternal soundtrack.
Then comes another strong standout in "Illusion of Sleep". It's short yet pulverizing in the breakdowns. Kinda like "Disappoint Me", another heavy banger. From the Architects-style BLEGHS to the typical deathcore breakdowns, there's so much impact in just those two minutes. "Consistent Suffering" is filled with feral death/metalcore. At over the one and a half minute mark is an unreal blend of sped up trap with the usual growled vocals. Those lyrics may seem sad, but the vocals make them sound mad.
Left to Suffer has their raging strength on display in Feral. Their destructive force is not one to be taken lightly. I wouldn't say this is the best deathcore album I've heard, but it's solid and attacks like a motherf***er....
Favorites: "Artificial Anatomy", "Break the Fever", "Illusion of Sleep", "Consistent Suffering"
I consider Love is Not Enough to be Converge's own Blind Guardian The God Machine. While Blind Guardian added more symphonics to their power metal, reaching that aspect's height in the special orchestral album Legacy of the Dark Lands, and then returning to their heavier roots in their new album, Converge added more atmosphere to their sound, reaching that aspect's height in the special post-sludge collab with Chelsea Wolfe, Bloodmoon. And now they're back to their heavier roots in Love is Not Enough!
These Massachusetts-based metalcore pioneers have a sealed lineup of Jacob Bannon (vocals), Kurt Ballou (guitars), Nate Newton (bass), and Ben Koller (drums). Aside from their poor debut Halo in a Haystack, the albums that followed are some of the greatest I've heard in non-melodic metalcore, and their new album continues that streak.
The title opener already launches you back into the thrashy metalcore/mathcore of their 2000s material, all in pure savagery. Then "Bad Faith" has more relatably helpless lyrics. The idea of someone being in an uncontrollable situation is something many of us have unfortunately experienced, including me. "Distract and Divide" is a minute-and-a-half blitz of rage against society. "To Feel Something" continues that helpless scenario with the idea of being numbed by insecure fears.
"Beyond Repair" is a different composition, a two-and-a-half-minute dark ambient interlude. It's OK, but a little weak. This album would be perfect without it. "Amon Amok" (is that a pun of Amon Amarth?) is more exciting as the lyrics tackle life's demons. "Force Meets Presence" is more expansive, expanding without end until it does end.
"Gilded Cage" takes on the epidemic of the world's industries. It is one of three over 4-minute epics to end the album, the second of which is "Make Me Forget You". This one lets rip the band's wild side as memories fade into silence in the lyrics. "We Were Never the Same" maintains the band's metalcore roots while restoring some of the post-sludge from Bloodmoon. The best way to end this half-hour journey!
September will mark the 25th anniversary of Converge's biggest album and America's biggest tragedy. I say Love is Not Enough is, well, not enough to surpass their 2000s material and All We Love We Leave Behind, but it does beat The Dusk in Us. Witness the return of the band's early hardcore as they protest against the darkness of humanity!
Favorites: "Love is Not Enough", "Distract and Divide", "Amon Amok", "Make Me Forget You", "We Were Never the Same"
Those last couple reviews for albums by Enterprise Earth and Fit for an Autopsy were my attempts at checking out the progressive side of deathcore, ending with fantastic results. Now we're going into the more nu-ish deathcore bands. I actually heard of The Last Ten Seconds of Life before this review because one of my brother's friends likes that band, along with a few of their tracks being added to my Revolution playlists, but that band was too brutal for me at the time. Maybe I can enjoy the brutality more now...
The metalcore/deathcore scene expanded a lot throughout the new millennium. Some might find some bands listenable, while others don't. This Pennsylvanian band storms through with some of the most aggressive riffs, breakdowns, and vocals you can imagine. Any open-minded heavy modern metalheads can recognize their strong talent.
"As the World Turns Over" begins their brutal nu metal-ish direction. The vocals sounds so monstrous! "The Box" has more massive guitar assault as the near-undecipherable lyrics growled by then-vocalist Storm Strope bite religion in the a**. Leaning into post-hardcore a bit is "North of Corpus". Then "Meant to Be Free" is covered in sinister riffing and breakdowns that are more horror-filled than The Exorcist.
"Guillotine Queen" has more of those growling vocals blended with whispering. Speeding up a little is "Pain is Pleasure" with powerful atmosphere. "Ballad of the Butcher" has all the different extreme aspects deathcore has. "Sacrifice (The Prince)" is so d*mn perfect, absolutely impressive with the brutal music and irreligious lyrics. F*** yeah!
"Changing Forms" continues the harsh growling and crushing guitars. We actually get a blues rock-sounding solo in the lighter yet ominous "Heavy Headed". Next up, "Junkie - Sprite" is an interesting highlight. Although they're still deathcore, that one leans into some of the chaos of Car Bomb while staying in a mid-tempo pace close to the industrial groove of Fear Factory and Mnemic. Finally, the vocals have more effect in "The Dream is Dead" which returns to the earlier brutal heaviness.
In a world where melodic pop songs have influenced even metal bands, The Last Ten Seconds of Life avoid those influences like the plague. Soulless Hymns is filled with heavy rage not for the faint-hearted. Anyone up for some brutal fury should take on these hymns of destruction....
Favorites: "As the World Turns Over", "The Box", "Meant to Be Free", "Ballad of the Butcher", "Sacrifice (The Prince)", "Junkie - Sprite"
The newest record from Swedish death doom duo Enshine is a pretty decent, if a little slow. I was worried about this album at first as the first two tracks didn't do anything for me. "Heartbliss" in particular had that really out of place transition between two different songs halfway through, before becoming a guitar solo for the remaining two/three minutes. "Distant Glow" was a bit of an eye opener. For one, it's entirely instrumental and secondly, it's the best track on the record. I was going to highlight this review with some snarky remark of "if you're best track on the album is the instrumental interlude, we're gonna have a serious problem" but that's not actually what happened. You see normally with these death/doom albums they start strong and lose momentum in the second half. As the album becomes more moody in its second half, it becomes considerably better. The slower tempos of "The Purity of Emptiness" and "Reignite" and the ample space given out by the vocals cause these songs to feel more lived in and do not feel forced like how "Heartbliss" or "Where the Sunrise is Felt" do.
This is a decent enough of an album if you can overcome the slog it takes to get going.
Best Songs: Distant Glow, The Purity of Emptiness, Reignite
Fit for an Autopsy is one of those bands I had never really thought of listening to. Likely because at the time this album came out, I was still quite selective about deathcore. I wasn't up to trying the more brutal bands, or at least sounding brutal in the name, like Fit for an Autopsy. So far, all I heard about their 2022 album Oh What the Future Holds is that apparently they took a more atmospheric progressive direction. Well, seeing how much I love the new Enterprise Earth album, let's not waste any more time...
You have no idea how quickly my interest went up in Fit for an Autopsy's music. Sure, many people have started their FFAA journey with The Great Collapse of The Sea of Tragic Beasts, but Oh What the Future Holds pretty much kickstarted it for me in an instant. Any doubt I have for this band is long gone!
Sounding unpleasant yet beautiful, the opening title intro will have you at the edge of your seat. After some ambient piano, it explodes into an intense barrage of vocals and riffs. "Pandora" is where everything hits full charge. The chaotic rhythms and dramatic melodies fit well together, alongside lyrics like "Too many graves, not enough shovels". Then "Far From Heaven" is more groove-ish in the riffs and drums. The chorus is well-paced, and the song gets more destructive all the way up to a brutal breakdown.
"In Shadows" is absolutely hammering! Nothing but relentless darkness to destroy all in its path. "Two Towers" has more smooth melody before it snaps back into aggressive heaviness. "A Higher Level of Hate" has more frantic riffs, drums, and vocals, all of which make another powerful highlight.
"Collateral Damage" is even more monstrous. You can witness a huge firestorm of blast beats, vocals, and leads, swirling around and burning different lands beneath. "Savages" attacks with savage technicality to headbang to. "Conditional Healing" continues the explosive energy. "The Man That I Was Not" is an awesome 7-minute closing epic. It impresses me with the alternation between cleans and growls. Just like the 7-minute closing epic of that Enterprise Earth album, it is the "best for last"!
This kick-A masterpiece that is Oh What the Future Holds has nothing filler at all and has allowed me to hear the top-notch talent of Fit for an Autopsy. I'm pretty much THIS close to letting it surpass Lorna Shore's Pain Remains as the best deathcore album of 2022. Indeed the future of deathcore holds great promise!
Favorites: "Pandora", "In Shadows", "A Higher Level of Hate", "Collateral Damage", "The Man That I Was Not"
Is it just me or was my deathcore exploration very quiet during these past few months since the release of the new Lorna Shore album? I've already made Make Them Suffer's debut Neverbloom a feature release, but for anything new or not yet heard by me, the well was run dry... Until a few awesome discoveries have popped up that made this a promising year for my deathcore journey. This 2024 Enterprise Earth album is the first of those discoveries, and my first deathcore review of 2026!
Death: An Anthology has made me remember that deathcore doesn't have to be symphonic to make a masterpiece. Throughout its literal hour of power, the brutality of the genre hits you hard while spreading into technicality and even some of the deep downtuned stylings of djent and some bright melody here and there.
There's still some orchestral beauty in the intro "Abyss" that includes synthesized vocal harmonies and guitar melodies, almost like the missing link between Cynic's first two albums. Of course, the savagery you'll soon witness will be far beyond what Cynic can do. It all crashes in with the vicious "Face of Fear". This chaotic blend of deathcore and elements of technical mathcore pretty much separates this band from the league of deathcore bands that take on the symphonic blackened approach. Then out of nowhere comes an epic clean chorus. "The Reaper’s Servant" continues the chaos, this time blurring the lines between brutal deathcore and melodeath. Adding to the massacre is the guest vocals by Darius Tehrani of Spite. "Spineless" starts off beautiful but then unleashes seething anger in the music and lyrics, "You spineless sack of festering sh*t!"
The djenty "King of Ruination" is basically full-on Meshuggah gone deathcore. It also has guest vocals by Shadow of Intent vocalist Ben Duerr, and it's probably the first track I've heard with his vocals that doesn't have any orchestrations. I love it! Next track "Casket of Rust" is one of two epics surpassing the 7-minute mark in length, and it further shows the band's tech-deathcore side. "I, Divine" blends their deathcore with some melodeath from Soilwork and even Hinayana with its occasional doomy melody. Leveling up the moshpit is "Malevolent Force" which is an absolutely grand smasher with some guitar soloing by Wes Hauch (Alluvial).
"Accelerated Demise" is a progressive instrumental almost like what BTBAM would make. A fun instrumental! Then "Blood and Teeth" may be the closest we have to a deathcore ballad, though the ravaging destruction is still around at times. "Curse of Flesh" is a kick-A 7-minute epic, again making the "best for last" aspect in some albums from deathcore and other genres. I absolutely enjoy the guest appearance by Trivium's Matt Heafy.
For those who think this offering lacks focus and is too pompous, you may want to reconsider that thought. It's not everyday a deathcore band can blend together elements of many genres into their sound, and that should be praised. With Death an Anthology and other epic masterpieces in these past couple years, there is a future for deathcore!
Favorites: "Face of Fear", "King of Ruination", "Casket of Rust", "Malevolent Force", "Accelerated Demise", "Curse of Flesh"
Who had a Textures reunion and album on their 2026 bingo card?
I've enjoyed Textures in the past. Their brand of progressive djent metal was quite unique at the time where the rhythmic breakdowns were an integral part of the songs instead of being some kind of obtuse metalcore breakdown. Dualism is still annual listening material to this day and a go to recommendation when people ask me what to start with when listening to quality djent music (with it being so few-and-far between quality releases anymore). But Textures were a band who probably never got the respect they deserved when it came to songwriting and a decade long wait between Genotype and Phenotype left a lot of people what could possibly happen here? Judging by the album title, you might expect this to be some kind of sequel to the previous album, but one playthrough and you can tell that this is not Textures status quo.
It took me a while to figure out why I didn't like Genotype at first. My first instinct was that the songwriting had taken a tremendous downturn over the last ten years. Instrumentals that felt like they were full of character have been replaced with stock djent grooves and heavy vocal focus and layering. The vocals have become fry and exhaustive instead of the mellow and almost harmonic texture of previous releases. After a while, I started making comparisons to the band Northlane, specifically the 2022 record Obsidian. Northlane changed their sound considerably from a traditional metalcore with djent to something that was far more atmospheric with Obsidian. After that comparison was made, any attempts by Genotype to impress me were immediately squashed.
Northlane's Obsidian has influence from Textures if you know where to look. The songs were more pop oriented than Dualism, but they could get away with it thanks to heavier roots and strong vocal performances from Marcus Bridge. Textures tried mutating Obsidian back into a Textures album and the result is lacking; the fundamentals are very pedestrian, the vocals of Daniël de Jongh are uninspired; as mentioned before, lots of shrill high singing and harsh vocals don't fit Textures at all, and the melodies between the guitar and vocals are bland.
In a way, I see Genotype as the antithesis to Tool's Fear Inoculum (I sure hope that I don't have to reference that album too many more times this year!) Textures are a band that had a good thing going. Then they disbanded, and then they came back trying to be something that they are not. The end result is disappointing. This band, who have been out of action for nearly a decade, try to keep up with the modern day progressive/djent trends and ironically, lost the feel of what Textures was all about.
Best Songs: At the Edge of Winter, Vanishing Twin, A Seat for the Like-Minded
Simple, But that Doesn't Mean it's Easy
By all accounts, Applause of a Distant Crowd shouldn't work. This is an album that is too simple for progressive music. The synth leads on this album are deliberately loud and at the top of the hierarchy of sound, while the guitars play a far more harmonic and rhythmic role. The albums song lengths are rather brief, even by comparison to some tracks from Inmazes. And yet, none of Applause of a Distant Crowd sounds simple. Songs on this record have a strong tendency to grow and develop over time, whether that be a quiet modulation in time signature, the main chorus being slightly altered over time, the percussion adding a complex drum fill in place of what was a standard groove previously. And most importantly, all of it feels like it belongs within the same walls of this album.
This is a record that I hear many people discussing when bringing up Sleep Token in the modern day. And having gone back recently to hear this album again, I completely understand why. My biggest concern with Sleep Token today, which I mentioned in my review of Even in Arcadia, is how pop and progressive don't mix well together. Sleep Token want to write pop songs with a progressive foundation, but forget that most people who listen to pop music can't pay attention for longer than three minutes at a time! VOLA gets this in spades on Applause of a Distant Crowd. While the songs themselves are not as pop centric from an audible point-of-view, the shorter song lengths mixed with beautiful sung choruses make it stand out. The progressive elements are not forced directly in front of the audience like how they would on a Dream Theater album. And the light touches of intensity from the percussion and the reserved scream vocals add the heavy metal and progressive punches that this album desperately needs.
It's a bit of a shame that VOLA have not been able to retain this niche into later albums. Recent albums have done away with the pop centric attitude and have become more "djentrified", especially on Witness and overbearing synth leads on Friend of a Phantom. I hope that this doesn't turn out to be a flash-in-the-pan type album, but with each passing release, it's looking more and more like that'll be the case.
Best Songs: Ruby Pool, Applause of a Distant Crowd, We Are Thin Air, Alien Shivers, Still
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.
“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.
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.
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.
As if we ever doubted the experimental traits of Morbid Angel before the much maligned Illud Divinum Insanus, here we have their 1994 EP that features two tracks from the previous year's album, Covenant. Both tracks get two runs out, once in their original form and then again in a format "realised" under the "supervision" of Slovenian avant-garde band, Laibach. The fittingly titled, Laibach Remixes simply is an exercise in why somethings are better left as they were originally intended. The "remixes" tag suggests that a level of thought has gone into creating something fresh or at least enhanced. This doesn't happen.
Instead we get random vocal effects; the already OTT depths of Vincent's belicose barkings get a coat of weird to really underline just how far away from laughable he actually can be at times. I am in an especially grumpy mood with MA today as I sat through the entirety of Heretic, twice in the last twenty-four-hours and I am genuinely wanting to cut my ears off as a result. Foolishly believing it could not get any worse, I ventured into this release and I am currently sharpening that blade even more to ensure it does the required job at the first time of asking.
Electro-industrialising any death metal should be a war crime, punishable in keeping with such heinous acts as genocide. Hands down one of the worst releases I have ever heard in my life.
The Tool Effect
It has been over a decade since the last official Karnivool album. A lot has changed in the world since Asymmetry. And even in the world of Karnivool, the release of In Verses is a long time coming, seeing as "All It Takes" was released as a promotional single in 2021. Now as someone who likes Themata and Sound Awake I had heightened expectations of what to expect out of In Verses. That may have been the wrong approach.
Having such a long window of time between releases, regardless of the reason, creates greater hype among the audience about what to expect. For bands that have progressive elements like Tool and Karnivool, I can only imagine that those expectations are heightened further. So when In Verses comes out sounding like a "vibes" album, I do not know if the fans of this band will be as forgiving.
I know that as an onlooker I will give Karnivool the benefit of the doubt over Fear Inoculum. But something still doesn't sit right with me. Karnivool have always been pretty strong songwriters and that is on display here. The first three tracks, "Ghost", "Drone" and "Aozora" all sound great with good choruses, nice thematic development and upbeat grooves. Even "Animation" has a decent flow to it, despite being one of the albums lesser tracks. But then comes the one-two-punch of "Conversations" and "Reanimation". I think that "Reanimation" has a strong build that carries throughout the runtime, while "Conversations" is musical pleasing. But both tracks have immense downtime. It reminds me of Tool where the band will just sit on a simple ostinato for a while without growing or making it more than just its foundation. And as I sat back on this album more, I felt the same way about songs like "Ghost" and "Salva" and even "Opal".
Where I can give Karnivool credit is in their lyricism. Now a lot of In Verses thematic content revolves around disillusionment and escapism, which is commonplace in this kind of music and doesn't really stand out as a whole. But for individual tracks, the way in which Karnivool are able to manipulate lyrics from the beginning to the finish of each track is commendable. It helps tremendously with that growth that each song should have that is sometimes lacking in its instrumentals.
It was a long turnover for the band and I am glad that the ride is finally over. Now we all get to sit back and enjoy some Karnivool music. And it's honestly pretty good, if you can overlook some painful artistic directions. I would like to say that Karnivool are better equipped for "vibes metal" than a band like Tool are, but even with my guard lowered, I can't help but feel like Karnivool missed an opportunity here.
Best Songs: Drone, Aozora, Reanimation, Remote Self Control, Salva
Kylesa have possibly spent the longest duration on my “to do” list in since its very inception. With the years that I spent meaning to check out more of what constitutes The Fallen clan but never quite getting around to the task, the Georgia natives sat out numerous long years waiting to get anywhere near the front of a queue that simply was not moving. As I approach my fiftieth year on the planet, I am just getting around to a record that came out when I was thirty-four years old and Kylesa were already four records to the good in what was fast coming up for a decade of existence for them. Following the much-praised Static Tensions album from the previous year, Spiral Shadow had much to live up to for the fans of its predecessor. I have the luxury of their 2010 release being my gateway album, having heard nothing from Kylesa prior to this. As such, I get to review it based on its merits as a standalone record.
I was surprised at the inclusion of two drummers in the band, in fact, I would never have even thought this could possibly work in any band, regardless of style, pacing or tempos. This was the first instrument that stood out to me on Spiral Shadow, not because the dual percussion offers such an overwhelming experience though. It was more how clever the interplay between them both was, managing to create innovation, complementary exchanges and adding weight to the sound without creating a wall of bashing noise. The tight drumming of ‘Drop Out’ with that military style salvo is a joy to behold, especially when the rest of the instrumentation rejoins proceedings and keeps time with it. Also on Spiral Shadow, the male and female vocals combination provide distance on some occasions but also a unified strength in others. The male vocal style reminds me of Kowloon Walled City a lot, which can only be a good thing in my book.
My quandary with this record is mainly down to perhaps the best-known track on here, ‘Don’t Look Back’. Each time I approach it in the track listing, I get the urge to skip it. Then it starts and I think it is not so bad and allow it to play. I am not sure quite where my issue with it comes from in all honesty. I certainly pick up on the similar sounding structure on other tracks on the record though which makes me wonder if it is some fluke regurgitation of an idea that ended up paying maximum dividends. It is not a bad track, far from it in fact. However, I can’t shake the sense of laziness that seems to fit its build and structure, even if performance wise I cannot fault it. That having been said, there is still plenty else to enjoy on Spiral Shadow and so I cannot let this one track pull down the overall rating of the record.
Fun, unhinged and very, very satanic death metal. I like it, and it's clearly ahead of it's time, as this a very early example of the kind of fast-as-hell tremolo based death metal that would be done ad nauseum in the next years. Lyrics wise it is surprisingly creative for a record that is basically about the same thing all the time (it's all Satan! and I'm not complaining!) and the delivery is awesome, both in terms of rhythm and timbre. Drumming is also great, and the drum mix is fine. Talking about the mix, this is what kind of ruins it for me, the production here is pretty ass, specially the strings. Essentially no bass and the guitars are very thin and small for the level of brutality they were going for. Had this a production like Death's Leprosy or even Morbid Angel's Altars (which is not a favorite production wise), this would be pretty much perfect.
Listening through Death's discography, I finally come to an album that is very much regarded as one of the band's best but that I never gave too much attention. After many, many spins this has come to be my favorite Death album. The perfect point in the progression of their sound, the very transition between the brutality of Leprosy and the progressiveness of Sound, here everything is in perfect balance. Coupled with stunning musicianship, amazing compositions and a very solid production, Human takes Death far ahead of the competition with a record that shows how much art can really be in death metal. I feel like this is a specially somber album in the band's discography, with some of their most aggressive (Suicide Machine comes to mind) and sinister (Lack of Comprehension) songs, and also the first to go deep into philosophical and existential lyrical topics, something that would become a staple in Chuck's later work. Honestly, there is an argument to be made for every song here as a standout, because every single track has something interesting and new to offer. Every instrument is also played flawlessly. Here the band starts to use very creative and distinct drumming, with quick metallic cymbal grooves that would also become a trademark of the later Death sound, and also veers toward a more technical and out there string instrumentation, specially in bass fills and dare I say "jazzy" solos (like the second one on Flattening of Emotions).
Well, to summarize, this pretty much scores perfectly in every way and the only reason I don't give it all stars is that I reserve this rating for albums that really touch me in a different way. It can't get much better than Human.
Disarmonia Mundi are members of the quarter-century-club and at this point, it's safe to say that they will never learn how to produce an album properly.
This was a struggle to listen to. Not because The Dormant Stranger is a poorly written album, but because the production is complete ass. The loudness war has taken full effect here and has been a staple of Disarmonia Mundi's music for a while now. So tracks that may have had potential like "Outcast" and "8th Circle" lose all of their grandeur by having brick wall soundscape. Nothing is allowed to breathe as the guitars just power away the entire time. The vocals are compressed to hell and only really ascend above the instrumental when the harmonies and vocal layering takes over. This would all be an issue on any record released in 2025, but could be forgiven if the mood was right, say for example this was a hardcore punk or metalcore record. The Dormant Stranger is not only neither of those things, but this record goes on for almost an hour! By the time I hit "8th Circle" at nearly seven minutes long, I was nearing the end of my rope. This band needs to streamline their albums OR write shorter songs more consistently. As it stands, it's an album that starts off underwhelming only becomes progressively worse the longer it goes on.
Best Songs: Illusion of Control, Crossroads to Eternity, The Dormant Stranger
Invictus are a death metal three-piece who formed in 2015 in Nagano in Japan. They play in an old-school style that plays very much to my death metal preferences, so it is unfortunate that I haven't come across these guys until now. They don't appear to rush their releases, with this being only their second full-length, following 2020's debut, "The Catacombs of Fear", and it shows because this sounds like well-written and well-rehearsed material that the individual musicians are apparently exceedingly comfortable with.
Musically there is a reach back through time to the late Eighties and early Nineties scene with influences from the likes of Bolt Thrower, Asphyx, Autopsy and early Death all shining through. The riffing is fluent and hard-hitting with some vestigial thrash metal elements underpinning the album's potency and inexorably driving the tracks forward. Like all the best old-school protagonists Invictus are also unafraid to drop the tempo into a doomier territory from time to time. The production is very dense, feeling like it is smothering and squeezing the listener and which possibly helps to make the album sound even more brutal than it really is. I say this because although it does sound damn brutal, it is actually also quite melodic (for want of a better word) and has some killer hooks in its riffs. However the foetid production always seems to subvert those hooks and presents such an atmosphere of filth and violence that this melodicism goes to work on a much more subliminal level, so you suddenly find yourself tapping your toes and nodding your head almost unwittingly.
This is quite a short album, by modern standards, with eight tracks and a brief intro clocking in at a touch over 35 minutes. With the final track taking up 8 of those minutes, the others are mainly in the sub-4 minute region, yet seem to have far more going on in them than such brief run times would suggest, a testament to the three guys songwriting prowess. The riffs are obviously the big draw here and there aren't many guitar solos but when there are they are pretty manic - check out guitarist and vocalist Takehitopsy Seki's frenzied shredding towards the end of "Altar of Devoted Slaughter" for proof. The rhythm section of bassist Toshihiro Seki and drummer Haruki Tokutake are both impressive here and their work is the foundation of all the brutality and filthiness that bursts out of the speakers and these two guys are definitely more than just supporting players to Takehitopsy's six-string antics.
I enjoyed this one immensely as it plays to all that I have grown to love about old-school death metal, the stampeding riffs, the foetid atmospherics, the chunky bottom end dynamics and the grizzled growls of subterranean demon vocals. One of my favourite OSDM albums of recent times that I will definitely return to time and again.
My initial thoughts after hearing Zerfall was how much more progressive this sounds than the previous record. This kind of had that transition from pure atmospheric black metal to progressive that a band like Fen had from Winter to The Dead Light. Ellende unfortunately do not have the same highs as Fen does and this record, while still okay, is far from excellent. With this bands roots in DSBM, the first track, "Wahrheit" is very fast and groovy and the technicality in the percussion takes away a bit from that feeling of isolation. The record does get progressively more slow as it moves on, which is a similar trait that Todbringerin shared and later moments like "Zeitenwende" and "Reise" excel. But the major key of "Ode ans Licht" set a very unusual expectation for not just the track itself, but what followed later on in the album.
As a whole however, I think that Zerfall is a record that has some experience and has learnt from Todbringerin's mistakes. The changes in tempos and paces make Zerfall feel like a much more complete project instead of a monotonous drone the whole way through. Some progressive elements and a knack for dark storytelling help this record stand on its own. It's about the same length as Todbringerin and yet it feels much more concise. That being said, I do hope that Ellende plan on doing something else with this sound in the future. As it stands, while Zerfall is just a simpler version of Fen's The Dead Light, I would find it difficult to appreciate this sound if it didn't try to distance itself more from that influence.
Best Songs: Wahrheir Teil I, Übertritt, Zeitenwende Teil I, Zeitenwende Teil II
I have given Neverbloom around three spins over the past couple of days and it has grown on me, from my first impression at least. When they settle down into rhythm and riffage, there are some genuinely entertaining moments for me. Tracks such as ‘Widower’ and ‘Maelstrom’ standout as being high points in this regard and I suspect there could be more of these moments if the arrangement was just a little better thought through. I think the piano is perhaps the worst conceived part of the instrumentation, often it sounds like someone has started playing another track over the top of the current one and it does take a couple of seconds to reconcile that it is actually on the same track. The synths stab perfectly well to create a sense of theatre and drama where they get deployed, but for a “symphonic deathcore” record, I find it surprising how little focus the symphonic elements actually get.
Vocally there is nothing here to surprise me as it seems to be pretty standard deathcore fare in all honesty, but it is the riffs that are my only real positive takeaway from this record. They are by no means perfect, but they certainly do land a lot better than most of the rest of what is on offer. I get the sense that Make Them Suffer had some good ideas going into this one, and I am of course giving them some rope as this was their debut. However, the ideas never really shine as I suspect they could, appearing to be sacrificed by a confusing, if not outright disorientating arrangement problem that is something of a curse on the album I feel.
I listen to a lot of deathcore during my workouts nowadays and so I am perhaps a little more desensitised to The Revolution clan’s previous penchant to overwhelm this well-travelled metal head than I was some three or four years ago. Although Neverbloom does not land all that well with me, I still enjoyed the discovery experience and could be tempted by a listen to a later album to see if they did improve at all.
Wretch were formed by former Gates of Slumber main man, guitarist and vocalist Karl Simon, after the demise of GoS in 2013 and this self-titled album was their only full-length release during their eight-year existence. The album also features former GoS drummer Chris Gordon, so it would be reasonable to expect the two bands to sound very similar. Well, kinda, but on "Wretch" Simon forewent all the classic metal sword and sorcery imagery so often indulged by his former incarnation and focussed more on personal and emotional issues, largely in rection to the death from a heroin overdose of his best friend and former Gates of Slumber bassist Jason McCash in 2014, as encapsulated in lines from opener "Running Out of Days": "Final day, Sad song, Sung again, The needle stole away my friend".
The album is really quite short, its seven tracks only spanning 32 minutes with two of those being instrumentals and another is a Judas Priest cover of a track from their Rocka Rolla album ("Winter"). Musically "Wretch" is authentic, Sabbath-inspired trad doom as plied by the likes of Saint Vitus or The Obsessed. In fact, in truth, Simon sounds incredibly similar to Scott Weinrich, both in his vocals and guitar playing, with the same kind of "tight but loose", bluesy guitar style and "cigs and whiskey" vocals favoured by Wino himself. Despite its brevity this is not an inconsequential album and has a deep and resonant feeling, both in guitar tone and with the grizzled vocals. A big feature are the blues-infused guitar solos that Simon unleashes at every available opportunity, which have a stoned-out, jamming quality (check out the instrumental "Blood Finger") but which retain coherence thanks to the excellent foundational work of drummer Gordon and bassist Bryce Clarke who hold things together whilst Simon heads off on his six-stringed flights of fancy.
The production is very good indeed with a crispness to the riffing and sound overall that doesn't negate the "smoky cellar" vibe that all the very best trad doom metal tries to reproduce, yet which allows every note to be heard perfectly, with a distinct lack of muddiness that can often bedevil many doom releases. Inevitably, I guess, my favourites are the slower, more down-and-doomy tracks such as the lengthy "Icebound" and "Drown", but there are very few missteps here with even the clean-sounding short instrumental "Grey Cast Mourning" acting as a nice contrast, sandwiched as it is between the album's two doomiest tracks.
Wretch split in 2021 with their only further release being a 3-track EP (two of which were GoS covers) and since then Simon has reformed Gates of Slumber who put out a new album in 2024 (which I have to shamefacedly admit I haven't heard yet). I would have liked to have heard a bit more from Wretch as this, despite its brevity, shows much potential for a top-knotch contemporary traditional doom metal outfit to show some of the less impressive contenders exactly how to do it.
Benedictum, where the f*** were you in all my years of melodic metal?! This is a band any metalhead should listen to find something classic-sounding in these modern times! And not just any band, but one that would surely kick a** and make even the unbelievers believe.
To be more specific, Benedictum is one of several bands reviving the classic 70s/80s heavy metal sound in the 2000s, plus some touches of power metal. What makes them more unique is the angelic AND devilish singing of frontwoman Veronica Freeman. And it sounds about right that she is like a female Dio (RIP). The album even includes two covers of Black Sabbath songs from the Dio era, which we'll get soon. I don't think I've heard female-fronted heavy/power metal sound this bad-a** since Sinergy.
The opening title track starts with a sinister backmasked subliminal message then rises into Sabbath-infused riffing. The chorus has a nice modern touch to balance things out. Then we get to "Benedictum", which can be considered the band's theme song. Here it starts with sinister Latin chanting then once again brings forward the blend of Sabbath and modern heavy metal in different sections. "#4" is a more progressive track with occasional odd time signature changes. The chorus has a HammerFall vibe within the chanting. "Misogyny" slows things down to a doomy pace. I like the keyboard melodies here, including the old-school-sounding synth soloing. Veronica unleashes her lyrics against those misogynistic unbelievers out there.
"Ashes to Ashes" is filled with rock-on groove. A nice song though not as magical as the others. "Wicca" is one of the most wicked tracks here. Veronica's Dio-esque range shines the most here, as does the rest of the band. But if you wanna hear how much Dio the band can add to their sound, look no further than the first of their Black Sabbath covers, "Heaven and Hell". Veronica can nail those vocals perfectly, and the riffing sounds greatly heavy, the way Tony Iommi has done in the original. Of all the covers I've heard of that song, Benedictum's take might be the best! "Them" cranks up the heaviness while including a catchy singalong chorus. Another powerful standout!
"Two Steps to the Sun" rocks out with more of that guitar heaviness. Indeed it's another more modern take on Dio's sound in both the music and vocals. "Valkyrie Rising" is the album's nearly 9-minute epic, and it shows the band in all its glory without any failure. "Mob Rules" ends this offering as the last of the two Black Sabbath covers. Again, Veronica really has done an excellent job channeling her inner Dio. As great as this one is though, the other Black Sabbath cover has a more mighty edge.
Uncreation can strike you in different moments when you're least expecting it. And those strikes are from the vocal power of Veronica Freeman, as well as the rest of the band. This is not an album or band a metalhead should go their whole life without. It's a masterpiece to tear down the conventional walls!
Favorites: "Uncreation", "Benedictum", "Wicca", "Heaven and Hell", "Them", "Valkyrie Rising"
Named after the ancient Iranian prophet and philosopher, Zarathustra Spitama who was more commonly known as Zoroaster, this trio from Atlanta recall the sounds of Sleep, the progressive sludge of Kylessa and the doom/sludge combination of Unearthly Trance. All are great reference points of course; however, it is a stoner influence that sits strongest for me; even above that trademark sludge sound that Georgia was near-patented when Matador was released. My point is, there is a lot going on here. Yet this is not at the expense of order or structure, as Matador never does sound chaotic. Even during the frenzied mid-section solo of ‘Odyssey’ or the psychedelic sludge of ‘Firewater’, the levels of intensity may well reach critical mass, but they are always measured by a good mix of straight up stoner.
Just listen to the jangling leads of ‘Trident’ to understand why Matador is to all intents and purposes a very cool and incredibly pleasing record. There is a freedom to how the trio express themselves here, yet there is still a respecting of boundaries, a sense that we are not under any circumstances going to go left-field, but we are going to have a fucking good time still anyways. At the same time the calming sense of structure that embodies the album never feels like anyone is being safe or pensive about what they are playing either.
Whilst perhaps not as tantric as Al Cisneros of Sleep and Om fame, the cleaner vocals on Matador could easily be delivered by him. Listening to Matador soon got me in the mood for Om’s Pilgrimage record and that got a couple of spins this week as a result. I feel Matador engages me on the same level of connection that Pilgrimage manages to as both records can easily coast my soul into a peaceful bliss that it yearns for. Tracks such as ‘Old World’ develop a quick sense of familiarity and soothing repetition, whilst the scathing sludge of ‘Black Hole’ still carries that welcoming warmth also. There are not many albums that have grown on me as quickly as this one has. With its array variety of pace and tempos there is still an immense amount of genre stability about Matador, resulting in an experience that suffers from no jarring or obtuse moments. Equally though, this is a record that never becomes boring either.
Last year I checked out the most recent album from the solo black metal project, Blackbraid and it turned out to be one of my more enjoyable metal records from the year. I figured that, since I do not partake in the extreme variety of metal as much as I would like anymore, now seems like a good a time as any to show some love for one of Blackbraid's formative albums; so let's go back and hear how 2023 Blackbraid differs from the modern day sound.
I must admit, this album took me a while to get into. This is not helped by the "Autumnal Hearts Ablaze" intro before the record beats you over the head with "The Spirit Returns". However, the main reason is because Blackbraid II just feels a little tardy. I can let some of that slide given this is an older record, but even for normal black metal standards, it does feel cheesy. Some of the transitions are so wacky that I honestly thought that they must be a joke. "Twilight Hymn of Ancient Blood" strikes me immediately as it begins with this sludgy, almost doom metal groove, which (if you ignore the interlude "Celestial Passage") is a great segue out of the high intensity, foot on the gas pedal of "A Song of Death on Winds of Dawn". But then, about halfway through the song, it switches gears and becomes a thrash anthem...without the anthem part. Sgah’gahsowáh retains their poetic delivery of the words rather than hammering home one particular line of dialogue as one would expect from a band like Warbringer, Havok, or Enforced. The shame is that it actually sounds really cool on its own, but as an extension of the first half of the track, it becomes corny as hell.
Not all the transitions on this record are bad mind you. "The Wolf That Guides the Hunters Hand" is a song that has an impactful punk flare to it, before gradually mellowing out for its conclusion down to a crawl. I enjoyed how "Moss Covered Bones on the Altar of the Moon" builds over its runtime, only to collapse right back down into a doom-y groove the same way it began. And I would be remised if I didn't mention the incredible chemistry between "Moss Covered Bones on the Altar of the Moon" and "A Song of Death on Winds of Dawn". The way the first one ends on a standstill before the next song ramps up the intensity at a blistering pace was well done. It was a shame that tempo could not be maintained throughout the first section of "A Song of Death on Winds of Dawn" though.
I felt like, after a few listens, Blackbraid II grew on me. I can hear the vision and how that vision has evolved to the point where Blackbraid are now after Blackbraid III. The record does have some significant hurdles that need to be ascended in order to appreciate what is on the other side, but if you can weather the turbulence, you'll find a very respectable melodic black metal album.
Best Songs: The Wolf That Guides the Hunters Hand, Moss Covered Bones on the Altar of the Moon, A Song of Death on Winds of Dawn, Sadness and the Passage of Time and Memory
The title of this album Genotype was held on to for a decade, originally meant for an album that was never meant to be. And now, we finally get the once-lost sequel to Phenotype! Just not how it initially was...
Metalheads were hyped up for this supposed Genotype album that ended up shelved when Textures announced their farewell tour and subsequent disbandment. Like a cliffhanger in a cancelled show, it was a big hole in the story that wasn't filled... Until the band reformed in 2023 and rewrote everything into something fresh and new, while maintaining the fact that Genotype continues the Phenotype saga. And at last, it arrived two days before my birthday! Although I didn't get it until two weeks later.
"Void" is the album's overture that welcomes back their fanbase with a colorful burst of guitars, synths, and drums. A warm light after the cold darkness of the absence! "At the Edge of Winter" is where the band's heaviness comes back to life and punches right through. Vocalist Daniel de Jongh is still in great shape after all those years away, but what impresses me the most here is the guest vocals Charlotte Wessels. D*mn it, I gotta hear more of her former band Delain! The instrumentation and vocals sound so epic, and it's clear the band is back for real. "Measuring the Heavens" has more emotional flow. When the vocal intensity alternates with the heavy riffing, they really strike.
"Nautical Dusk" brings some darkness to the light in the rhythms. It's quite addictive, especially in the vocal power. "Vanishing Twin" is more diverse in the drum energy and the synths. Although there are mostly cleans, the growls hit hard within the stomping instrumentation at the end.
"Closer to the Unknown" is sharp and catchy. It is another perfect anthem with a total live-friendly chorus and searing leads. A short yet massive banger! Then "A Seat for the Like-Minded" takes a more ominous turn in the riffing and vocals. "Walls of the Soul" is the 8-minute closing epic, gradually building up and get more lively every minute. The percussion and riffing attack and, at the same time, let you transcend smoothly. An adventurous way to end their comeback offering!
It can be hard to pick up greatly where you left off after a long hiatus, but Textures have just done just that and more. The melodies and riffs will surely please the older fans and bring new ones in. Genotype is a true return to form for this talented band. They shall keep waving the progressive metal flag!
Favorites: "At the Edge of Winter", "Measuring the Heavens", "Closer to the Unknown", "Walls of the Soul"
I have made my metal origin story public for quite awhile now but for those who are uninformed, I was not listening to metal early in my lifetime. It was not until I became a rebellious teenager that my musical interests broke off from the adult contemporary that my family was listening to. And I knew I did not want to listen to the mainstream pop of the Backstreet Boys, Destiny's Child, or the Black Eyed Peas. I didn't discover Alice in Chains or Tool until my first year in high school! But the thing was I still didn't feel like I fit in with the other "cool" kids in school because the metal I was listening to was so much different than theirs. So I asked "what are you listening to?" and they showed me a copy of The End of Heartache by Killswitch Engage. I did not love it at first, but as my ear for music changed, so did my appreciation for the album and the band who created it.
So, in 2006, As Daylight Dies comes out and the promotional single, "My Curse" is everywhere! And it's a great single too. Some might even go so far as to say its the greatest melodic metalcore song of all time. And with this year being the 20th anniversary of the album that changed metalcore, I went back and listened to it and checked to see how it stand up and... I mean, it's still a pretty solid mid 2000s melodic metalcore record, but perhaps my older (and wiser) ears have soured on it more than I thought they would.
I don't know what it is about As Daylight Dies that has changed over the years because all of the pieces are there for a solid metalcore album: the use of breakdowns to compliment choruses, a mammoth refrain led by the unmistakable vocals of Howard Jones, great bass presence and tasteful percussion, and a strong variety in keys, tempos and styles between the tunes. And yet, I'm not sure I feel the excitement from songs like "Break the Silence" and "Daylight Dies" as I did twenty years ago. Maybe it's... stagnation?
I do not listen to metalcore like I once did and that might be to its benefit. Because if I listened to a new metalcore album (or more) every week, I would be more likely to rate this album poorly, despite its cultural significance. So much of the modern melocore sound (i.e. Architects, Born of Osiris, Polaris, etc.) use Killswitch Engage, and more specifically As Daylight Dies, as the framework for their newest releases and there isn't a whole lot of innovation. And it leaves the whole genre as a whole feeling like it's been left behind. I know there are modern melocore bands who are growing from the As Daylight Dies era of Killswitch Engage, but even listening to this record twenty years later, I cannot help but feel like it has lost its grandeur... and I wish it hadn't.
Best Songs: This is Absolution, My Curse, Still Beats Your Name, Eye of the Storm, Desperate Times
If you read existing reviews of this album there seems to be a conflict of styles that undoes any possible value in the record before it even gets going. That is true. I am one hundred percent in agreement that sludge and hardcore just do not work together. The clash of tempos is too much conflict to be able to remedy, no matter how much of the heavy lifting the riffs do on the record. Still, I must admire the tenacity of Jamey Jasta. Whilst infamous for the less than desirable Hatebreed, and being one-dimensional in his vocal approach, the guy has wrked with seemingly everyone from Dee Snider to Lamb of God to Devin Townsend and of course his two-album collaboration with Kirk Windstein of Crowbar and Down.
Here, on KoS’ sophomore release he just sounds like an angry child that a sludge band brought to a recording session, and he wouldn’t shut the fuck up the whole time, so they just left his shouting as “vocals”. It is a shame when an album exhibits such potential in the form of those biting riffs, only to be let down by some other central element contending with them. Not that there’s much else going on across the record, the drums are tepid at best (which considering Nick Bellmore was part of Toxic Holocaust at the time is surprising to say the least) and if there’s any bass floating around in here then (Nick’s brother, Charlie) it is lost behind the guitars and vocals.
As a record this is a sorry sounding affair overall. Comments I have read bemoan how quickly this passes by, but for me I could not wait for the record to be over and done with as it was dragging on and on with every song.











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