Review by Shadowdoom9 (Andi) for Worm Shepherd - The Sleeping Sun (2023) Review by Shadowdoom9 (Andi) for Worm Shepherd - The Sleeping Sun (2023)

Shadowdoom9 (Andi) Shadowdoom9 (Andi) / June 01, 2025 / 0

Worm Shepherd had their way of triumph with their second album Ritual Hymns, but this epic deathcore band from Massachusetts would end up losing half its lineup. Only two founding members remain, Devin Duarte on vocals and Tre Purdue on guitars, both determined to continue their blend of orchestral beauty and metallic brutality.

This epic blackened deathcore style has been popularized in this decade by Lorna Shore. It's a brilliant mix because I can get the symphonic black metal elements of Cradle of Filth and Dimmu Borgir without going heavily satanic and it shows that deathcore doesn't have to be entirely brutal. And here we are at Worm Shepherd's EP The Sleeping Sun! The guitars and orchestration appearing together are so mesmerizing, and while Leo McClain is out, temporary replacement Alex Nourse nails the drumming precision.

The opening epic "The Frozen Lake, Pt. II (The Ruined)" is the sequel to the debut's "The Frozen Lake". It starts off with slow doomy deathcore then speeds up gradually, save for a couple breakdowns and soft breaks. And there's more of their slam side in "The Broken Earth" while having some symphonic magic. "The Tortured Path" is just straight-up downtempo deathcore demolition. The best place for atmosphere and melody is the highlight "The Dying Heavens", all the while having blackened brutality. Purdue's guitar talents reach high levels of strength there. "The Parting Sea" throws in some melodeath from Be'lakor and Disarmonia Mundi albeit in a slower crushing pace.

Worm Shepherd continues their symphonic blackened deathcore in their very own And I Return to Nothingness, although it can't beat the glory of that Lorna Shore EP and Ritual Hymns. Worm Shepherd would continue with a different lineup for live shows and next album Hunger. Still, two heads are better than one as the two main members can easily pull off both the blackened and downtempo sides of deathcore well. So get ready for a half-hour haunting rage under the sleeping sun and the blood moon!

Favorites: "The Frozen Lake, Pt. II (The Ruined)", "The Broken Earth", "The Dying Heavens"

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