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In Waking: Divinity

My symphonic deathcore expedition has led me to what might just be the earliest band of that sound besides Winds of Plague, The Breathing Process. This American band from Connecticut has practically invented the idea of a symphonic deathcore/melodeath blend while also throwing in some Scandivanian-style melodic black metal. It's a mix of epic and extreme that barely any other band had attempted before...

Having just come across their debut In Waking Divinity, I have to admit, it's not as glorious as the later more popular bands of the league. However, it's slightly better than other humble beginning attempts at a niche subgenre. I also admit that the band name is a little goofy, but not bad enough to qualify for the "sh*ttiest band name" thread.

The album's intro "The Hunter" is an ambient yet heavy start with some samples. A bit pointless, yet I approve. The title track impresses me with heavy guitars, skilled drums, and killer vocals. While the symphonics are more oddly placed compared to the later bands of the league, I enjoy the more metallic headbanging sections. Great start, though keep that in mind before the remaining full songs of the album follow the same formula. "Lament Configuration" is a melancholic piano lament. "Blessed, Be Thine Martyr" basically continues the melodic deathcore sound of Bring Me the Horizon's debut Count Your Blessings and blends it with the symphonic black metal of Abigail Williams around that time. "Pandora's Rebirth" has more unique identity. I love the chorus in which the vocals appear over background synths, reminding me of Bleeding Through.

Not much happens in the 24 seconds that make up "Oceans". However, "The Harvesting" attacks like a symphonic Despised Icon. Melodic and technical riffing are more balanced in "Prey" which isn't amazing but I approve of this stylistic blend.

"Legion's Prayer" is one more piano interlude. The winning highlight has to be "Dear Antigone" with lots of vicious headbanging moments. "Somnium" has more interesting progressiveness. It starts doomy with spoken vocals, slowly building up before a final climax. A bonus track in some editions, "Inferno" is an earlier track from the I Am Legion demo, and I love the clean chorus here. If they had more of that in the actual album, I would rate it higher.

I think the title track and those 3 full songs at the end are what you need if you're checking out this band and album for the first time. While a couple tracks in the middle and the interludes are average, In Waking Divinity is still a good start to the then-unpopular symphonic deathcore trend. Not to be missed out, but it's fine if it is....

Favorites: "In Waking Divinity", "Pandora's Rebirth", "The Harvesting", "Dear Antigone", "Somnium", "Inferno"

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Shadowdoom9 (Andi) Shadowdoom9 (Andi) / June 24, 2025 12:45 AM
Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water

If there's one thing that most of our regulars would know about me by now, it's that I call 'em purely as I see 'em & I don't give a fuck what the general consensus is. I like to make up my own mind about things & won't be swayed by what the cool crowd thinks. With that in mind, this week I decided that I really should have an informed opinion on one of the most successful yet heavily divisive metal acts on the global scene in Florida's Limp Bizkit. I'd never heard a full record by them before as I'd always assumed that they'd be none of my business up until now but, you know what, this shit ain't half bad. These dudes certainly know how to write a catchy hook, how to play their instruments & how to create a throbbing mosh pit anthem.

I was surprised at how many of the fifteen tracks I knew as there was clearly a whole slew of hits taken from this record but it wasn't always the well-known stuff that I found the most appeal in. Another thing that I perhaps wasn't prepared for was just how good a rhythm section Limp Bizkit had at the time, particularly the bass guitar which really drives a lot of this material. I don't think there's any doubt that front man Fred Durst's personality is what turns off most metalheads & I can see why as his message can often be summarized as meathead fodder but his macho posturizing can't disguise the obvious Eminem influence in his whiny rapping which I would suggest comes across as nothing more than tolerable. In fact, the rap component in Limp Bizkit's sound is really significant (perhaps more so than most nu metal bands) & that's usually the element of the subgenre that I struggle with the most but I've somehow managed to overlook it here, despite Durst being one of the more overt exponents of the craft. And once I managed to look past his immature personality to the groove-laden music behind him, I discovered that Limp Bizkit had more creativity in their kit bag than I'd ever given them credit for.

All of the hits are pretty enjoyable to tell you the truth with "My Way" being my pick of the bunch but it's the strength of some of the album tracks that surprised me the most with "The One", "Getcha Groove On", "Boiler" & particularly the outstanding album highlight "Hold On" really getting under my skin. Unfortunately, the album is book-ended by some much weaker material though with opener "Hot Dog" falling victim to Durst's idiocy, the Urban Assault Vehicle version of "Rollin'" being a total mess & the almost ten minute "Outro" track being absolutely pointless & a complete waste of your time. The remainder of "Chocolate Starfish & the Hot Dog Flavored Water" is well worth hearing though & provides further proof that you shouldn't believe everything you read. Perhaps I won't go running out to indulge in the remainder of Limp Bizkit's back catalogue any time soon but I can honestly say that this record isn't any worse than the majority of the subgenre, even if it doesn't compete with Linkin Park or Korn's best work.

For fans of Korn, System of a Down & P.O.D.

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Daniel Daniel / June 23, 2025 08:04 PM
Aurinko ja teräs

Norrhem’s fourth full length release has been bobbing around near the surface of my fathomless pool of new releases this year for months now. As soon as I get into it again, something else distracts me and then I go back see it marked as a “contender” on my list of new releases I am working through, and I remember to give it some more plays before I fallback into the whirlpool of new music that I cycle in nowadays. Nominating it for feature release in The North clan this month had a hidden purpose of giving its review an added dependency.

Now, I am not overly familiar with pagan black metal, however I do know a hint of Moonsorrow when I hear one and after multiple listens, I think that the reference is the nearest I can make to how I can define the sound here. The tracks for the most part have solid, driving rhythms, offset with acoustic, atmospheric passages that give time for reflection. Clearly Norrhem have a deep sense of pride in their Finnish heritage and this nationalism is strong in the sound of the music. Embracing the melodic aspects as they do on Aurinko ja teräs alongside the more choral/chanting effects makes for a good mix of foot stomping black metal that carries an almost hidden catchiness (in the sense that it takes a few listens to pick up on it – well at least I did). Unexpectedly, I find some of the tracks quite warming, despite the colder atmospheres associated in general with the music.

I did baulk at the symphonic comparisons I saw with other bands but, again, upon repeated listens I did start to increasingly notice this in the sound. Even when the band drifts a bit too far on the eerie ballad ‘Mullan marttyyrit’, they still manage to make it work well in the grander scheme of things as a (albeit slightly grandiose) intro to the title track. Despite this symphonic and pagan meleé the band can add a great selection of riffs into play also, ranging from the squally efforts on ‘Hävitetty maa’ through to the relentless chop of ‘Teräsmyrskyssä’ which is my album highlight here. Some of the keys remind me of 80’s pop whilst on other occasions they sound like chimes straight from a Burzum record.

Aurinko ja teräs has worked its way onto my rotation with an almost dogged determination. It is not my usual bag really but is hardly celebrating sub-genres that I go out of my way to avoid either. My overarching sense from multiple connections with it is that the record grows stronger as it goes on without quite reaching the imperious levels of pagan black metal that Havukruunu have achieved in recent years. It is unlikely to walk away with any massive accolades this year but it certainly deserves recognition.


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Vinny Vinny / June 23, 2025 07:40 PM
Dormant

Take the heavy guitar leads from modern Arch Enemy, combine it with some Arch Enemy style vocals, a percussion work that feels eerily similar to Arch Enemy and....wait.

It's hard to dunk on a band who are just trying to get their feet wet, but when that band in question has nothing unique to add to the table, it makes me lose focus in record time. Hiraes are a German melodic death metal band with Dormant as their second full length studio album. And as I alluded to from the start, Dormant doesn't really do anything to separate itself from its clear primary influence. What does one do to stand out in a landscape of second wave melodic death metal? You could go the Aephanemer approach and bring the symphonic embellishment to the forefront. Or you could try the progressive/folk approach like Eluveitie or Aeternam. Hiraes do have some symphonic development here, but it is all very conservative in its usage; no song on this record is either benefited or detracted by having a orchestra. It simply adds to the density of the recording, but without providing something of its own value.

Dormant is one of those albums that promises to be a heavier Arch Enemy...which it is. The guitars alternates back and forth between very standard melo-death leads, chugging riffs and the occasional tremolo picking sections. The percussion is a lot more engaged on Dormant than it has been on recent Arch Enemy projects like Deceivers and Blood Dynasty. But the whole project is brought down by the generic vocals. Britta Görtz has a strong presence behind the microphone and performs with great diction. But the delivery itself is monotonous. Britta's vocal range feels very limited on Dormant and the ramped up intensity that was promised at the start feels underutilized, since the rest of the music doesn't play into her strengths. Ironically, some of this albums better songs are the ones that stay at one intensity for their entire duration. Songs like "We Owe No One" and "Nightflight" benefit the underwhelming vocals, while the more "progressive" leaning tracks like "Red Soil" do absolutely nothing for me.

When I listen to Dormant by Hiraes, I hear a band that just wanted to make music together, but without any sense of direction as to what to do with it. This band is listed as having in formed in 2020 when the world was engulfed in an economic lockdown so finding something to do with friends was undoubtedly important so as to not go stir crazy. They are clearly in love with Arch Enemy, which is not a bad place to start if you are creating melodic death metal. But now, after the bands second studio album, they need to walk their own path and not lay Dormant to the changing tide of modern melodic death metal.

Best Songs: Chance to Fail, Nightflight

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Saxy S Saxy S / June 23, 2025 04:58 PM
Destroy the Machines

I am not super familiar with a lot of metalcore, outside of a few big names like Converge and Trivium and I have only very recently tried to explore it further. I find a lot of it to be very samey, with little to differentiate a lot of the bands, but Earth Crisis certainly are not one of them. Destroy the Machines sounds very much to me like a straight edge band that has discovered Sepultura's Chaos AD and thought "We'll have some of that". I like quite a few straight edge bands, even though they can be annoyingly preachy, and Chaos AD is a great record, so that combination works really well for me.

Vocals can often be a personal bugbear with metalcore acts, but Karl Buechner has a raggedness to his voice that makes it sound less shouty and forced than most and that is definitely a plus. A lot of more modern metalcore feels like it has moved away from the punk side of the equation, but Earth Crisis are most definitely authentic when it comes to their punk credentials, which gives the album a looseness that allows it to breathe rather than the constipated tightness of more recent metalcore orthodoxy. The riffs are great, even pretty groovy at times, yet still contain a lethal agressiveness that lets everyone know exactly just how pissed off these guys are. If more metalcore sounded like this then I would most definitely be a bigger fan.

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Sonny Sonny / June 23, 2025 09:24 AM
So It Goes

The scathing attack of Demoniac is a welcome approach to how I like my thrash metal. With a frantic pace to proceedings, So It Goes stamps and stomps a mark in sheet steel when the band are in full flow. Those sneering vocals and razor-sharp riffs over a plodding bass and relentless drums makes for a great combo. As such, there are parts of the record that connect well with me. The Kreator and Sadus vibes are strong in this group. Heck, even the progressive wizardry of Vektor gets incorporated into the Chileans sound. At face value, this is exciting music for any fan of thrash or speed metal. As always though, there is a lot to be said for some adherence to some semblance of control and restraint.

Whilst it is not unheard of that I am alienated by a band’s sound or chosen style, sometimes even by an individual track even, I would not call it a regular occurrence by any means still. In those moments when I detect that sense of “WTF is this?”, then this usually does not bode well for the artist or release concerned. The clarinet is not an instrument many of us would associate with metal music. Its inclusion here on So It Goes is an absolute bolt out of the blue for me and no matter how hard I try to fathom the rationale behind its appearance, I cannot attribute any reasonable logic to it. It just seems like one of the band members plays the clarinet as well as guitar and so they have included it on the album. It holds no place on the record for me beyond setting some element of atmosphere. Its timbre is too bold and the texture it induces is too warm for the aesthetic of the music Demoniac play. What annoys me even more is that there is no need for the band to try and make themselves stand out by way of such a gimmick. Demoniac can play. Some of their lead work is mindboggling. Their vocals are perfect for blackened thrash and that drummer certainly knows his way around his kit too. Hell, even the bassist can make their presence known without taking over whole sections of tracks with progressive wankery.

I cannot say the clarinet rules my experience of the record, there’s far too much high level, well played, intense thrash metal being played here for that. However, it does ruin the album for me overall. It is just so unnecessary an addition and it retains an almost anarchical presence when considered with the rest of the record. So much potential here as well but this one is destined for the lower end of my ratings.  So it goes, indeed.


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Vinny Vinny / June 22, 2025 02:14 PM
In the Rotting Grave

Belgium is at it again. That often-forgotten corner of the global black metal community that likes to give it large with the synths to really add some atmosphere whilst still retaining the requisite amounts of rawness to remind us that production values still don’t mean diddly-squat. Forbidden Temple has seven years of marauding, atmospheric bm under their bullet belts. Espousing witchcraft and good old-fashioned paganism as some of their key topics of lyrical discussion, this trio (don’t really know how fulltime the keyboard guy is) now have two albums to their name. You will have to scour YouTube to find them, as they are released on suitably obscure and shadowy labels only (no Spotify or Apple Music quick search items here thank you very much).

In the Rotting Grave certainly sounds like it has been recorded south of ground level. It is full of dank riffs and lumbering synths. Creating doom-like atmospheres seems to be an organic output to what Forbidden Temple do. The opening to ‘Mephistopheles Nightmare’ with its choral accompaniment sounds perfect before it gives way to some solid riffs and haunting keys, the drums all the while are bashing away like some dementor with two bits of wood and a stool and some pedals. The Norwegian influence is still very clear throughout the record, with early Darkthrone being a clear similarity from the off. However, there’s some Mortuary Drape and Samael kicking around on here too. FT are all about the late 80’s and early 90’s bm scene baby.

Not much is known about the members of the band, yet it is clear where their hearts lie in terms of influence. Whilst the aesthetic is very DIY in terms of production the performances themselves have layers and textures. The result of this is that whilst In the Rotting Grave retains a distinctly murky and cold charm to it, utterly devoid of any grandiosity, at the same time it has a deep-rooted warmth to it that reminds me of Varathron also. This dynamic tends to hide in plain sight, adds to the constant sense of mystery and necrotic wonder of the album for me. I feel like I know exactly where I am going each time I listen to it, yet I hear something new each time I listen. Not that repeated listens uncovers new instrumentation or extrovert direction, more that subtle melody lurks in corners not fully explored the last time around.

So where does it sit in the year list? Well, it breaks into the top 20 without managing to challenge the higher scores, relying as it does on purely old school qualities to separate it from the pack to any degree. There is a lot to enjoy here however and I would suggest it will continue to be revisited for some months to come.


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Vinny Vinny / June 22, 2025 10:27 AM
Legacy

HOW?!? How did I not discover this awesome modern metal band earlier?! Remember what I thought of Becoming the Archetype's debut Terminate Damnation? Hope for the Dying's most recent album Legacy basically continues the progressive melodeath/metalcore sound of that album but with more symphonic/neo-classical elements. Many people who enjoy this band have started off with Dissimulation or Aletheia, but my first encounter with Legacy makes me wants to check them out for the first time soon.

While there are some similarities to Terminate Damnation in terms of the sound, flow, and track lengths, there's only one interlude that is the intro. That's OK, because the rest of the album stands out as is. Before we get to that, I'd just like to point out the album cover. It may not be by Dan Seagrave, but it still has that epic Game of Thrones vibe.

So "Aurora" is a nice orchestral intro that lasts for a minute. "Setting Sun" fits greatly with its title, setting the album's tone in stone. The haunting keys shine greatly alongside the heavy guitars. The best place for progressive diversity is "Flame Forged", one of my favorite tracks here. Then we have the relentless "Narcissus" that continues its blend of heaviness and melody from beginning to end.

However, its abrupt transition into "Nemesis" is a bit jarring. My perfect 5-star rating still stands as that next track brushes aside that misstep with heavy dissonance. Lyrics like "I was a slave to my own demons" and deathly growls by Becoming the Archetype frontman Jason Wisdom makes that track another standout. I also love the guest gutarwork by Elisha Mullins (The Burial, Miss May I, War of Ages) including the Van Halen-esque divebomb at the end. "Trenches" is another fantastic dish of heaviness and symphonics that stays speedy until its slower ending section. "Wretched Curse" lets you rest in a slower tempo for the first couple minutes then speeds back up again.

After the previous track's brief soft moment, "Wander No More" has searing guitars to rip you apart. My ultimate favorite track of the album is the 9-minute title epic that really packs some punches. A smooth two-minute bridge comes in midway through before some blazing soloing out of nowhere. Then it ends with soft strings. The last bit of triumph comes in "Adamantine" which is an excellent summary of this glorious literal hour. And finally some soft piano to end it all.

As brilliant as Terminate Damnation is, Legacy is another huge deal of modern epicness. Every layer is absorbed through your ears into the brain, and you'll be able to experience this unique creativity in no time. You can expect headbanging metal sections, soft orchestral bridges, and different time signature changes. Just like Terminate Damnation, this offering is a standout in the Christian metal scene that can please both Christians and non-Christians. If I thought Mechina's Progenitor was the best album of 2016, that award might just be passed over to this album. There's still hope for Hope for the Dying to come back with something fresh to maintain their legacy!

Favorites: "Flame Forged", "Nemesis", "Trenches", "Legacy", "Adamantine"

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Shadowdoom9 (Andi) Shadowdoom9 (Andi) / June 21, 2025 06:00 AM
Unyielding Night

As my symphonic deathcore expedition continues, I've just encountered this band from metal's motherland Finland, Assemble the Chariots. With their storytelling symphonic melodic death metal/core sound, they're like a more conceptual Shadow of Intent and Lorna Shore. I think of all the releases of this genre I've explored so far, this might truly be the most saga-filled one yet!

Although their full-length debut Unyielding Night was released a year before this review, 2024, they've actually released a series of EPs dating back 15 years prior. With their sign-in to Seek & Strike records, it was time to unleash their epic storytelling deathcore to the world.

"Aquilegia in Peril" begins it all with that cinematic blend of symphonics and narration. Then "Departure" launches into metallic blasts that blend with the epic orchestration. The riffing and harsh vocals add to this intriguing mix. "Admorean Monolith" has some powerful bass groove alongside highly diverse metal aggression. "As Was Seen by Augurers" fires away with drumming impact. The screams and growls alternate with great unpredictability. "Shimmering, Pulsing Glow" is another string/narration interlude.

The ominous melancholy is decimated by the furious "Evermark". Absolutely brutal growls and intense riffing there! Introducing "Reavers March" is the usual savage battle between metal and orchestra. I love the impressive shredding! "Ephemeral Stream" is a different story, with soft piano and cleans by Milma Laitinen for something calm while still dark. "Emancipation" blasts forward again like a machine gun (no Kelly). As we have more of the demonic harsh vocals, we also have some operatic cleans by Nitte Valo (Dreamtale, ex-Battle Beast). "Keepers of the Stars" is a catchy headbanging highlight with kick-A drums and leads. "Empress" has more screaming chaos.

"Last Line of Defence" is one more interlude, to get you geared up for the final battle of this story. Warhorns begin the war in "Galactic Order", getting you excited with the theatrical orchestration, crushing metal, and charging vocals. "Equinox" is the grand ending epic where the ultimate climax occurs. The final bit of energy is used wisely, all the way up to the glorious end. That's the kind of closing epic that I enjoy!

Unyielding Night is probably the most ambitious and conceptual album in all of symphonic deathcore. Many different layers can be found in the deathly fury, the symphonic orchestra, and a voyage of a concept. You gotta appreciate the time it took for this to be made. The long wait was worth it. Here's to the next part of the Ephemeral Trilogy!

Favorites: "Departure", "Admorean Monolith", "Evermark", "Reavers March", "Emancipation", "Keepers of the Stars", "Equinox"

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Shadowdoom9 (Andi) Shadowdoom9 (Andi) / June 21, 2025 01:18 AM
The Loss

Themed around the Kubler-Ross model (the five stages of grief), Mares of Thrace fourth album is an uncomfortable listen for anyone who has endured any kind of loss. Be that the death of a loved one, the breakdown of a relationship or the end of a friendship, The Loss feels multi-faceted in its possible applications for its listeners. Playing as a multitude of elements, ranging from noise rock through to sludge and on into acoustic passages, MoT keep the attention with this array of seemingly transparent yet emotionally heavy collection of tracks.

Previously unknown to me until this past week, the duo of Thérèse Lanz and Casey Rogers have made an impact immediately in my world. Whilst the tracks are charges with a jarring and lumbering intensity, the riffs do not rely on simple heaviness for impact. They have an almost loose quality to them, played as if in organic creation in some jam session, their blend of dark rock ‘n roll adding an interesting edge to proceedings. Similarly, the drums follow an uncomplicated path. Sat just right in the mix, they undertake the perfect supporting role. Operating just under the fuzzy haze of the strings they are a solid foundation for the bashing bleakness of The Loss.

The star of the show though is most definitely the vocals. As you would expect from my description of the album thus far, the vocals of Thérèse are not pretty. They are incredibly versatile in the reactions they can invoke in the listener, however. For me they mirror frustration, desperation, unfathomable sorrow, scathing fury and stinging vitriol across the nine songs that make up the record. At times they do bring tears to my eyes, such is the level of pleading futility that is on display on some songs. It feels like they are on occasion, seeking refrain from the relentless cycle of grief that I so brilliantly exemplified by the music. I am no expert of the Kubler-Ross model, but it feels like the songs are well researched and as a result are performed in a legitimate and convincing way.

The album highlight for me is penultimate track, ‘The Fifth Stage: Depression’. Anyone with any experience I would imagine would find this track a valid exploration of the horrible affliction. Here, the desperation borders on being demented. The utter, all-consuming sense of being completely overwhelmed and rendered dysfunctional by the illness is exhibited in HD on this track. You can hear the vulnerability, the rawness of losing someone and the agonising disintegration of your reality at the same time.

MoT have the uncanny ability to make their songs sound as the track titles suggest they should. ‘Complicated Grief’ has an air of challenge to it, for example. Meanwhile, shock, anger, denial and even acceptance all get personified in the corresponding track performances. The Loss is (ironically) an album that gives me so much. Possibly an early contender for album of the year, it has connected with me so instantly and so effortlessly. It is one of those albums that I am beyond being merely entertained by, I am genuinely grateful to have heard it.


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Vinny Vinny / June 20, 2025 07:11 PM
Heritage

I had a quick look to see if I had encountered Structure's main man, Bram Bijlhout, before and the only time our paths have crossed was Officium Triste's 2013 album, Mors Viri, which I honestly can't remember listening to and which I rated a measly two-and-a-half stars, so not an auspicious start then. However, whether my long forgotten score is an accurate reflection of Mors Viri's quality or not, one of us has changed because I honestly cannot express how utterly affecting and emotional I found Heritage to be. This may sound a bit odd considering Pim Blankenstein uses the guttural growls of extreme metal and the ponderous riffs are huge, crushing affairs, but there is also a melancholy yearning oozing out from under that crushing weight which is often accentuated by lighter instrumental moments.

Heritage actually straddles the line between death doom and funeral doom, allowing for well-executed tempo variations that ensures the generally medium-length tracks don't succumb to saminess. The riffs are melodic and memorable in the main, and really do strike an impressive balance between musical and emotional weight, providing the discerning metalhead with more than enough heaviness to satisfy their craving whilst simultaneously tugging at their heartstrings. The lead work often soars above the miasma created by the riffs, rhythm section and guttural growling like a released spirit taking its leave of the soul-crushing grind of earthbound existence, shrieving itself of its earthly cares and reaching towards its personal nirvana.

I haven't sat down with a lyric sheet, so I don't know what the philosophy behind Heritage is, but for some reason I can't help but feel uplifted and hopeful both whilst and after listening to it, as if it is saying, no matter how hard and heavy things may be, ultimately everything will be OK. This may be fanciful on my part, and yes, it is steeped in melancholy and a gruelling weight, but there is a ray of something more at the heart of the album that genuinely makes me feel good and that is something that I have found in very short supply in recent times. I am exceedingly impressed and it will take a fucking great record to beat this to my AOTY for 2025.

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Sonny Sonny / June 20, 2025 12:29 PM
Perigaea Antahkarana

Way back in 2007 or so (damn, that’s nearly 20 years ago), I was lurking on a doom metal forum associated with Southern Lord: mainly for discussions and announcements for new albums. There were a number of musicians on that site who discussed their new projects. One such person was Blake Green who announced his first release as a duo with Brittany McConnel under the name of Pussygutt – a doom-laden drone metal band. In 2010, the multi-instrumentalist duo changed their name to Wolvserpent, Perigaea Antahkarana is their second full-length album.

Bookended with nature recordings of wind, a fire crackling and cawing crows, this is no one-paced drone metal release. Yes, we have big repetitive droning guitar riffs, pounding drums and synth and droning violin layers. But we also have: massive doom/stoner riffs, post-rock style ethereal violin build ups akin to Godspeed You! Black Emperor leading into an atmospheric back metal sound; guttural funeral doom style vocals from Blake and ethereal dark folk style chanting from Brittany. Layers of sound that provide a truly immersive experience. I’m no musician, but I would imagine pulling together diverse influences into a truly cohesive work is no easy task, but the duo do this seamlessly.

I see lots of reviews describing the sound as dark and its association with winter, but to me this is both lush and bleak, light and dark, and this was the perfect album for this glorious summers day.

A drone metal album? I guess, but this contains a whole lot more. Wonderful


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dk dk / June 17, 2025 07:51 PM
Gone Forever

I was first introduced to the band God Forbid at Mayhem Festival 2009 when myself and some of my more metal friends took the trip across the border from Ontario to Michigan. We had been to Mayhem Festival the previous year when they visited closer to home, but this time we had to do some cross border shenanigans. They played the same stage as Trivium and All That Remains; both bands I was quite familiar with ahead of time. I thought "oh cool a new American metalcore band to dive into. Then I listened to the music and was immediately turned off.

Don't get me wrong, I do think that GF (God Forbid) had talent, but one listen to Gone Forever and you could tell that this band wasn't performing at full capacity. They could write solid hooks and the overall compositions were thoroughly constructed, but to expand these concepts beyond the initial honeymoon phase, God Forbid transforms into a painfully generic melocore band. Like those bands who played Mayhem Festival with GF in 2009, they would use decent song structures, breakdowns did not serve as interjections, and they could write an above average chorus. Unlike Trivium and All That Remains, this consistency does not pan out for an entire album. "Antihero" and "Force-Fed" start the album quite strong, but by the time we get to "Soul Engraved", "Judge the Blood" or even earlier songs like "Precious Life" you can see that the well runs dry fast.

And it isn't helped at all by the clean vocals. If they had ditched the clean vocals entirely, Gone Forever could have been an above average 2000s melocore record. But GF's clean vocals are so sheepish and non-committal. It's the kind of raspy singing you expect to hear out of Rob Flynn. Similar metalcore bands would have clean singing also, but those vocals were a clear counterpoint to the harsh screams; whether it be dual vocal acts like The Devil Wears Prada or Alexisonfire, or the rare vocalist that could do both by themselves (i.e. Howard Jones, Matt Heafy). On Gone Forever, GF are trying to cash in on a trend to get popular, but can't even do it correctly.

If Gone Forever sounded closer to an Unearth album like The Oncoming Storm or III: In The Eyes of Fire without any clean vocals, we might be telling a different tale. That still wouldn't change how this album loses momentum halfway through, but at least it would be slightly more tolerable to listen to. God Forbid fall into the singles band territory, where their best songs are the ones promoted by the record label and radio. After those however, you won't miss much.

Best Songs: Antihero, Washed Out World, Living Nightmare

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Saxy S Saxy S / June 17, 2025 02:11 PM
Heritage

Ex-Officium Triste guitarist, Bram Bijlhout raids his old band for assistance as he drafts in Pim Blankenstein to deliver vocals on his debut full length under his solo outfit, Structure. Not being familiar with Officium Triste at all, I cannot say how much similarity there is here between the two acts. Plus, I do not think it would be best use of the review either, especially given the obvious quality of Heritage. As a standalone, atmospheric doom/death metal act, Structure is a strong offering. How we got here is not necessarily as important as enjoying what we have got here. Heritage is a fine debut album, one that sounds like it has been put together by established artists with a strong ear for immersive compositions that the listener can absorb as opposed to just listen to.

In attempting to put some of the above into coherent reference to parts of the album, one’s attention is immediately drawn to the rich melodies of the guitar that soar alongside the intense weight of the riffs that you would expect to hear on any doom death release. Adopting an almost funeral doom depth at times, the guitars go for the very depths of the sound at times, yet they also create big sounding, almost rock-esque riffs on other occasions. ‘What We Have Lost’ showcases this perfectly. Unafraid to take off into more mid-paced territory, this track develops into much more than standard doom death fare would normally permit. This early, promising trend continues across all of Heritage I am pleased to report, resulting in a very fulfilling experience. Whilst it most certainly is doom death at its core, this is a record that holds no trepidation for expansive compositions.

Clearly well-produced, the sound on the album is big, surrounding the listener in all the glorious tropes of the instrumentation present here. Those keyboards are elevating and elegant, adding distinct majesty to the darkness, uniting with the melancholy of the guitar perfectly. Both elements do really work well in tandem with one another, the guitar comes out with the upper hand still though, maintaining prevalence throughout much of the album. As a reference point, I am reminded often of Shape of Despair when listening to Heritage, such are the acute levels of melancholy and the sense of the sheer distance that is created in the atmospherics. At times I would go further and say there’s a bit of Bell Witch present here also. The dramatic opening to album closer ‘Until the Last gasp’ lives up to this comparison for sure.

If I were being super-critical, I would be asking for a little more from the drums, which do sound a little timid at times. Just the slightest of an increase in space in the mix would have afforded them a greater presence. Whilst this measure of component parts does allow for the focus on the guitars and vocals, it does diminish some of the power behind tracks such as ‘The Sadness of Everyday Life’. There is almost too much of a distance between them and the rest of proceedings. It is a minor compliant however on an album that is a consistent, intriguing and above all else immersive experience end-to-end.


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Vinny Vinny / June 16, 2025 07:26 AM
Darkness Descends

While Slayer decided that the speed and aggressive of Reign in Blood, other bands decided that this was too soft for them. Dark Angel is one of the bands most known for doing this.
I kind of disagree with this common view of the album. I'm sure on a BPM and note for note level, Darkness Descends is far more aggressive. But Reign in Blood has more factors contributing to it than pure aggression. Darkness Descends has a lot more warmer and less slick elements to it, having more amateurish production. In line more with NWOBHM albums and subsequent early thrash albums not feeling the need to come into a room and scream that they're thrash metal albums. And compared to some later albums in general, this can come off as downright quaint at times.
Which isn't a bad thing, one's creative nature dies when one tries to limit oneself to what "should" be in a genre. Something that bands after Dark Angel would surely fall into, because arguably these guys don't expand on the formula all that much. Which is fine, ceaseless brutality is often boring and renders itself lifeless. In this regard, Darkness Descends comes as a missing link between early thrash and what British thrash would end up sounding like, a balance of the extremes.
But this album does feel a bit style over substance, even for the early years of thrash. Riffs are often of little importance to aggression, which considering the aforementioned, leaves it feeling unmemorable. Despite listening to it a number of times I can barely recall anything beyond a fuzzy feeling once the album is over.
It's a pretty good album, but ultimately you can see the faults that would eventually result in the genre's death for a while.

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Morpheus Kitami Morpheus Kitami / June 15, 2025 04:39 PM
Nightmares as Extensions of the Waking State

Katatonia have a special place in my listening habits nowadays.  The album Fall of Hearts has been of recent importance as it guided me through some of the darker times of a relationship breakdown over the past year.  The Dance of December Souls is also one of my favourite records of the sub-genre of the time, and whilst I cannot pretend to be massively in love with everything the band releases, a new release from them will certainly wind up on my rotation list for a period.  With a couple of singles circulated ahead of the main album release, I was already prepared for more of the same from modern day Katatonia.  Progressive elements, fused onto a main hull of alt-metal seem once again to be the order of the day.  Pace and tempos do vary but there is still that lumbering undertone to their sound that scratches some of that Fallen clan itch for me.

My favourite element of the band’s sound, Jonas’ pained vocals, are in fine form here.  Never getting into the pleading territory, nor are they bleating about unfairness or uncertainty, they paint a melancholy picture without grating.  For their largely monotone presentation, this consistency could easily end up grating, yet they compliment the darkness inherent in Katatonia’s sound so perfectly.  The other element that stands out this time are the superb guitar leads that haunt the record at various intervals.  Just as harrowing as the vocals, they are the perfect accompaniment.  Also, there are some quality riffs happening here on Nightmares of the Waking State.  Add in the power of the drums and you soon find yourself in that strange atmosphere of a subdued, yet deep and thoroughly entertaining experience.

The infectious (yet somehow not catchy) chorus line of ‘Temporal’ is a genuine joy that sticks in my head for days afterwards.  ‘Efter Solen’ is a sullen and moody track with a sneaky build that grows subtly in the background of the dreamy vocals and keys, exhibiting a crawling ambience as it goes along. There is a variety to album number fourteen from the Swedes, that we all absolutely expect by now, but it is all so mature sounding, without being boring.  The predominant colour of Nightmares as Extensions of the Waking State in my mind after multiple plays is still grey.  That monotone is filled with bursts of white, some of them brighter than others, yet there is no real burst of vibrant yellows, oranges or even reds and that is absolutely fine for me.  Another chord struck with me here.

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Vinny Vinny / June 14, 2025 07:17 AM
Verdun

Campbell Kneale is a pivotal figure in the New Zealand drone/noise scene and has released numerous albums under the Birchville Cat Motel and Our Love Will Destroy the World monickers. Black Boned Angel is his drone metal trio. Verdun is the bands fourth full length album that takes on providing a soundtrack the longest and most devastating battle in World War 1.

Verdun is a single 50+ minute song split into 3 distinct parts (the 3 parts are available on the CD and digital release, the vinyl version contained the first and the third movement). Part 1 (Prayer Sodden Holes) has a sombre, ominous sound with repetitive riffs and drums underlayered with feedback that leads into a brief respite during the mellow(er) part 2 (Tears Strike the Mile High Gong) before the terrifying climax of looped choirs and a cacophony of noise, feedback and the sound of war of part 3 (Creeping Barrage). It’s the sound of desolation, hopelessness, anticipation, terror and fear.

Black Boned Angel are no more. In an interview on the inarguable, Kneale stated that “The grand-scale, crushing, sadness that is plastered all over those records was actually real for me and I can't live that way anymore.” And you can hear it all on Verdun – my favourite drone metal album.

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dk dk / June 13, 2025 01:14 PM
The Unifying Themes of Sex, Death, and Religion

From Seattle, Botch was known for contributing to their development of the noise-powered mathcore genre in the late 90s. The band would release two albums before splitting up in 2002, though they would reform two decades later for a new single and reunion tour. Botch shared their hybrid sound with fellow mathcore pioneers Converge and The Dillinger Escape Plan, and would plant the seed for later bands like Norma Jean and Every Time I Die. During Botch's 20-year split, the members would go on in different bands like Minus the Bear, These Arms are Snakes, Roy, Russian Circles, and Sumac.

This unique ambitious sound can take on a variety of different influences such as Helmet and Black Sabbath, putting them together into their own. You can hear it clearly in The Unifying Themes of Sex, Death and Religion, a compilation of demo EPs released before their two albums. It spawned an extended re-release in 2002, entitled Unifying Themes Redux, with more previously unreleased tracks. Whichever release you get, expect some complex high-energy hardcore chaos...

The frantic "God vs. Science" showcases the metallic chords of guitarist Dave Knudson. "Third Part in a Tragedy" has some of those hardcore jumps that Norma Jean would later have. Then slowly they turn, step by step, "Inch by Inch"... Some slight industrial from Nine Inch Nails is added to the metallic hardcore that can be heard in Eighteen Visions. They've actually covered "O Fortuna" by Carl Orff, turning an opera song into a mathcore track. A little too much of a joke, but I can accept it. Then we slam into "Closure", which is from a various artists compilation. A true trail of noise and destruction!

"Contraction" adds a little more melody to the hardcore, though not as much as The Plot in You would in the 2010s. Then on "Ebb", Knudson paints his guitar notes on the bass grooves of Brian Cook and the screamed vocals of Dave Verellen. "Stupid Me" is kinda stupid in the cliche chanting. The drama is lost by sounding laughable. "In Spite of This" is the 5-minute epic with killer riffing. They never need to go Meshuggah levels of djenty to sound this heavy.

I suppose I can one day check out the extended Unifying Themes Redux, but as much fun as I had with the original, hearing a lot of this for 70 minutes might be wearying. Still you can witness how well Botch can do their music, giving you a great complex time....

Favorites: "God vs. Science", "Third Part in a Tragedy", "Closure", "Ebb", "In Spite of This"

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Shadowdoom9 (Andi) Shadowdoom9 (Andi) / June 13, 2025 01:24 AM
Eiger

Eiger is in reference to a specific mountain found in the Bernese Alps. Aara are using this mountain as the basis for their album since it is one of the most treacherous inclines on the planet. At least 64 climbers have attempted to climb to its peak, and have been unable to return to tell the tale; the perfect backdrop for a Nordic atmospheric black metal project!

Aara have been producing records on an annual basis since 2019 (which is very impressive) and Eiger is kind of a change of pace for them. Aara's previous releases have told recollections of gothic literature, so this move towards real life events might be strange. And that can be heard in the vocal presentation. I do know a little German from my second language course in University, however I haven't used that language in quite some time, so the finer details in the words were a little hard to dissect. But in general, the vocals of this album are pretty barebones. Not that I expect a life changing storytelling experience out of a black metal album, but they do feel rather dry.

But when the vocals are so inconsequential to the performance, it allows for those gorgeous instrumentals to take center stage. When those blast beats and thundering guitars enter the mix you can feel the weight of two avalanches suppressing you. While the guitar leads lead you on an almost ethereal journey. The key to making Eiger so good is the songwriting. When the album is ferocious, it's as pulverizing as any modern black metal record. But when then album brings in those acoustic guitars for outros, intros and bridges, they bring another layer to this already cold tale. Something about their unaccompanied texture is just so isolating and awesome and give the listener a moment of respite before the inevitable return of the black metal textures of before. They almost remind me a little bit of Saor's Forgotten Paths from 2019 and that's high praise.

Unfortunately for Aara, they don't really seem to be doing much else with the atmospheric black metal sound on Eiger. Yeah it's a fantastic albums filled with highs and lows, some of the prettiest sounding melodies in black metal since Sunbather, and a solid backdrop for a concept album. But they don't reinvent the wheel. Perhaps Aara does not need to reinvent the wheel, since they are too busy releasing a new album on an annual basis. And when you release an album that is as top quality as this, why would they need to? 

Best Songs: Die das wilde Wetter fängt, Senkrechte Welten, Todesbiwak, Zurück zur roten Fluh, Alptraum


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Saxy S Saxy S / June 12, 2025 02:11 PM
I Disagree

From surreal performance art YouTuber to experimental popstar to metal screamer, Poppy, born Moriah Rose Pereira, has revolutionized both the internet and music scene. However, I've barely encountered any of her work, only knowing her collaborations with her highly acclaimed collaborations with Bad Omens and Knocked Loose. So now it's time for me to dive into her diverse world...

Her 3rd album I Disagree marked her transition from electropop into experimental alt-metal. The album's themes are empowerment and destroying the destroyer. It's clear that a lesson to learn is to disagree with life's conventionalities that can drag you down.

"Concrete" shows Poppy reinventing the pop metal wheel, by combining anime-style electropop with metal shredding. Two different worlds collide as catchy hooks battle against brutal breakdowns. At one point, an audience chants her name which then leads to a pop rock bridge and the last of the metal shredding. Truly an energetic banger! Then the title track shows more of her creativity. The chorus is quite playful as Poppy sings like an angel, telling us to "let it all burn down, burn it to the ground". After which, her devil side strikes back against her manipulative ex-collaborator Titanic Sinclair, "I disagree with the way you continue to pressure me". She can burn away her abusive past and walk away without batting an eye. "Bloodmoney" takes on some electro-industrial, leaning into a bit of hardcore dubstep.

The electronic side continues on in "Anything Like Me", which also drifts into cacophonic metal and continues the directly empowering lyrics, "sorry for what I’ve become, because I'm becoming someone." Then "Fill the Crown" encourages liberty for all, "you can be anyone you want to be, you can be free". The edition of this album I'm reviewing includes a bonus cover of "All the Things She Said" by t.A.T.u., and interestingly enough, this is one of my favorite tracks here, fitting in the "metalizing covers" category by adding in dark alt-/industrial metal drama while staying true to the original. If that isn't Poppy's most emotional moment, I don't know what is! After that, "Nothing is Need" dives into dreamy soft pop, like something Ariana Grande would make. There's not much metal there, unless you count some lead guitar melodies. As a heavier listener, I find that one bland, though not a total disaster.

Poppy can let her ideas run loose in "Sit/Stay" with lyrics against having to obey like an animal. She wants to show that she is an independent individual and motivates us to have that same feeling of freedom. Then we have the explosive "Bite Your Teeth" with its straight-on metallic energy. "Sick of the Sun" is one of the more ethereal tracks here. 6-minute closing epic "Don't Go Outside" has a soft acoustic intro, and... I know this album fits well as an alt-metal release, but this track is the closest to that genre, maybe even the post-grunge style my brother likes. The music and lyrics revisit many of the earlier tracks, most notably the title track, "Let it all burn down, we'll be safe and sound".

I Disagree is a fine example of the experimental creativity Poppy has, expanding the boundaries of modern music. Although it's too poppy (no pun intended, maybe) for me to listen to on a regular basis, she deserves some great appreciation from fans. And we will disagree with the haters....

Favorites: "Concrete", "I Disagree", "Anything Like Me", "All the Things She Said", "Bite Your Teeth", "Don't Go Outside"

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Shadowdoom9 (Andi) Shadowdoom9 (Andi) / June 12, 2025 10:16 AM
Purulence Gushing From the Coffin

Stenched is a death metal solo project of Adrain Thule from Mexico who also plays grindcore as Impending Rot. Stenched, as you can perhaps deduce from the name, plays a style of cavernous death metal that is very much a throwback to the old-school. The gurgling vocals are pitched so low as to be almost inaudible, and are very laid back, being almost spoken rather than sung so lethargically are they delivered, reminding me a bit of the vocal approach on Demilich's "Nespithe".

The riffs are generally restricted to medium-paced chugs with the occasional quicker burst or slower crawl and the guitar sound involves a fair bit of distortion. There is little by way of soloing as such, but Thule's leadwork contains a certain degree of dissonance, without really committing fully to that direction of travel, so works more to add a layer of unease to the overall vibe. The drumming is perfectly fine and he shows himself to be more than capable behind the kit, with an efficient and unshowy style, handling sudden tempo changes just fine.

The production is probably a bit clearer than you might expect for this style of material, which feels like it would be happiest with a filthy and cavernous production job. But, to be fair, Thule seems content to allow sufficient clarity that he can't hide behind muddy production and so is willing to be judged on his ability to musically create that old-school atmosphere so beloved of many a death metal fan (like myself). To this end he does a commendable job and does serve up a filthy-sounding album, based on the foetid vocals and hulking, mouldering riffs rather than studio knob-twiddling and effects.

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Sonny Sonny / June 11, 2025 02:14 PM
Shrine

Another 2010s metalcore band that I have no remembrance of during my metal purge of the decade, and another who started out as deathcore before transitioning to a lighter shade of hardcore. Bands like Wage War and Make Them Suffer are near the bottom of the barrel in this regard and left me with a poor first impression entering Shrine. But what I was given was actually a really solid piece of 2nd wave melocore. This album is groovy; it has some really good riffs, the percussion is decent and not overwhelming in the overall mix, and while the vocals can be hit-or-miss, I really enjoyed the harsh vocal delivery of Scott Kennedy. Songwriting is closer to groove metal/melodic death metal most of the time, but Shrine employs breakdowns in a classic 1st wave melocore fashion; where the breakdown is a key component to the song and in most cases, is the foundation behind either the main chorus or a bridge. Texture wise, as mentioned before, the groove/melodic death metal palette means that Bleed From Within sound closer to a band like Orbit Culture as opposed to The Devil Wears Prada. But without the inclusion of those migraine inducing Inception sound effects as Orbit Culture did on Descent, that makes Shrine the superior album by a long shot!

After a while, the album does get rather tedious and starts to become more bland as Bleed From Within start to run out of unique ideas for this particular brand of melocore. But I do really enjoy the intensity of the album; a decent balance of aggression and melodic presence, which is seldom seen in mainstream metalcore these days...even more so if the band is one of those "deathcore turned metalcore" bands like Bleed From Within have become. So I do like this. It won't be a mainstay in my listening rotation, but I'll keep it around as a heavier change of pace, while also being a solid melodically driven record.

Best Songs: Sovereign, Flesh and Stone, Stand Down, I Am Damnation

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Saxy S Saxy S / June 10, 2025 02:28 PM
Court in the Act

The NWOBHM was a great time to be a heavy metal fan here in England but, in truth, many of the young bands doing the rounds had trouble translating their energetic live performances into recorded format. This meant that, outside of the obvious candidates like Iron Maiden, Saxon and a handful of others, there were very few really dynamic albums released in those years. This is not true of Satan however. Their 1983 debut had a heady velocity to it and their version of heavy metal, whether by accident or design I cannot say, leaned a lot more towards speed metal, occasionally even sounding a bit thrashy.

The production isn't exactly stellar, a trait that also hampered a lot of the NWOBHM, and the guitars for certain could have done with a bit more oomph and depth, sounding a little bit thin. This is a great shame because these riffs are actually pretty great, but even they are cast into the shade by the two gutarists' incendiary soloing. The vocals also suffer from production weakness and have something of a distant reverb-y tone. Top and bottom of it is that Court in the Act is an album of energetic and generally high tempo tracks with awesome guitar work and with a much better production job it would rightly be considered a NWOBHM classic alongside Lightning to the Nations, Wheels of Steel and Number of the Beast. Still, despite these issues it is still fairly obvious that this is an exciting and vibrant act going about their business of slaying audiences and listeners with their salvos of infectious, hi-octane heavy metal.

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Sonny Sonny / June 10, 2025 01:44 PM
Crimson

There is sometimes a danger that progressive metal becomes a bit too full of itself, tending towards the bloated and overblown, in a similar way that prog rock did in the 1970s. However, when it comes to producing an album with an overarching concept that requires a complex narrative arc, then the versatility of progressive metal is profoundly suited to achieving the aim. Where it works particularly well for me is when it is utilised as a storytelling tool by bands from the more extreme metal genres. Enslaved and Opeth are two particularly brilliant examples of this and more recently the like of Blood Incantation and Monolithe have taken that route with some pretty far-out sci-fi themes.

Now I only relatively recently came across Crimson, but it is an album that can confidently stand shoulder-to-shoulder with any of those previously mentioned. Taking a really solid grounding in swedish melo-death with some terrifically memorable riffs and a chunky guitar sound, then drawing on more diverse progressive elements, both instrumentally and songwriting-wise, there is a genuine feeling of a story unfolding and of the listener taking a journey with the band throughout the tale. As a single, forty-minute track, there is always a danger of either being too monolithic or too complicated, but repeating motifs ensure the listener remains connected and the track has a feeling of consistency, whilst still driving itself forward. The actual concept itself is a pretty bonkers sci-fi story, but that isn't really the point.

In truth Crimson isn't overly proggy and this is still, at its heart, a melodic death metal album, but the gentle, reflective moments, complete with those impressively recognisable Mikael Akerfeldt clean vocals and the gothic interjections that sound like Andrew Eldritch is guesting, provide a satisfying contrast to the death metal riffs. Technically the performances are great, and the songwriting is not a sterile exercise in tech-death precision, but is warm, human and relatable. This is one of the most enjoyable progressive metal albums I have heard, with enough hooks to make even a forty-minute track memorable, enough riffs to satisfy that underlying death metal craving and contrasting tonal shifts via the use of disparate elements from outside of metal to make it a more emotionally engaging listen.

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Sonny Sonny / June 10, 2025 12:53 PM
Crowbar

NOLA Sludge Masters Crowbar play down-tuned crushing riffs and sing about the lows of life. They are incredibly consistent in terms of sound and theme, so if you've heard Crowbar this is more of the same. This album contains a truckload of great songs, with "High Rate Extinction", "All I Had (I Gave)", "Will that Never Dies", a cover of Led Zepplin's "No Quarter", "Existence is Punishment", and "I Have Failed" standing slightly above the other very good tracks.

Crowbar is what I would describe as "Survivor" music-often times the lyrics are discussing the internal thoughts of person battling some kind of immense personal obstacle, be that depression, addiction, anxiety, self-doubt, etc. What makes it special is that while the lyrics are often downer in nature, the music symbolizes the strength to survive these situations. I use the word survive rather than overcome because it's an important distinction, whereas another band or artist would make the song about overcoming a hardship, or defeating a problem, Crowbar acknowledge that sometimes you don't overcome, sometimes you just deal, and sometimes you even fail-but this does not make a weak man, and it's in that message that Crowbar becomes something much more real, and therefore much more inspirational than the fairy-tale another artist might present. You put Crowbar on when you're going through hell. Crowbar is strength in sonic form.

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ZeroSymbolic7188 ZeroSymbolic7188 / June 10, 2025 12:34 PM
Bloodlust

Released in 2017, ‘Bloodlust’ is the sixth studio album by rap metal band Body Count, the metal project formed by hip hop legend Ice-T. After an eight year hiatus, the band struck back with 2014’s ‘Manslaughter’, an album that was arguably the heaviest thing they’d ever put out, and instantly helped the band gain momentum with their return. This brings us to ‘Bloodlust’, which follows on exactly where its predecessor left off.

Once more pushing the boundaries with how heavy they can get, ‘Bloodlust’ is a non-stop assault of absolutely massive guitar riffs, rapid-fire lyrics spewing pure vitriol and frustration, all packed into 41 minutes of anger, aggression and political statements. 59 year-old Ice-T hasn’t mellowed with age, in fact, he sounds more pissed off than ever, rapping about crime, violence, corruption, and all the usual subjects that he’s been rapping about since the late 80’s, yet sadly, are still as relevant today as they ever were.

It’s insane how monstrously heavy this thing is. Having ramped up their sound and production to fit perfectly with the modern metal landscape, songs like ‘The Ski Mask Way’, ‘Civil War’, ‘All Hope is Lost’, ‘Black Hoodie’ and the title track itself, show a band who are pulling no punches and taking no prisoners. Particular highlight, ‘No Lives Matter’, is probably one of the best songs Body Count has ever written, probably one of their most relevant too. And along with guest appearances by the likes of Dave Mustaine and Max Cavalera, and a cover of the Slayer classic, ‘Raining Blood’, it’s clear that ‘Bloodlust’ is not for the faint of heart.

While there may be a couple of tracks I find fairly passable, overall, this is a very solid album from start to finish. Ice-T and co. have proven that they’re here to stay, and showing with ‘Bloodlust’ that 25 years since their debut, and getting heavier with each release, they still have plenty to say, and are just getting warmed up.


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MartinDavey87 MartinDavey87 / June 10, 2025 12:26 PM
None So Vile

If you want the fastest, most technical, and most brutal death metal available, and with songs that somehow still have hooks-this is it. In a word this album is EXCITING, there is never a dull moment. The needle drops and it just kicks your ass from start to finish. It also holds up to this day-this album doesn't sound dated, it still sounds like something from the future. Stand Out Tracks "Phobophile", and "Slit Your Guts". As viscous as it is, it also possesses the ability to convert the "I don't like death metal" naysayers. It's a masterpiece. 

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ZeroSymbolic7188 ZeroSymbolic7188 / June 10, 2025 12:11 PM
Odd Fellows Rest

If you've heard Crowbar before, then you know what you are getting here, it's NOLA sludge metal, and I would echo what I wrote in my review of Symmetry in Black. Crowbar write slow impossibly hefty riffs and sing about dealing with lows in life. The formula is incredibly consistent, and it's sublime music for weight lifting. This album is notable for containing "Planets Collide" which is considered by many to be the bands best song to date. However, for me it's all about "To Carry the Load". "...And Suffer as One", "It's all in the Gravity", and "New Man Born" are also bangers, but every track is great. Put this on when you need to get through some hard times, or just simply beat your current bench press max!

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ZeroSymbolic7188 ZeroSymbolic7188 / June 10, 2025 12:01 PM
Individual Thought Patterns

Chuck Schuldiner
Andy LaRoque
Steve DiGiorgio
Gene Hoglan

If you're a seasoned metalhead, I really need not say more, as this is arguably the most talented line up on a metal recording. I'd also add that Steve and Gene tour today in a tribute called "Death to All" along with Bobby Koelble and Max Phelps-go see this if you are able.


As for this album, put simply, it is a loaded roster playing a loaded setlist. Every second of this album is incredible and really needs to be heard to do it justice. Seriously, it's perfect music; Death metal with progressive elements, but never sacrificing a good song for technical display. It's great musicians working together to craft great music. This is how it should be done, and you absolutely need to get this into your ears if you haven't already.

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ZeroSymbolic7188 ZeroSymbolic7188 / June 10, 2025 11:53 AM
Keeper of the Seven Keys Part I

I suppose this one may be a bit of a surprise to anyone familiar with my aversion to european power metal, but I have always had a soft spot for this album. I still have my original vinyl copy I bought shortly after release and although I can't truthfully claim it has been out of its sleeve for a few years, I wouldn't ever part with it. The reason I bought it is that it isn't all soaring vocals, multi-layered keyboards and out of control guitar posturing that has become the standard for EUPM. No, this actually has some killer riffs and these are the backbone of the album upon which everything else is hung. Even the vocals aren't especially OTT, not being much more effusive than Bruce Dickenson and there is a welcome absence of synths. Side one is pretty good, but the one-two salvo of "Future World" and the epic "Halloween" which comprise most of side B are where things take off for me. "Future World" is catchy and anthemic, a real fist-pumper and then the discordant intro to "Halloween" introduces my favourite power metal song, bar none, with its thrashy riff and epic narrative style standing out from the crowd. I guess, at the end of the day, I am just as fond of a big old slab of cheese as much as the next guy!

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Sonny Sonny / June 10, 2025 09:32 AM
Servants of Sorcery

Fimbulwinter were a very short-lived early norwegian black metal band who split-up after releasing this, their sole official release. They were a trio that included bassist Skoll and drummer/guitarist Shagrath who went on to become long-term members of Arcturus and Dimmu Borgir respectively. This is some pretty raw early norwegian shit, with demo-level, lo-fi production values and some pretty basic songwriting. Yet, as is often the case with early black metal, it is also exhilharating and exciting as hell with a completely necro feel that just serves to increase the iciness of the material. Vocalist Necronos has a great line in demented screams and screeches that make it strange that he never showed up anywhere else when Fimbulwinter split. If you have a love for lo-fi early second wave black metal then this is a must hear.

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Sonny Sonny / June 10, 2025 09:31 AM
Leviathan

This was a pretty big thing when it came out twenty-odd years ago and Mastodon were touted all over the metal mags as the next big thing, except that, unlike most of the early 2000s metal press darlings, their music didn't suck. They took the abrasive anger and aggression of sludge metal and steerred it in a progressive direction, which gave it a much more technical edge. At this stage, this isn't fully blown progressive metal, it is still identifiably sludge metal with a guitar sound well familiar to fans of bands like Crowbar and the angry, shouted, hardcore-derived vocals we are used to. Yet, I am fairly sure, that sludge metal concept albums were fairly rare, unless they were about the misery and desperation of a life of drug addiction and poverty, certainly I can't recall any that were based on classic literature such as Herman Melville's Moby Dick, which is exactly what Leviathan is. Sum total is an intelligent, technically proficient, muscular and aggressive-sounding, remarkably ambitiously-written entry into sludge metal history that ultimately heralded in a new era for the genre, but which has rarely been bettered.

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Sonny Sonny / June 10, 2025 09:28 AM
Rust in Peace

Megadeth produced one of the great albums of the initial thrash metal wave in Peace Sells, but the follow-up was a bit patchy (although I probably like it a lot more than most 'deth heads) so Dave Mustaine was under a bit of pressure to deliver with Rust in Peace. That he managed to do in spades and in so doing delivered one of the most highly acclaimed albums in thrash metal. There are some of the most exciting, hi-octane thrash metal anthems ever written on here. "Holy Wars", "Hangar 18", "Tornado of Souls" and "Rust in Peace... Polaris" must be the envy of almost every thrash metal songwriter.

He is a mercurial character, Dave Mustaine, but when he is on fire then there are very few who can match him and on Rust in Peace he showed exactly what he was capable of and that is producing some of the best riffs and guitar solos in the whole of metal. I must confess Peace Sells is still the Megadeth album that means the most to me and is my go-to 'deth album, but Rust in Peace is nothing short of a phenomenon.

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Sonny Sonny / June 10, 2025 09:27 AM
God Luck and Good Speed

Cape Fear North Carolina's Weedeater, are one of my favorite bands, because they tap into a sort of rural anger that no other band captures quite the same way. This is not polished refined music, or high art of any kind. This taps into something more visceral. I'm a 36 year old man at the time of this writing, soon to be 37, and mostly happy with where I'm at in life, but there was once an extremely angry young man on a Nebraska Cattle farm who saw a lot of things, and had some feelings about it. Weedeater is the band to speak to that young man-again they simply understand rural frustration, and it comes through as the secret sauce to their formula. The formula is to take a given southern rock song, strip away anything finesse, technical, or pretty about it, distilling the raw essence of the almighty riff, channel this riff through an absolute wall of distortion, fuzz, and raw percussion, and then deliver a few carefully chosen lines through "Dixie" Dave Collins. Collins sounds like a cement mixer, his voice is raw, whiskey soaked, marijuana smoked, and gravely. He also one of the greatest front men to ever do it-an angrier, more eccentric, and aggressive Ronnie Van Zant, and one of the finest gentlemen I've ever smoked cigarettes with. Again you aren't going to get anything refined with Weedeater, but I actually think Dave is an underrated lyricist (Shep might write some too)-like a country singer he isn't going to give you metaphor, or surrealism, he's going to say exactly what needs to be said and nothing more, which I think is an art in and of itself.

Example from this album:

"Wish I could be like you all the time

Blind, deaf and dumb all goddamn day

But everybody needs just a little bit of downtime

So I'll just turn my back and walk away"

It's lyrics like that I feel in my veins more so than anything Dylan-esque.
 

 Every album is consistent. I chose this one because it has some of my favorite songs on it, and it's considered to date by many to be their best offering, but I listen to their whole discography. It's probably not for everybody, but it's exactly what I need.


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ZeroSymbolic7188 ZeroSymbolic7188 / June 09, 2025 06:55 PM
Leprosy
I like to think of this album as Scream Bloody Gore Part II. If you haven't heard that album go do that.
It's still a raw and brutal death metal album, but it has some new tricks. The music is a bit more adventurous, and the lyrics have gone from being graphic descriptions of death and dismemberment to something a bit more contemplative. Deadly Disease, Assisted Suicide, the toll of waging war are some of the topics in line here. If Scream Bloody Gore simply held up a picture of death and described it to us, Leprosy now asked us what it all meant? Importantly, one could forgo the hard questions and simply head bang to the incredibly catchy riffs. Putting Chuck's music into words will never do it justice, go listen to this stuff, experience it, feel it. 
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ZeroSymbolic7188 ZeroSymbolic7188 / June 09, 2025 06:27 PM
Scream Bloody Gore

For me personally, Chuck Schuldiner is the holy grail of heavy metal. I could never put into words how important his music is to me. 

Trying to rank the albums is an exercise in futility, with the exception that I do always have Spiritual Healing at the back of the pack. Ultimately I put this in the #1 slot because it was the first of it's kind, and thus get's the influence perk. I was also able to see Death to All (a modern tribute to Chuck featuring Steve and Gene-arguably the cream of the crop of Chuck's line-ups), that's a fabulous thing to witness, and is undoubtedly my all-time favorite concert experience to date. On the night I saw them, "Baptized in Blood" and "Zombie Ritual" just fuckin' hit different! This lead me to revisit the album yet again with a fresh lens. This whole album is just a ton of brutal fun. It's an all-time great. Sometimes people say the lyrics are juvenile, but I think that's just because of how much more introspective and philosophical Chuck would be in later offerings. I like the rawness of this thing, like another reviewer said, this is blue-collar heavy metal made to bang, and it does that better than maybe anything else. 

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ZeroSymbolic7188 ZeroSymbolic7188 / June 09, 2025 06:13 PM
Hellbilly Deluxe

Released in 1998, ‘Hellbilly Deluxe’ is the debut solo album by Rob Zombie, taking his first steps into a solo career after the disbandment of his former group, White Zombie. With plenty of horror overtones and imagery, and a huge-sounding production, giving the music an incredibly big, beefy sound, it’s a high-octane adrenaline ride of industrial and groove metal.

Well, the first few songs, anyway.

The album starts off with some absolute bangers, such as ‘Superbeast’, ‘Demonoid Phenomenon’, ‘Living Dead Girl’, and of course, the dance floor filler, ‘Dragula’. These are all fantastic songs that combine heavy grooves and thumping beats, and Rob’s instantly recognisable gravelly vocals are great for getting the listener pumped up. Overall, he has a great sound and style going on here. But it’s not to last.

Sadly, I find that after those few tracks, the album gets quite repetitive. I struggle not to zone out, but it feels like I’m hearing the same song over and over. Even the vocals, both melodies and lyrics, start to feel quite samey in every song. It’s frustrating, because the album starts on such a high, but from the midway point, my interest just seems to vanish.

There are a few songs with weird vocal effects or some such tomfoolery, as well as some “interlude” songs, and none of these inspire me to pay closer attention. And it’s a shame, because I am a Rob Zombie fan, and while ‘Hellbilly Deluxe’ generally seems pretty well-received, I just can’t seem to enjoy it all the way through. Regardless, if the first few songs are anything to go by, Mr. Zombie’s solo career should be an exciting ride, and I look forward to checking out his next album!


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MartinDavey87 MartinDavey87 / June 09, 2025 04:52 PM
Live... One Nation Underground

This is a fantastic live EP by forgotten nu metal quartet the Union Underground. Released in 2002, it features six tracks and flies by in 20 minutes, but it’s an adrenaline-packed 20 minutes that doesn’t let up for a moment.

The Union Underground only ever released one album, 2000’s ‘…An Education in Rebellion’, and that was literally one anthem after another, and this live performance perfectly reflects that, with the band smashing through a number of songs, full of energy and youthful vigour. They should have gone so much further than they did.

The sound is really good, the performances are tight, and the set list is great, including such bangers as ‘South Texas Deathride’, ‘Killing the Fly’, ‘Revolution Man’ and their biggest hit, ‘Turn Me On. Mr. Deadman’, but overall, this EP isn’t really worth owning unless you’re a big fan of the band. Their only studio album is an absolute gem from the nu metal scene at the turn of the century, and it’s cheap enough too, so just get that instead.


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MartinDavey87 MartinDavey87 / June 09, 2025 04:47 PM
Tyr

Black Sabbath, with Ozzy as frontman, birthed and popularised metal for so many of us old metalheads and Dio helped to resurrect the tottering giants from the terminal decline into which their drug-ravaged delusions had pitched them, delivering a couple of indisputable all-time metal classics in the process. So, come on people, revisionism can only go so far and to consider the Tony Martin era with anything like the same degree of respect as the Ozzy and Dio eras is disingenuous at best. But, that said, it is what it is and these albums still have the world's finest riff master plying his trade and no amount of awful 80s-style over-production can disguise that fact. On the odd occasion when I do listen to albums from this Sabbath era, I do my best to strip away the production in my mind, so I'm not hearing something akin to awful AOR shite like Journey or Foreigner, but getting down to the pure heart of the record and that is Iommi's impeccable ability to write riffs. To be fair, none of this is Tony Martin's fault and I have nothing against the guy per se and, in truth, he is a gifted singer who doesn't sound all that different to Dio as a quick listen to "The Law Maker" will attest - shut your eyes and it could be the diminutive one himself throwing horns left and right!

But, I will never believe that layered keyboards and harmonised backing vocals have any place on a Sabbath record and on a track like Jerusalem they are a bridge too far, especially when coupled with one of the weakest riffs Iommi has ever written, then it is a big ask for me to get too heavily behind it. The best tracks here are the ones that are recognisably continuations from previous band iterations, "The Sabbath Stones", "Anno Mundi" and "Valhalla" would all have sat comfortably on Heaven and Hell or Mob Rules, if not for the production equivalent of 1980's big hair and shoulder pads.

So, in summation, for me this is an album with a fistful of decent tracks, alongside a couple of duffers, dragged down by a production sound that, whilst beefing up the guitar tone, throws the drums way too much to the fore in a way that has become decidedly dated. Overuse of layered keyboards and harmonised backing vocals irritate me at the best of times, but on a Black Sabbath album this is totally indefensible to me. I can't hate this, because underneath it all the riffs reign supreme, but I will never love it either.

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Sonny Sonny / June 08, 2025 09:54 PM
Violence Prevails

With half an hour or so to kill on a Sunday morning, a thrash record was a perfect fit. A Costa Rican thrash metal in fact, and a none too shabby effort to boot. Having listened to probably a handful of thrash metal at best this year so far, Chemicide with their brazen artwork and equally bold thrash metal made for a welcome breeze through my lugholes this morning. With Costa Rica not being the hotbed of thrash metal of say Chile, it was interesting to hear some quality beyond the borders and shores of that ever increasingly impressive thrash metal nation.

Full of commentary and judgement on social injustice and violence, the band’s fifth full length offering has some real bruising rhythms and cutting edges to those riffs. With vocals straight out of the Mille Petrozza playbook, there’s a solid nod back to the foundations of the sub-genre on display. Placed alongside the racing riffs in the style of Slayer, with equally chaotic solos a la King and Hanneman at the peak of their powers also, Violence Prevails soon makes a name for itself. The drums and rhythm combination often reminds me of Sepultura in their Arise/Chaos A.D. days (that ringing guitar melody on ‘Parasite’ helps also).

The production job permits fullness to the sound across the instrumentation, with only the bass struggling for a bit of space. It is still audible though, just battling away in the background. Listen intently enough and you can hear it plonking away beneath the barrage of riffs that lead the attack for the most part. As you would hope it to be, the title track is a fucking blast end-to-end. This is what a title track should always do; totally underpin the album ethos in one succinct and well-placed moment on the record. With the energy levels already high going into the mid-point of the record, placing a banger in the center is key to advertising the longevity, or peak of the record.

Thankfully, what follows on from the title track represents no dip in energy or quality. If anything, tracks such as the franticly paced ‘Chokehold’ only up the ante on the record. This is not to say that Chemicide just focuses on face-melting intensity to get their message across. I mean, yes, it is an integral part of proceedings, this cannot be denied. However, the band controls the pace and tempos well, without sacrificing the intensity for the most part. The only real cooling-off section is during ‘Supremacy’ with its bass and picked strings opening, which soon give way to chopping riffs as the track builds superbly.

Closing the record with two (three if you have the corresponding version of the album) covers is a move that leaves me lukewarm in comparison to the rest of the record. I have never heard of Los Crudos and so cannot possibly know what justice Chemicide does to the track they cover. Metallica’s ’72 Seasons’ is a track I am vaguely familiar with after I sat through the abomination of the record that the track comes from, and, well…glitter on a turd is a phrase that springs to mind. I won’t let this unfortunate ending ruin what is otherwise a great discovery though, as a standalone record, with their own material, Chemicide are impressive.


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Vinny Vinny / June 08, 2025 09:47 AM
We the People

Released in 2017, ‘We the People’ is the third studio album by American groove metal band Adrenaline Mob. Following on from previous outings, it’s full of massive-sounding, energetic, fist-pumping anthems of a very high standard. While the band was originally considered a supergroup when they first formed (they still are, somewhat…), it’s pretty obvious by this point that the core of the band is vocalist Russell Allen (of Symphony X fame), and guitarist Mike Orlando.

Not that that’s a bad thing, as these two have fantastic writing chemistry. Orlando’s absolutely furious guitar playing is insane, and Allen has one of the most incredible voices ever. Sounding extremely “metal”, yet able to drop emotion in on a whim, both of their styles fit really well.

As for the music, yeah, it’s pretty similar to everything they’ve released before, but why fix what isn’t broken? It’s heavy, groovy and melodic, and an amazing production gives it the massive, beefy sound that it deserves. Highlights include ‘King of the Ring’, ‘Raise ‘Em Up’, ‘We the People’, ‘The Killer’s Inside’, ‘Bleeding Hands’ and ‘Chasing Dragons’, but, to be honest, the whole album is just brimming with bangers, and each track flows into the next effortlessly.

Overall, ‘We the People’ is another fantastic record by one of the most underrated metal bands of the 2010’s. Everything about this album, from the songs, the production, even the artwork and the imagery, all fall perfectly into place, and if you like your music heavy (and you’d better, if you’re listening to this), then this is definitely an album worth owning.


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MartinDavey87 MartinDavey87 / June 07, 2025 04:18 PM
VI: Revelation

I think now's a good time for me to fill you in on a brief history of Fear of Domination. The Finnish "shock" industrial melodeath band was formed in 2006 by vocalist Saku Solin, bassist Lauri Ojanen, and guitarist Jan-Erik Kari. These 3 original members would carry on with the band while the other two, guitarist/keyboardist Marko Salmikangas and drummer Jaakko Arteli would leave early on. It was Lauri who came up with the band name, stemming from one of the first (and best) songs they've written, similarly to how the more popular Finnish metal band Nightwish got their name. Since then, many lineup changes would occur, most notably the addition of female vocalist Sara Strömmer, originally a live member but has since joined the band full-time, performing co-lead vocals alongside Saku.

VI: Revelation is the second album with Sara and would end up being their last with her. On the same month as its release, December 2021, she started taking time off for maternity leave and ultimately left the band to focus on family life. That's too bad because I consider her one of the most energetic female vocalist modern rock/metal besides Linkin Park's new lead vocalist Emily Armstrong. At least we can still hear her cleans and screams for one more album. As for the music, while it still has that heavy energy they always have, their sound is no longer industrial melodeath. It's more like trance-metalcore in a similar vein to Amaranthe...

"Exitus" is where the band makes their entrance by tearing things apart with the usual electro-trance beats and heavy/melodic blend with a massive chorus. Now that's the starting track I wish the previous two albums had! "Dive Into I" has energetic groove. And don't forget the catchy melodic chorus! "Inner Lies" starts with the sample that begins Strapping Young Lad's "Home Nucleonics" ("The beat starts here"). The song is a shredtastic highlight with more of those heavy verses and melodic chorus.

"Formless Ones" has soft melancholy without sacrificing the heaviness. "Rust" has heavier strength in the riffs and vocals, along with more of those dance-y beats. The chorus would certainly be suitable for a dance party, while the music continues to have that wall-smashing power. "Manifest" punches through in the music and vocals.

"Amongst Gods" has more straight rhythms. Massive chords enhance the melodic chorus, alongside the synths and vocals. "Home" is still heavy in the guitars and vocals but they experiment with unusual aspects like film-score orchestra and rapping. "The Greatest Harmony" has good heavy groove. The sing-along chorus adds to the variation. "They All Want Me to Die" is so heavy and trance-y in the instrumentation, fitting well with the vocals including a bit of choir singing at the end. The perfect ending storm!

I'm aware that experimental industrial-ish trance-metalcore isn't for everyone. So it's best to take small steps with other bands before getting here. And in the end, you'll have a f***ing whale of a time. Rock on and party on....

Favorites: "Exitus", "Inner Lies", "Rust", "Amongst Gods", "They All Want Me to Die"

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Shadowdoom9 (Andi) Shadowdoom9 (Andi) / June 07, 2025 01:09 PM
Metanoia

Fear of Domination's 5th album Metanoia marked another different era for the band. Anyone with prominent knowledge of this band would know that keyboardist Niina Telén has sung occasional background vocals in their first two albums. Then she was replaced by Lasse Raelahti while Helena Haaparanta performed guest vocals in their next two albums and was a live member. And now enter Sara Strömmer! With her strong powerful voice, the band decided to add her to the full-time lineup.

As for the music itself, this is still the same industrial-ish melodeath as before. And I don't mind because I dig this kind of music. So what we have in Metanoia is another solid offering, albeit with a new kick-A co-lead vocalist.

Starting track "Dance with the Devil" starts off similarly to the previous album Atlas, as it's not the strongest way to begin. Nonetheless, we're introduced to Sara's shouts that would make you stick around for the rest of the album. Next track "Obsession" greatly pushes the music and vocals forward, with both vocalists having their time to shine. I enjoy the clean and harsh vocals as well as the otherworldly soloing. A true highlight! "Face of Pain" comes up next, and it follows up the previous track very well. The energy is kept up in this aggressive highlight. From the intro onwards, a layered melody appears in different forms to implant itself into your mind. Riffs, electronics, and beats flow with the vocals to make such a coherent standout. "Sick and Beautiful" has more that powerful energy.

This metal party is put on hold in "Shame". Its slow melancholy shows a new side of Fear of Domination listeners didn't hear before. "Lie" takes us back to the band's usual sound. It's enjoyable but doesn't stand out as much as the rest of the album. It's not a filler track, though it is close. I originally didn't think "We Dominate" like I wasn't sure if listening to this more would be suitable for me. However, when I gave this another spin for the sake of this review, I actually like it a lot more! The energy that somehow sailed over my mind in my first listen can really get the live crowd. And the motivational lyrics fit well for when I successfully convinced myself to give it a second chance. Perfect!

"The Last Call" follows as another strong standout. The great vocals and catchy chorus will be embedded in your mind. "Mindshifter" also has a catchy chorus and cool keys. Smooth melodies are in great contrast with the heavy riffing. I'm not sure about that ending though. The finale "Ruin" is the absolute best highlight here! It's one of the most experimental tracks by the band, starting off doomy before exploding into a ballad when some Apocalyptica-like cellos and jazzy magic. So different yet a perfect way out!

Metanoia continues the killer talents of Fear of Domination. Almost every track is a spectacular one suitable for both a metal concert and a dance-club. So put this record on and get ready to both dance and rock!

Favorites: "Obsession", "Face of Pain", "We Dominate", "The Last Call", "Ruin"

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Shadowdoom9 (Andi) Shadowdoom9 (Andi) / June 07, 2025 01:09 PM
Atlas

You can barely find any disappointment from Fear of Domination and their industrial melodeath sound. Heavy riffs and dance-y synths are what you can expect from this hybrid of genres. The keyboards might take some time to get used to, just like it did for me albeit quickly. The "shocking" aesthetics also show that the band is not afraid to have some fun in the serious realms in metal. What else can ask you for from this cool band?!

Actually I would ask for a little more of their earlier industrial side since some of it is dropped off for a dark-ish atmosphere that wasn't entirely present in Distorted Delusions. That's been used greatly in a few songs in that album, and now it's used more in Atlas. Though a few songs ignore that and give the album a back and forth vibe.

"Misery" is an interesting intro that reminds me of some of Avatar's softer moments. Then "Divided" starts, and while that one's still great, it's not how I want the album to begin. Saku Solin shouts out his vocals in a rap-ish tone with an occasional "Suck it! Suck it!". But I like the melodic chorus with subtle choir. That's the Fear of Domination I remember from Create.Control.Exterminate! Then we have the energetic "Primordial" with its headbanging beat. The synth helps give the metal instrumentation more life. Those keys shine in the spotlight while the guitars are comfortable in the backstage, relaxing in the verses then unleashing all its power in the chorus. Majestic! "Colossus" continues the industrial machinery with dark thrash-ish rhythms. Riffs and synths make a punishing interplay.

For "El Toro", I love the soloing that's a rarity for this album. However, the keys have a bit of wasted potential. "Carnival Apocalypse" is more apocalyptic-sounding. Although it's mostly melodic, there's some heaviness that almost comes out as a cyber/industrial Fleshgod Apocalypse. We also have some vocal variety in "Messiah".

"Adrenaline" sounds more mainstream, but it actually makes the album's ultimate highlight. Metallic riffing and galactic keys shine brighter than the sun. Perhaps one of the most memorable anthemic tracks they've ever done! But then it leads to the title track that doesn't have the same action. The final track "Final Transmission" hits hard and has some background female-sung beauty. It came close to being the ultimate highlight before the aforementioned "Adrenaline" took the throne.

There are very few flaws here and they're so small that they're overshadowed by the enjoyable majority of the album. Lots of intense action that blends heaviness and melody. Fear of Domination continues to impress me and should really catch on with the rest of the world!

Favorites: "Primordial", "Colossus", "Carnival Apocalypse", "Adrenaline", "Final Transmission"

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Shadowdoom9 (Andi) Shadowdoom9 (Andi) / June 07, 2025 01:09 PM
Requiem Tenebrae

For an album released in 2004 this has some serious early second wave credibility, which is not so surprising when you discover that despite only releasing their debut album Light of a Dead Star in 2002, they had originally formed in '92 (although they had split in '95 after releasing a demo which would later become that debut, ultimately reforming in 2000). There's a Lovecraftian aesthetic theme running through the album with it's songs of unknown threats and elder gods and in keeping with the creeping terrors of HPL's work, this isn't a monotonous blastathon, but rather, the band isn't afraid to slow it down and allow the music to reflect that crawling feeling of dread. For proof check out the superb The Elder Gods Awakening, the claustrophobic feeling of being stalked by an unnamed terror is excellently realised as you feel the darkness closing in. Don't misunderstand however, when it blasts it really kicks ass too, believe me. The first half of In the Mists of Orion's Sword is as taut as a piano wire and may well tear your fuckin' head off (fans of Darkthrone's classic trilogy prepare to salivate!)

Although black metal is viewed as foremost a Scandinavian phenomenon, the French have certainly carved out an impressive niche for themselves within it's boundaries and Requiem Tenebrae is a great example of Gallic BM. This is the very definition of an underground classic and I'm gonna give it an unapologetic 5/5.

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Sonny Sonny / June 07, 2025 12:54 PM
Holy Diver

One guy who will need no introduction here is the diminutive legend that is Ronnie James Dio. After his stint as frontman for Rainbow and being one of the very few guys who could replace the irreplaceable Ozzy in Sabbath, RJD decided he had had enough of being told what to do and say by other people and so launched his own "solo" band. The first fruits of Ronnie's new-found independence was Holy Diver and I think it is fair to say it is a classic of 80s heavy metal. With fist-pumping, horns-raising riffs and infectious choruses this is anthemic stuff that has become synonymous with RJD, alongside fantasy lyrics about gypsies, rainbows and low-level occultism.

Even though this is undoubtedly Dio's show, he also surrounded himself with very talented musicians, who crucially wouldn't steal his thunder, in fellow former Sabbath bandmate Vinnie Appice, ex-Rainbow bassist Jimmy Bain and young guitarist Vivian Campbell. If you enjoy Ronnie's larger-than-life version of heavy metal (and who doesn't) then there are some belters on here; "Stand Up and Shout", "Don't Talk to Strangers", "Rainbow in the Dark" and the title track are all bona fide, horns-raising eighties' metal staples guaranteed to lift the heart and bring a smile to the face of any old metalhead.

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Sonny Sonny / June 07, 2025 05:15 AM
Flame Within Flame

With the arrival of a new Sargeist record in any given year, you can usually bank on this being a sign that the scene just stepped up a notch at that point in the year. In short, it is something I always consider to be a treat. It has been seven years since Unbound mauled our eardrums and if I am honest, I completely missed the following year’s EP, Death Veneration, so I do have some catching up to do. Flame Within Flame arrives in a year of strong releases so far and so quite how it fits into the year will be interesting to watch unfold in the coming months. There have been some lineup changes since the last record also, with Shatraug taking over vocal duties on a studio album for the first time since 2003 (‘frowning, Existing’ from Satanic Black Devotion). With Marko Hirvonen no longer on bass, it is up to Spellgoth (Horna) to fill this role, and the sticks are now in the hands of Decapitated Christ drummer, Alewar. Therefore, only VJS (Nightbringer) joins Shatraug from the previous album.

Has this shake up changed how Sargeist sound? Well not fundamentally no. this is still easily identifiable as the rich tremolo wielding, melodic black metal that we have all come to expect from Sargeist over the years. At the same time though, I do sense some loss of intensity in some moments. Shatraug’s disinterested sounding vocals take some getting used to in the main, but I still feel overall that proceedings are dialled down when compared with previous releases. This tame element could be down to a refreshed (rebuilt?) lineup of course but on the plus side there are many genuinely glorious moments to digest as well.

Tracks such as ‘Incandescence of the Funeral’ open with such a strong driving, melodic bm beginning that sees the band at their urgent and racing best. With a pace akin to racing horses, Sargeist do still have gas in the tank, that much is clear. It is increasingly questionable as the album goes on as to whether Shatraug has the vocal style to be able to compete with the rest of the group though. Whilst I cannot say that they make for a terrible listening experience, they certainly do go some way in acting as a distraction from some of the better executed elements of the record.

Still, listeners should take time to revel in the chiming majesty of the guitar on ‘To the Mistress of Blackened Magic’ as it dances like the darkest of incantations imaginable. Likewise, ‘Juravit Sanguine’ is another fine example of the rich melodic vein that runs through the band’s sound. This track is almost catchy; such is the level of accessibility here. So, all in all, a mixed affair if I am honest. Not their best, but then again instability is a cruel mistress it seems.


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Vinny Vinny / June 06, 2025 08:24 PM
Desert Psalms

The chaos of Deathspell Omega lies at the very heart of what Portuguese black metallers, Serpentes ply as their trade. Whilst a lot less extreme in terms of the Avant Garde aspects of the sound, Desert Psalms still blusters with that dissonant majesty and imperious arrogance that seethes from the vocals. Reminiscent of Aosoth also about the vocals, there is a deep French connection running through what this (largely) one-man outfit does. Utilising Misþyrming’s drummer on the album is a definite boost to the professionalism on display, Magnús Skúlason puts in quite the shift here, even if you do have to listen intently to pick out his patterns in the frantic noise that smothers you from the off. All that having been said, I find Desert Psalms to be a very memorable experience and can easily recite sections of songs in my head. That’s the sign of a good album.

Fact is, this record has been kicking around my rotation list for a good few weeks now and there is a healthy number of listens under my belt on this one, given it has enjoyed at least one spin per week over the last two months. It is certainly an album that has benefited from repeat visits, with each trip into its darkest depths leaving me curious to come back for more each time. It is a record that I would say I hear more of each time I listen to it. At the same time, it now possesses a strong degree of familiarity also. Those mocking vocals are sublime to my ears each time they spit their derisory lyrics my way. The layers of riffs that dash at me like flicked knives bring welcome wounds as they breach my skin. All the while, the constant threat of something really unhinged getting ready to be unleashed keeps my nerves just on the edge of turmoil every time.

This promised menace never really surfaces, and that is okay, because it is part of the allure that I absolutely crave. If this album swung off into any aspect of total Armageddon inducing audible warfare, then it would lose all its mystery. Thankfully, Ainvar Ara plays his cards close to his chest for the main part, drawing out the tension with the piano key picked opening to the final track, teasing the listener until the very end. Overall, Desert Psalms does feel like a collection of sacred songs. A selection of anthems for followers of the darkest of art forms. A series of canticles for all that is unholy in the glorious world of black metal in which fans of the music inhabit.


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Vinny Vinny / June 05, 2025 08:25 PM
Live Shit: Binge & Purge

Originally released in 1993, ‘Live Shit: Binge & Purge’ is an audio and visual tour de force of live music by Metallica. During the absolute peak of their world tour for 1991’s ‘Metallica’, they released a monstrous box set featuring three different concerts, two on video (later DVD, thankfully) and one on three CD’s.

Having become worldwide megastars with their 1991 self-titled release, the band would go on to tour the world, multiple times for over a staggering three years. Which brings us to the CD’s and the first DVD; the live album part of it is from a show in Mexico City, whilst the DVD is of a similar show from San Diego. Both concerts are fantastic, with excellent performances, sound, and in the case of the DVD, great picture. However, one major downside is the endless “noodling” and messing around between songs.

Yeah, it’s come to be expected, and is pretty harmless enough, but there’s so many random solo spots, messing around, jams, and countless other bits of shameless banter, that after a while, it does wear a bit thin. At one point, there’s 20 minutes of tomfoolery before they start another song, and during ‘Seek and Destroy’ James interacts with the crowd for over ten minutes. It’s fun at first, but after repeated listens, it does get quite boring fast.

Then there’s the second DVD, filmed in Seattle and taken from the bands 1989 tour in support of ‘…And Justice For All’, and this is a fantastic concert. This was a great time for the band as they were still “on the way up”. The playing is incredibly tight, the sound and picture are excellent, especially given the age of the footage, and with a great set list to boot, this random addition to the box set makes it totally worthwhile.

Everyone performs brilliantly on all three concerts. Even Lars, bless him, far from the best drummer in the world, but his boundless enthusiasm and excitement is infectious, and Jason Newsted’s copious amounts of energy makes me sad for how things turned out for him. With around nine hours of content, ‘Live Shit…’ is certainly not for the faint of heart, but overall, any detriments aside, this is an absolute beast of a box set, and truly belongs in every Metallica fans collection.


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MartinDavey87 MartinDavey87 / June 05, 2025 04:46 PM
Silver Knife

One of the appeals of black metal music (beyond some of the rawer aesthetic stuff at least) is the sense of discovering some depth to the sound of a band, beyond mere tremolo riffs and blastbeats. This sense of the revealing of the arcane is what drives me in a lot of my listening nowadays. I should caveat that is not always a successful venture, for example this year alone I have been privy to a salsa infused black metal band (yes, really) which was absolutely every bit as awful as the description sounds, as well as another group who used a 10 string lyre as a centre-piece of their sound – equally as terrible as the other record, for the benefit of doubt. There is a point clearly then, where the understanding of something being better left to a select few is absolutely the best idea. The problem lies in releases where there are no jarring abnormalities to the sound, no obscure instrumentation or extreme Avant Garde tendencies. The ones that have a clear sound and direction, yet, despite the obvious quality of the musicians involved, still leave you with a sense of some barrier between you as the listener and the band as a message bearer.

Silver Knife’s self-titled album, their sophomore release, is one such release. Hailing from Belgium, France and the Netherlands, this supergroup of black metal ‘stars’ (Olmo Lipani of Déhà, Nicky from Laster, Hans Cools from Hypothermia are amongst the artists involved) play an atmospheric/post-black metal combination that constantly seems to be creating space as they play. Songs soon become soundscapes here, with the vocals of whichever one of the secretive five members overall is performing them giving the truer aspect of the black metal sound alongside the resonating tremolo riffs. Occupying an almost squally, alternative sounding edge at times, the guitars do an excellent job at driving the sound of Silver Knife along. The drumming is urgent, if not somewhat lost at times in the squall of the mix in general. As I am listening through to the album for the third time today, I think I have happened upon what holds me back from feeling like I have truly connected with the offering. I think the production job permits the guitar a little too much space at the expense of the drums and other parts of the sound in general.

There is almost a protective cover most of the instrumentation on this record that stops the real value of what I am hearing from quite landing. The vocal style reminds me of Fluisteraars, with that distance from them and the rest of everything else being very reminiscent of the style I experienced on many of the excellent releases from the Belgians. However, here the vocals do not quite attain the same sense of connection as a result, whereas with the former band the audible link feels much more solid. In fact, there’s a slight muffled edge to the sound here and that is a real shame because I absolutely can hear that Silver Knife have something important to say, it is just denied from being given its full voice.


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Vinny Vinny / June 05, 2025 12:52 PM