Daniel's Forum Threads

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Daniel

Ben, please add Aussie thrashers Cromok, Critical Mass, Betrayer, Neophobia & Fatal Array.

172
Daniel

What I meant was that "World Extermination" is about as grindcore as grindcore gets with the dial wound firmly up to eleven so if you're not all in with the genre then you may struggle with it.

37
Daniel


 I don't think it's a terrible release but it's simply not one that I get much pleasure out of so I've never been able to understand why most fans place it ahead of the other early Manowar releases. 3/5

Quoted Daniel

Simply put, production issues aside (and I do agree that the guitars are underwhelming), for me the songs are better. Well, better than Battle Hymns anyway, I don't recall having heard Into Glory Ride, though. I actually like how the bass rules the roost on Hail to England, weird I know, but true all the same.

99
Daniel

Rhythm & Sound - "See Mi Yah" (2005)

The fourth & final CD I purchased from this incredible German artist during the 2000's is a compilation of vinyl releases from the period. The interesting thing is that all of them come with basically the same backing track, only with slight variations in the arrangements & different Jamaican vocalists who each take different lyrical & melodic directions. And boy does it work too! I could honestly listen to that backing track in isolation for the entire duration of this release to tell you the truth as it puts me into a level of relaxation that I rarely achieve. Highlight tracks like "Lightning Storm", "See Mi" & "Free For All" are some of Rhythm & Sound's very best material, although I do think that their previous releases are just slightly better than this one which sees them abandoning their techno roots for a pure dub & roots reggae sound.

For fans of Babe Roots, Frenk Dublin & Deepchord Presents: Echospace.

4.5/5

5
Daniel


I've always quite liked "Ample Destruction" but don't ever really feel the urge to return to it. It's a 3.5-star record for me personally.

Quoted Daniel

I think I have had a bit of a sea change in my attitude towards traditional heavy metal sub-genres over the past few months. I have been finding the sheer unrelenting intensity of extreme metal rather wearying and even downright exhausting at times and have been quite enjoying the less draining experience of listening to traditional metal styles.

Don't get me wrong, I'm not going to be walking away from extreme metal any time soon, but it is nice to listen to something that is a contrast to the unwithering intensity sometimes and to balance it all out in my head. I don't have much interest in looking outside the metal sphere for a change anymore, so trad metal is providing the respite I feel I need when I need it.


19
Daniel

Unfortunately, my old Darkthrone "Transilvanian Hunger" long-sleeve now has enormous holes in the elbows & I've finally laid it to rest so that I receive the sheer joy of replacing it with another awesome band shirt.

5
Daniel

Saint Etienne - "Foxbase Alpha" (1991)

The debut album from this London-based trio offers a broad array of easy-listening, springtime vibes from a whole slew of different subgenres, from alternative dance to downtempo to UK street soul. The fifteen-song tracklisting is highly inconsistent but, when Saint Etienne get it right, they can hit some serious peaks, as seen in atmospheric EDM highlight "Stoned to Say the Least" & downtempo gem "Like the Swallow". Unfortunately, there are some noticeable periods of lethargy, particularly on the B side, which takes away some of the gloss while vocalist Sarah Cracknell isn't exactly a star which doesn't help. There's certainly enough to keep me interested though.

For fans of Stereolab, The Avalanches & Broadcast.

3.5/5

11
Daniel

Here you are Sonny:

Firtan - "Innenschatten" (from "Innenwelt", 2016)

Heltekvad - "Ærbødig er den som sejrer" (from "Morgenrødens Helvedesherre", 2022)

Pillorian - "By the Light of a Black Sun" (from "Obsidian Arc", 2017)

Agastus - "Black Moon's Blood" (from "Dawn of Martyrdom", 1996)

Dimmu Borgir - "Ulvgjeld & blodsodel" (from "Grand Serpent Rising", 2026)

Serpent Lord - "Constrictor" (from "The Once Forgotten Ways of Old", 2026)


257
Daniel

Dozens of different rip-offs/coincidences between metal bands and other artists compiled in one video (including the hilarious Septicflesh/Meowmix comparison):


80
Daniel

Grief - "Dismal" compilation (1992)

Boston's Grief are one of my favourite exponents of filthy sludge metal, particularly their 1994 debut album "Come to Grief" which I regard as being a genuinely classic metal record. I've also really enjoyed their 1992 "Dismal" E.P. this year which has led me to check out this compilation release which draws that release together with their 1992 self-titled E.P. & their two tracks from the 1993 split single with Californian sludgers Dystopia (both of which I was previously unfamiliar). Needless to say that this collection makes for a formidable listening experience too with all three releases offering some very solid & ultra-heavy material. If I had to pick, I'd suggest that the tracks taken from the split release are the most consistently impressive but this is a very consistent record without any real blemishes so there's not much in it. I simply love this cold & oppressive, doom-laden sludge sound & if that sounds like you then I'd urge you to check this compilation out at some point.

For fans of Noothgrush, Eyehategod & Dystopia.

4/5


Oh... & I almost forgot... this record is an excellent release in its own right too:


Grief - "Grief" E.P. (1992)

4/5

49
Daniel

I love Minor Threat. Their Complete Discography CD is well worth a listen. Although it is a compilation of their entire discography, it is still only forty-odd minutes long! The only problem I had with them was that, certainly back then, I was about as far from Straight Edge as you could get - no booze, no drugs? Fuck that!!

13
Daniel

Ben, please add Grief's self-titled 1992 E.P. which was released on 12" vinyl in 2015.

331
Daniel

Brodequin - "Instruments of Torture" (2000)

I first discovered Tennessee brutal death metallers Brodequin through their 2001 sophomore album "Festival of Death" back in 2009 & very quickly found myself indulging myself in the rest of their back catalogue. I'd only recently returned to metal after spending a decade in the electronic dance music scene & was looking to satisfy my long-standing urges for the sort of devastatingly brutal death metal I'd drenched myself in during the mid-1990's. These guys produced some of the most brutal death metal you'll ever find during the early 2000's so I perhaps gave them more time than they actually deserved if I'm being honest. This debut album "Instruments of Death" is a clear case in point because it's nowhere near as good as it's made out to be.

There are two main gripes that I have with it that prevent me from being able to connect with a release like "Instruments of Torture" in 2026. The first & most obvious is the ridiculous vocal performance of bass player Jamie Bailey who makes no attempt whatsoever to enunciate actual words here, instead producing an almost never-ending drainpipe pig-grunt that I find enormously annoying, single-handedly destroying my chances of finding any genuine enjoyment in "Instruments of Torture". The second is the sloppy drumming of Chad Walls who doesn't seem to possess the endurance to consistently keep up with Michael Bailey's at times very solid death metal riffage. This is a real shame because the pieces are all here but Brodequin simply can't manage to put them all together in a similar way to how they've done with their much cleaner 2024 comeback record "Harbinger of Woe" which I really enjoy. There is certainly better brutal death metal out there than "Instruments of Torture" so perhaps it's for the best that its runtime is limited to just twenty-five minutes. Oh well... I guess you can't win 'em all.

For fans of Liturgy, Disgorge & Orchidectomy.

2.5/5

68
Daniel


Hey Andi, I have a couple of suggestions for July if you want them:

Knights of the Realm - "Blood on Steel" (from "Knights of the Realm", 2021)

Century - "Fallen Hero" (from "Sign of the Storm", 2025)

Quoted Sonny

I was not able to find the Knights of the Realm track on Spotify (must be only in your country), but I could find the Century track, so I've just added that to the playlist.

Quoted Shadowdoom9 (Andi)

OK, Andi. Fair enough.


199
Daniel

Babasónicos - "Babasónica" (1997)

I usually struggle with clean-sung Spanish vocals (particularly male ones) but I have to admit that the quality of the music produced by this Argentinian rock outfit has won me over in the end. I hadn't heard them previously but, on the evidence here, their sound would seem to sit somewhere between stoner rock & alternative rock with a smattering of more stripped back psychedelic material spread across the thirteen song tracklisting. There are certainly four or five tracks included where I find myself failing to connect (generally where those vocals are at their weakest) but there are more where I've managed to identify the sort of appeal that's seen "Babasónica" being placed on a pedestal by South American audiences over the last couple of decades. I'm not sure I can see myself returning to "Babasónica" in the future but it's been an interesting experience nonetheless.

For fans of Queens of the Stone Age, Los Brujos & El Otro Yo.

3.5/5

75
Daniel

Këkht Aräkh - "Pale Swordsman" (2021)

I have to admit that it's taken me a good five years to build up the courage to decide how I feel about this controversial black metal hit whose primary claim to fame was the succession of memes that were drawn from its ridiculous cover photo. The black metal scene generally isn't too kind to artists who present themselves in such a vulnerable fashion so you do tend to get a skewed view of the quality of a product like this one based on the triggering of people's gag reflex but I choose to base my judgement purely on the musical quality of such a release & it did take me a few listens to overcome, not only that cover, but also the unintimidating sound of this Ukraine one-man outfits second full-length. I mean, despite being influenced by classic black metal artists like Burzum & Darkthrone, "Pale Swordsman" does make most blackgaze acts sound pretty sinister in comparison but that doesn't mean that there's no substance behind it.

Lone contributor Crying Orc isn't exactly a virtuoso but he presents his ideas with passion & authenticity, almost thumbing his nose at the black metal traditionalists out there. There's a fragility to his melodicism & a boldness to his tendency to want to showcase his own vulnerability, as best showcased in gentle closer "Swordsman". Don't get me wrong. I do still have to confess that I definitely crave a darker format for my black metal. I just find that there's nothing terribly wrong with "Pale Swordsman" when taken as a purely artistic form of expression instead of comparing it with my long-standing ideals about what black metal should be. Album highlight "In the Garden" is a prime example of this as it's bookmarked by some fairly lightweight tremolo-picked riffage but, at its gooey centre, you can find the sort of atmosphere that I crave from my European black metal with the Orc's easily intelligible snarled vocals sitting very well over some highly melancholic guitar arpeggios.

If I was being critical, I'd suggest that the couple of piano-driven interludes are pretty flat & some of that is due to the production which has stolen the brightness that could have given these pieces a bit of life & replaced it with artificial vinyl crackles. Apart from that though, I've found enough quality in these simple black metal songs to keep me interested. It's very easy for people to dismiss the album based on a cursory listen because we are a flawed species with a tendency to want things to be as they first appear. A deeper investigation can sometimes surprise us though & I've found "Pale Swordsman" to have grown on me over time. Not enough to see me returning to it in the future I suspect, but enough for me to afford it a respectable score.

For fans of Draugveil, Felvum & Ebony Pendant.

3.5/5

128
Daniel

For July Sonny, please.

Konvent - "Puritan Masochism" (from "Puritan Masochism", 2020)

Thorr's Hammer - "Norge" (from "Dommedagsnatt", 1998)

Crouch - "Hatchets and Hammers" (from "Breaking the Catatonic State", 2026)

Devil Electric - "Jill & Jack Shit" (from "Tahlia", 2026)

Ritual Arcana - "Subtle Fruits" (from "Ritual Arcana", 2026)

Rorcal - "Extinguished Innocence" (from "Silence", 2023)


341
Daniel

Here are my sneak peek submissions for the July Sphere playlist:

Celldweller - "Just Like You" (5:03) from End of an Empire (2015)

A Dark Halo - "Thin Be the Veil" (4:44) from Omnibus One (2023)

Fear Factory - "Depraved Mind Murder" (4:43) from The Industrialist (2012)

The Interbeing - "Eternal Eclipse" (4:20) from Icon of the Hopeless (2022)

Mechina - "Pray to the Winds" (6:00) from Conqueror (2011)

Motionless in White - "Contemptress" (4:02) from Reincarnate (2014)

Total length: 28:52

123
Daniel

Here are my sneak peek submissions for the July Revolution playlist:

August Burns Red - "Crusades" (5:11) from Constellations (2009)

Despised Icon - "In the Arms of Perdition" (4:24) from The Ills of Modern Man (2007)

Humanity's Last Breath - "Abyssal Mouth" (4:31) from Abyssal (2019)

Rorschach - "Oppress" (3:45) from Remain Sedate (1990)

Unearth - "Dawn of the Militant" (2:56) from The Wretched; the Ruinous (2023)

While She Sleeps - "Be(lie)ve" (3:54) from This is the Six (2012)

Worm Shepherd - "The Emptiness Between Stars" (4:55) from In the Wake ov Sol (2020)

Total length: 29:36

170
Daniel

Here are my submissions for the July Infinite playlist, having just two long epics in mind:

Ihlo - "Signals" (10:01) from Legacy (2025)

Tyr - "Land" (16:19) from Land (2008)

Total length: 26:20

106
Daniel

Here's my submission for the July Gateway playlist, last one for this clan:

Profiler - "Shadow" (from Shadow, 2026)

140
Daniel

Holocaust - "Hypnosis of Birds" (1992)

I hadn't heard the third full-length from this Scottish NWOBHM act before but this week's experience with 1992's "Hypnosis of Birds" has been unanimously positive as well as quite surprising. You see, I wasn't much of a fan of Holocaust's 1981 debut album "The Nightcomers" which is by far their most well-known release. It was a very basic, rough-&-ready heavy metal affair that's light-years away from the sophisticated & quite technical progressive metal we find here. There are some hints of Holocaust's roots to be found here & there (see the first half of the opening title track or the re-recording of the band's signature piece "The Small Hours" which Metallica covered on their 1987 "Garage Days Re-Revisited" E.P.) but, for the most part, Holocaust have moved on creatively with only guitarist John Mortimer remaining from the lineup that delivered the debut. Mortimer also handles the vocals this time which are admittedly nothing special. It's the instrumentation that's the real win here with some of this material reminding me a lot of more popular progressive metal artists like Mastodon, Devin Townsend or Dream Theater. Unfortunately, there are no genuine classic of offer but the quality is consistently strong enough to make "Hypnosis of Birds" a great listen nonetheless, even if the production is a little rougher than you'd generally expect from a prog record. This is definitely my new favourite Holocaust release, over-taking the fairly underground 1980 "Heavy Metal Mania" E.P. which I quite like. And by the way, please ignore the RYM tagging which includes Avant-Garde Metal & Heavy Metal, neither of which are relevant.

For fans of Voivod, Anacrusis & The Thought Industry.

4/5

77
Daniel

June 2026

1. Deteriorot - "The Bataan Death March" (single, 2026) [submitted by Karl]

2. Immolation - "Attrition" (from "Descent", 2026) [submitted by Vinny]

3. Monstrosity - "Veil of Disillusionment" ( from "Screams from Beneath the Surface", 2026) [submitted by Vinny]

4. Brodequin - "Theresiana" (from "Harbinger of Woe", 2024)

5. Cephalic Carnage - "The Isle of California" (from "Lucid Interval", 2002) [submitted by Sonny]

6. Oppressor - "Genocide" (from "Solstice of Oppression", 1994) [submitted by Karl]

7. Blood Incantation - "Slave Species of the Gods" (from "Hidden History of the Human Race", 2019) [submitted by Vinny]

8. Epitaph - "Engraving the Epitaph" (from "Seeming Salvation", 1992) [submitted by Karl]

9. Intestine Baalism - "Banquet in the Darkness" (from "Banquet in the Darkness", 2003)

10. Gibbeting - "The Cursed Fortress" (from "Execution Rampage", 2026) [submitted by Karl]

11. Discordance Axis - "Radiant Arkham" (from "The Inalienable Dreamless", 2000)

12.Foetorem - "Oozing with Pustulent Fluids" (from "Incongruous Forms of Everlasting Rot", 2026) [submitted by Vinny]

13. Deathwards - "In Death I Become" (from "Towards Death", 2018) [submitted by Sonny]

14. Casket Grinder - "Celestial Devourment" (from "Trip to Oblivion", 2016) [submitted by Karl]

15. Drumcorps - "Cut & Grow" (from "Creatures", 2022)

16. Decapitated - "Mother War" (from "Nihility", 2002) [submitted by Vinny]

17. Wailing - "Crushed by Eons of Inequity" (from "Oracles of Devastation", 2026) [submitted by Karl]

18. Vacuous Depths - "Worshippers of Death" (from "Humiliation", 2022) [submitted by Vinny]

19. Malthusian - "Telluric Tongues (Roaring Into the Earth)" (from "Across Deaths", 2018)

20. Goemagot - "The Ethics of Omnipotence" (from "Eradication of Insignificant Beings", 2013)

21. Fluids - "Humanity Reviled" (from "Not Dark Yet", 2021) [submitted by Vinny]

22. Misery Index - "Plague of Objects" (from "Heirs to Thievery", 2010) [submitted by Sonny]

23. Vital Remains - "Dawn of the Apocalypse" (from "Dawn of the Apocalypse", 2000) [submitted by Karl]

24. Gates of Ishtar - "Where the Winds of Darkness Blow" (from "A Bloodred Path", 1996)

25. War Därmen - "Sector Alpha" (from "Colonization", 2022) [submitted by Karl]

26. Frozen Soul - "Wraith of Death" (from "Crypt of Ice", 2021) [submitted by Vinny]

27. Eye Eater - "Other Planets" (from "Alienate", 2024)

52
Daniel


Cecil Taylor - The Cecil Taylor Unit (1978)

Genres: Free Jazz

Next up on my free jazz binge is the self-titled The Cecil Taylor Unit, an hour of more classical-infused surrealism hand delivered on a gold platter with a side plate of sample cheeses and wine.  This album was the first of Cecil's attempts at bringing classicism to free jazz, and the most obvious effort in that vein.  But this kind of sophistication isn't built on Mozart melodies and Beethoven drama.  This is free jazz, and Cecil's band sets everything on FIRE.

Idut, track 1, is basically a shark's feeding frenzy of cheese and wine, proud and bombastic to whatever extreme they can achieve without breaking the surrealism.  Track 2, Serdab, starts out much more quietly, but soon uses erratic violins and piano to create some very chilling atmospheres.  But in these chills also comes a sense of wonder, one that looses none of the bombast of the previous track but rather sacrifices the loud tone for something more mellow.  Even when the brass comes in, the build up tricks you out and loosens four minutes in.  It goes into several places, recycling old sounds with new combinations, until we get to a gorgeous yet bizarre piano solo by Cecil himself.  I'd say that this track was miles ahead of the Idut (no Miles David biopic ref intended).  Now track 3 is the one that worried me.  Holiday En Masque is a whopping 30 minutes long, so I was quite concerned with possible meandering.  But the surprise is: it didn't meander as much as I thought, not until the last ten minutes or so.  This was easily the most interesting of the three tracks.  This was everywhere around whatever music spectrum the band could provide, and every step forward into another territory was built entyirely on natural progression and pacing.  Maybe they stayed in a couple locations for just a little longer than necessary, but overall it was mysterious in all of its fury.  It's probably even the best Cecil track I've heard so far.

SO even though the first track managed to be fun and interesting, each track upped the antes and delivered even more goods each time.  This was exactly the kind of chaos one wants to experience with free jazz.  Currently, this is the best Cecil Taylor album I've heard.

96

18
Daniel

June 2026

1. Treponem Pal - "Ghost Rider" from Dead Inside (2025)

2. S.U.P. - "Insect Drug" from Imago (2005)

3. Neurotech - "Withstand the Agony" from Withstand the Agony (2026) [submitted by Shadowdoom9 (Andi)]

4. Static-X - "Jic Boi" from Project Regeneration Vol. 2 (2024)

5. Die Krupps - "To the Hilt" from II - The Final Option (1993)

6. Gothminister - "616" from Anima Inferna (2011) [submitted by Shadowdoom9 (Andi)]

7. PAIN - "Parallel to Ecstasy" from Rebirth (1999)

8. Genitorturers - "Flesh is the Law" from Flesh is the Law (2002)

9. The Amenta - "Angry Chair" from Plague of Locus (2023) [submitted by Shadowdoom9 (Andi)]

10. Bile - "I Reject" from ReGurge:a Bucket of Bile (2004)

11. Combichrist, King 810 - "Demons Wanna Be Summoned" from Demons Wanna Be Summoned (2026)

12. Celldweller - "Good L_ck (Yo_'re F_cked) (Combichrist Remix)" from End of an Empire: The Remixes (2015) [submitted by Shadowdoom9 (Andi)]

13. Samael - "For a Thousand Years" from Lux Mundi (2011) [submitted by Shadowdoom9 (Andi)]

14. Illidiance - "Open Your Eyes" from Open Your Eyes (2019)

15. Clawerfield - "Bend the Sky" from Butterflies of Smoke (2016)

16. Mechina, Melrose - "Cryoshock" from Progenitor (2016)

17. Black Comedy - "Favourite Hateobject" from Instigator (2008)

18. Fear of Domination - "II" from Distorted Delusions (2014) [submitted by Shadowdoom9 (Andi)]

19. Harms Way, King Woman - "Undertow" from Common Suffering (2023)

20. Motionless in White, Jonathan Davis - "Necessary Evil" from Graveyard Shift (2017)

21. Unheilig - "Kleine Puppe" from Puppenspiel (2008)

22. Semargl - "Loneliness" from SATANIC POP METAL (2012)

23. Rammstein - "Mehr" from Liebe Ist Fur Alle Da (2009)

24. Sybreed - "Critical Mass" from Slave Design (2004)

25. Turmion Katilot - "To Be Contiuned Act 1" from Technodiktator (2013)

26. Lord of the Lost - "The Days of Our Lives" from OPVS NOIR Vol. 3 (2026)

61
Daniel

June 2026

1. Invent Animate - "Fall Like Rain" from Fall Like Rain (2026)

2. Eighteen Visions - "I Let Go" from Obsession (2024 re-recording) [submitted by Shadowdoom9 (Andi)]

3. Downswing - "Disease" from Dark Side of the Mind (2017)

4. Wage War - "4x4" from IT CALLS ME BY NAME (2026)

5. No Cure - "Convulsing in the Dark" from Convulsing in the Dark (2026)

6. Guilt Trip - "Disdain" from Unrelenting Force (2016)

7. Harper - "Thorn in My Side" from Thorn in My Side (2025)

8. Samurai Pizza Cats - "City of Gold" from Press Start (2026)

9. VCTMS - "Lobotomy" from Sickness: Vol. 1 (2014)

10. Iridium - "Nihility" from Sub-Zero (2019)

11. Attack Attack! - "Kickin' Wing, Animal Doctor" from Someday Came Suddenly (2008)

12. Black Veil Brides - "Vindicate" from Vindicate (2026)

13. Harms Way - "Heaven's Call" from Common Suffering (2023) [submitted by Vinny]

14. Adept - "Secrets" from Silence the World (2013)

15. Cage Fight - "Exuvia" from Exuvia (2026)

16. Knut - "Whacked Out" from Challenger (2002) [submitted by Shadowdoom9 (Andi)]

17. The Dillinger Escape Plan - "Room Full of Eyes" from Option Paralysis (2010) [submitted by Shadowdoom9 (Andi)]

18. Snapcase - "Fields of Illusion" from Lookinglasself (1993)

19. Johnny Booth - "Sleeping with Serpents" from Connections (2012)

20. Atreyu - "The Theft" from A Death-Grip on Yesterday (2006)

21. Northlane - "Masquerade" from Singularity (2013) [submitted by Shadowdoom9 (Andi)]

22. Sylosis - "Lacerations" from The New Flesh (2026)

23. Bleed from Within - "Immortal Desire" from Zenith (2025) [submitted by Shadowdoom9 (Andi)]

24. Asking Alexandria - "A Prophecy" from Stand Up and Scream (2009)

25. The Agonist - "Burn It All Down" from Orphans (2019) [submitted by Shadowdoom9 (Andi)]

26. Stevie T - "French Deathcore Song" from French Deathcore Song (2015)

27. Silent Civilian - "Dead to Me 2006" from Rebirth of the Temple (2006) [submitted by Shadowdoom9 (Andi)]

28. Fit for a King, Chris Motionless - "Witness the End" from Witness the End (2025)

29. We Butter the Bread with Butter - "Extrem" from Das Monster Aus Dem Schrank (2008)

30. Humanity's Last Breath - "The Aftermath" from Structures Collapse (2011)

31. Worm Shepherd - "Whispers of a Dying Land" from Dawn of the Iconoclast (2026)

62
Daniel

June 2026

1. Culprit - "Guilty as Charged" from Guilty as Charged (1983)

2. Leaves' Eyes - "Leaves Whisper" from Into Your Light (2004) [Suggested by Shadowdoom9 (Andi)]

3. Black Sabbath - "The Mob Rules" from Mob Rules (1981)

4. DOMINUM - "Doctor Doctor" from Doctor Doctor (2026)

5. Accept - "Diving Into Sin" from Humanoid (2024)

6. Heavy Load - "Heavy Metal Angels (In Metal and Leather)" from Death or Glory (1982)

7. Europe - "Seven Doors Hotel" from EUROPE (1983)

8. Iron Maiden - "The Trooper" from Piece of Mind (1983)

9. Diamond Head - "Am I Evil" from Borrowed Time (1982)

10. Pagan Altar - "Liston Church" from Never Quite Dead (2025)

11. Saxon - "Witches of Salem" from Hell, Fire and Damnation (2024)

12. Legend - "Prologue" from Death in the Nursery (1982)

13. Riot V - "High Noon" from Mean Streets (2024)

14. Motorhead - "No Class" from Overkill (1978)

15. Dark Moor - "Somewhere in Dreams" from The Hall of the Olden Dreams (2000)

16. Sirenia - "Love Like Cyanide" from Arcane Astral Aeons (2018) [Suggested by Shadowdoom9 (Andi)]

17. Nightwish - "Gethsemane" from Oceanborn (1998)

18. Seven Spires - "Architect of Creation" from A Fortress Called Home (2024) [Suggested by Shadowdoom9 (Andi)]

19. Elvenking - "Pagan Revolution" from The Pagan Manifesto (2014)

20. Alestorm - "Drink" from Sunset on the Golden Age (2014)

21. Follow the Cipher - "Valkyria" from Follow the Cipher (2018)

22. Kamelot - "The Human Stain" from Ghost Opera (2007)

23. Tyr - "Battle Ballad" from Battle Ballads (2024)

24. Elvellon - "Dreamcatcher" from Until Dawn (2018)

25. Haggard - "Awaking the Centuries" from Awaking the Centuries (2000) [Suggested by Shadowdoom9 (Andi)]

26. Beyond the Black - "Welcome to My Wasteland" from Horizons (2020) [Suggested by Shadowdoom9 (Andi)]

46
Daniel

Update for July:

THE FALLEN: Sonny, Vinny

THE GATEWAY: Saxy

THE GUARDIANS: Andi, Sonny, Xephyr

THE HORDE: Vinny, Sonny

THE INFINITE: Xephyr, Saxy, Andi

THE NORTH: Sonny, Xephyr, Vinny

THE PIT: Vinny, Sonny

THE REVOLUTION: Andi

THE SPHERE: Andi

I've decided to step down from nominating The Gateway feature releases, since the well has run dry for which feature releases for me to nominate and I'm pretty much done contributing to the clan. I hope you don't mind being on your own in submitting The Gateway feature releases, Saxy.

235
Daniel

BTS - Wake Up (2014)

Genres: K-Pop, Pop Rap, Boy Band

I'm tired of avoiding this band and not knowing what the hype is.  These guys are apparently big record-breakers, which isn't surprising considering that this is the first choice for a K-pop band that Americans will literally watch concert films for.  Not a K-pop guy myself, usually just using the bands of said scene for chart filler, but whatever.  Anyway, I went into this expecting more k-pop crap, especially since its genre tagging n RYM included "boy band" as a genre choice and not just a piece of a scene.  So if RYM's acknowledging that, then that likely means this specific album took writing cues from 90's pop bands like Backstreet Boys and NSYNC.  Initially, a bad sign.  But nope.  This one actually makes a strict point of slapping.  Hard.  Whatever tropes exist in this album are heavily backed up by the band's energy and some surprisingly tight instrumentation for a bunch of boy band songs.  It suffered from a soggy middle syndomer, but I would even go as far as to say that this album shows more class than any Backstreet album.  The first half is the superior half, but there's still fun to be had in the second.  Anyway, even a non-K-pop fan can see that this delivers a good deal of goods, more so than a lot of average pop, and personality and independence drive it the whole way through.

75

15
Daniel

June 2026

1. Zeicrydeus - "Ten Thousand Spears Atop the Bleeding Mountains" (from "La Grande Hérésie", 2025) [submitted by Karl]

2. Khold - "Dødens grøde" (from "Phantom", 2002)

3. Krahnholm - "Scorching Storm" (from "Granting Death", 2018) [submitted by Sonny]

4. Primordial - "Empire Falls" (from "To the Nameless Dead", 2007) [submitted by Vinny]

5. Antaeus - "Devotee" (from "Cut Your Flesh and Worship Satan", 2000) [submitted by Karl]

6. Gorrch - "Vorago" (from "Stillamentum", 2026) [submitted by Vinny]

7. Helheim - "Jormundgand" (from "Jormundgand", 1995) [submitted by Karl]

8. Mist of Misery - "Epitaph of Penitence" (from "Absence", 2016)

9. No Point in Living - "Impatience" (from "The Cold Night", 2017) [submitted by Sonny]

10. Svartkonst - "Death Magic" (from "Black Waves", 2020) [submitted by Vinny]

11. Diabolical Masquerade - "Blackheim's Quest to Bring Back the Stolen Autumn" (from "Ravendusk in My Heart", 1996) [submitted by Karl]

12. Sig:Ar:Tyr - "Helluland" (from "Northern", 2016)

13. Misþyrming - "Ég byggði dyr í eyðimörkinni" (from "Söngvar elds og óreiðu", 2015) [submitted by Sonny]

14. Fire Magic - "Siege of Eternity" (from "Memories of Fire", 2026) [submitted by Vinny]

15. Majestic Mass - "Clandestine Supremacy" (from "Savage Empire of Death", 2018)

16. Graufar - "Buried in Flames" (from "Via Necropolis", 2026) [submitted by Vinny]

17. Xasthur - "Cursed Revelations" (from "Telepathic With the Deceased", 2002)

18. Thyrfing - "The Voyager" (from "Vansinnesvisor", 2002)

19. Crom Dubh - "The Invulnerable Tide" (from "Heimweh", 2015) [submitted by Sonny]

52
Daniel

June 2026

1. Warning - "Night Comes Down" (from "Rituals of Shame", 2026) [submitted by Sonny]

2. Oromet - "Forsaken Tarn" (from "The Sinking Isle", 2025) [submitted by dk]

3. Graves at Sea - "The Waco 177" (from "The Curse That Is", 2016) [submitted by Vinny]

4. Doomshine - "Celtic Glasgow Frost" (from "The End Is Worth Waiting For", 2015)

5. Opium Lord - "Lead Magnet" (from "Vore", 2019)

6. Swallow the Sun - "Firelights" (from When a Shadow is Forced into the Light, 2019) [submitted by Andi]

7. Ophis - "The Perennial Wound" (from "Spew Forth Odium", 2021) [submitted by Vinny]

8. Ethereal Tomb – “The Sufferance of Mourning” (from “When The Rivers Dry”, 2023) [submitted by dk]

9. Smote - "The Linton Wyrm" (from "Songs from the Free House", 2025) [submitted by Vinny]

10. Mourning Beloveth - "The Words That Crawled" (from "The Sullen Sulcus", 2002)

11. Sunn 0))) – “Glory Black” (from “Sunn O)))”, 2026) [submitted by dk]

12. Wildspeaker - "Cinders" (from "Spreading Adder", 2017) [submitted by Vinny]

13. Monolord - "It's Neverending" (from "Neverending", 2026)

14. Eternal Rot - "Crawler" (from "Grave Grooves", 2014) [submitted by Vinny]

15. Slow - "Néant" (from "V - Oceans", 2018) [submitted by Sonny]

55
Daniel

June 2026

1. Nervosa – “Slave Machine” (from “Slave Machine”, 2026) [Submitted by Vinny]

2. Epidemic – “Territories” (from “Decameron”, 1992) [Submitted by Sonny]

3. Sacrilege – “Shadow from Mordor” (from “Behind the Realms of Madness”, 1985) [Submitted by Sonny]

4. Exodus – “3111” (from “Goliath”, 2026) [Submitted by Vinny]

5. Hellbutcher – “The Sword of Wrath” (from “Hellbutcher”, 2024)

6. Örk Bastards– “Warmongers of the Gloomy Lands” (from “Warmongers of the Gloomy Lands”, 2019)

7. Barbarian – “Crossburn” (from “Reek of God”, 2026)

8. Torturer – “Demonic Possession” (from “Oppressed by Force”, 1992) [Submitted by Sonny]

9. Torture – “Ignominous Slaughter” (from “Storm Alert”, 1989) [Submitted by Vinny]

10. Destruction – “Satan’s Vengeance” (from “Sentence of Death”, 1984) [Submitted by Sonny]

11. Coroner – “When Angels Die” (from “R.I.P.”, 1987) [Submitted by Andi]

12. Acid Age – “State Your Business” (from “Perilous Compulsion”, 2025)

13. Corroder – “Prosperous Death” (from “Pyres of Uncreation”, 2025)

14. Razor – “Escape the Fire” (from “Executioner's Song”, 1985) [Submitted by Sonny]

15. Exciter – “Scream in the Night” (from “Violence & Force”, 1984) [Submitted by Sonny]

16. Slayer – “Captor of Sin” (from “Haunting the Chapel”, 1984) [Submitted by Sonny]

17. Acid – “Satan” (from “Acid”, 1983) [Submitted by Sonny]

18. Aphrodite – “Children of Night” (from “Orgasmic Glory”, 2021) [Submitted by Vinny]

19. Karloff – “A Violent Winter” (from “The Appearing”, 2021) [Submitted by Vinny]

20. Voivod – “Live for Violence” (from “War & Pain”, 1984) [Submitted by Sonny]

21. Power Trip – “Murderers Row” (from “Manifest Decimation”, 2013)

22. Inhuman Nature – “Taste of Steel” (from “Inhuman Nature”, 2019)

23. Zerre – “No Alibi” (from “Rotting on a Golden Throne”, 2026) [Submitted by Vinny]

24. Ascending Burn – “Braindead Zombie”, 2026)

25. Aggressive Perfector – “Return of the Axe” (from “Come Creeping Friends”, 2026) [Submitted by Sonny]

26. Strigoi – “Cauldron of Venomous Potion” (from “Black Magic Fumes”, 2024)

27. Lamb of God – “Omens” (from “Omens”, 2022) [Submitted by Vinny]

28. The Haunted – “Bury Your Dead” (from “The Haunted Made Me Do It”, 2000)

29. Feed the Flames – “Firefight” (from “Kyk-over-Al”, 2017)


47
Daniel


Dear GOD the last reply to this was in 2023! 

Quoted Rexorcist


That's because I started a generic Rock thread since then & have been posting all rock-related posts there.

https://metal.academy/forum/25/thread/2568

Quoted Daniel

I know about that thread, but still, I figured Elder belonged elsewhere.

3
Daniel


I'm a big fan of Elder & of the "Lore" album which is my second favourite of the four Elder records I've heard behind "Reflections of a Floating World". I don't think any of the three full-length albums I've experienced from them are metal though. The "Spires Burn/Release" E.P. is probably the only one of the four releases that I'd suggest is metal enough to qualify & it's still kinda 50/50. They're a great stoner rock band though & I'm glad you're enjoying them Rex.

Quoted Daniel

They've certainly proven themselves to be consistent.  I'm on Innate Passage right now and the opener is flat-out one of the best stoner rock songs I've ever heard.  This one ain't metal, tho.

36
Daniel

Yeah, I  have watched it this week as well. It is quite a feat nowadays for a series to get me to watch it all the way through, but this did manage that at least. The characters and their inreractions were all interesting and I did have to keep watching to find out what had happened that night. The spookiness was quite effective, although a bit sparse in some episodes.

I did start to watch the follow-up series, Haunting of Bly Manor, but only managed about half an hour before I had had enough. Henry Thomas' english accent was more than enough to put me off, but wasn't the only issue by any means.

35
Daniel


Album released today... excitement levels beyond imaginable... pressing play... it can't possibly live up to my expectations can it?
Quoted Ben

If it doesn't, I sure as hell wouldn't know why.

46
Daniel

Alice Coltrane - "Turiya Sings" (1982)

I discovered this lovely, meditative release many years ago now & have returned to it semi-regularly in the time since. "Turiya Sings" sees the iconic jazz artist & former wife of the legendary John Coltrane taking a dramatic stylistic departure from her jazz roots by composing nine deep new age pieces that utilize her own mantra-style vocals in praise of the Lord. It's quite a transcendental experience with the better inclusions relaxing & soothing me in a way that few others can.

For fans of Nala Sinephro, Sofie Birch & Mary Lattimore.

4/5

3
Daniel

Drudkh - "Відлига [Thaw] EP" (2026)

This latest release from the ukrainian atmospheric black metallers is a three-track, twenty-minute EP and it exudes an air of melancholic reflectiveness that is reminiscent of the opening instrumental from previous album, 2025's "Shadow Play". This may well be all-new material, but I wouldn't be at all surprised if it turned out to be leftover tracks from that album because it fits in so well as a companion piece. This turn in tone from Drudkh is unsurprising given the situation in Ukraine over the last four years, particularly around the band's hometown of Kharkiv which has seen some of the war's most intense fighting. Who wouldn't become pensive in such a situation? Although they don't address the war directly in their lyrics I think lines like "Only their silhouettes, Touched once by an indifferent hand, Take up faded places, In memory" (from "Memory") are fairly unambiguous in their sentiment.

The opener is indeed a reflective piece that, whilst still sitting comfortably under atmospheric black metal has such a melancholy air to it, emphasised beautifully by some subtly applied keys, that it also feels like it has one foot in the post-metal camp. The second track, "Somewhere, Sometime" is an instrumental that possibly feels even more wistful than the opener with its main melodic theme having a reflective, folky air, as if looking back fondly on simpler times now lost. Add in some picked guitar lines and, again, those subtle, melancholy-sounding synths and you have a fairly simple, melodic and exceedingly effective instrumental break at the heart of the EP.

The closer, "A Moment in Eternity" is probably the track most recognisable to long-standing Drudkh fans, being a more conventional slice of atmospheric black metal. Even here, though, the vicious bite that used to hone the edge of Drudkh's sound feels muted, as if the sorrow being felt by the musicians is so great as to infuse their very being and leave them changed as a result. Once more, even though the track is of a higher tempo and has a traditional black metal structure, the air of wistful reflection still permeates it and rather than being a celebration of ukrainian culture and history as a lot of Drudkh's past work seemed to be, this is more like a eulogy to something that has been lost, possibly for ever.

I understand if some long-time fans were to be unsure of this direction the band have taken as it is quite different to their best-loved releases but, as someone who is often drawn to the more downbeat and melancholy in metal, I have to say that I actually really like this, even though, unfortunately, its sentiments may well be rooted in real world tragedy which i am sure we all wish had never happened.

4/5

58
Daniel

As Above:

Ennui - "Qroba" (2026)

Ennui were formed in Tbilisi, Georgia in 2012 by guitarists David Unsaved and Sergi Shengelia with the former also contributing vocals and keys and Sergi playing drums and bass in addition to their six-stringed day job. In 2015, for their third album, "Falsvs Anno Domini" the duo added Daniel Neagoe (Shape of Despair, Pantheist amongst many others) on bass and drums. However, he departed before the next album, "End of the Circle" and they reverted to a duo with John Devos (Pantheist, Comatose Vigil A.K.) showing up as guest drummer. Onto Qroba then and they have now expanded into a five-piece with no less than four guirarists, the original duo being joined by Andrey Azatyan and Kakhi Kiknadze with the drum stool being filled by Alexandr Gongliashvili. Unsaved also covered vocals and bass duties as well as panduri, which is a three-stringed traditional georgian folk instrument.

Qroba is not the most monolithic or repetitive example of funeral doom that you will ever hear and at times it is even quite melodic and atmospheric. This does not translate as "not heavy" by any means because it assuredly is, but there is a bit more to the songwriting than merely trying to write the slowest, heaviest-sounding doom metal on the planet. I would compare it to the early albums from France's Monolithe, but without the extreme track lengths. The hour here presented consists of five tracks, from ten to fourteen minutes in length, giving each plenty of time to establish its rhythmic tides and atmosphere without ever outstaying its welcome. Thematically it is fairly typical funeral doom fodder. According to the band themselves it is concerned with "coming to terms with the inevitable, told through melancholy and contemplation" and although this traversal from light to darkness is common subject matter in doom circles it is addressed so effectively both atmospherically and lyrically that it transcends the feelings of triteness that these overused tropes sometimes elicit in the ardent funeral doom listener. The track "Down, To The Stars" is based upon and uses the words of the poem of the same name from highly respected 20th century georgian poet Terenti Graneli and is a beautiful expression of the album's concept, but this is no anomaly and the band's own lyrics are also some of the most thought-provoking I have heard for a good while.

The songwriting is excellent and it is obvious that these guys have been round the doom metal block a few times because they are able to explore and stretch the funeral doom genre without ever threatening to dilute what makes it so appealing to its adherents in the first place. This is not some Frankenstein's monster genre hybrid, but genuine, lovingly-crafted, purely refined funeral doom metal with a breadth and scope deserving of respect. Alongside expert song and lyric writing these guys are evidently talented musicians and, to my uneducated ears, Qroba sounds technically perfect with some gorgeous guitar lines, yet it never feels staid or stilted, but oozes with feeling and passion, each track developing in an organic and natural manner so that nothing ever feels forced. Unsaved's vocals are the deep, abyssal growls expected from a funeral doom vocalist, yet he seems to wring an expressiveness and emotional resonance from them that I have very rarely encountered from an extreme doom metal singer.

In summary this must be one of the most affecting and haunting funeral doom albums I have heard and, despite its often melodic approach to the sub-genre, it is so skillfully executed that there is no compromise made as regards to sheer heaviness. In the extreme doom world, where sludge and noise-based releases seem to be the only kids on the block anymore, it makes my heart soar to know that there are still acts out there who can fire my soul in a genre that seemed like it had passed its peak some time back. Each play sees me falling in love with this more than the previous one.

5/5 AOTY potential - probably depends on Patrick Walker.

29
Daniel

i have an old, beaten-up copy of Dispatches which has the front cover missing because I have read it so many times. A sobering indictment of all the war-hungry idiots who send poor kids off to war whilst their offspring claim to have bone spurs!

32
Daniel

Here's the current list of releases with high votes in the Hall of Judgement. I encourage anyone who is eligible but is still yet to submit a vote on any of these records to consider participating so that we can reach a consensus that utilizes the full 15 vote system.


Celtic Frost - "Into the Pandemonium" (The Infinite/The Pit)        Currently has 12 votes & just one more may see us reach a result

Oranssi Pazuzu - "Mestarin kynsi" (The Infinite/The North)          Currently has 11 votes & just one more may see us reach a result

Black Sabbath - "Black Sabbath" (The Fallen/The Guardians)      Currently has 11 votes & just one more may see us reach a result

Black Sabbath - "Master of Reality" (The Fallen/The Guardians) Currently has 11 votes & needs at least a couple more for a result

Sarcofago - "I.N.R.I." (The North/The Pit)                                         Currently has 10 votes & needs at least a couple more for a result


10
Daniel

Napalm Death - "Death by Manipulation" (1992)

This 1992 compilation popped up in my Spotify feed while I was driving this week & it has been a while since I last checked it out so I decided to give it another crack. "Death by Manipulation" compiles a number of Napalm Death's early singles & E.P.'s & falls very much in line with my feelings on 1987-1992 era Napalm Death in general in that I find it to be generally enjoyable but fail to really connect with it to a point that I feel like reaching for it for future revisits. I sit very much in the camp that feels Napalm's best work was still to come through records like "Utopia Banished" & "Fear, Emptiness, Despair", although I do really dig 1988's "The Curse" E.P. & their 1989 split with S.O.B. (admittedly due to the S.O.B. material). It's handy to have all of these records collected together on the one release but I don't think it's as essential as people seem to think.

For fans of Terrorizer, Brutal Truth & early Carcass.

3.5/5


Here's my updated Top Ten Deathgrind Releases of All Time list:


01. Napalm Death - "Utopia Banished" (1992)

02. Cattle Decapitation - "Monolith of Inhumanity" (2012)

03. Brutal Truth - "Extreme Conditions Demand Extreme Responses" (1992)

04. Full of Hell - "Weeping Choir" (2019)

05. Damaged - "Passive Backseat Demon Engines" E.P. (1995)

06. Brutal Truth - "Need to Control" (1994)

07. Exhumed - "Dissecting the Caseated Omentum" demo (1992)

08. Lock Up - "Necropolis Transparent" (2011)

09. Cephalic Carnage - "Misled by Certainty" (2010)

10. Napalm Death - "Harmony Corruption" (1990)


https://metal.academy/lists/single/223

27
Daniel

Monolord - "Neverending" Released May 29th

Swedes Monolord also have a new album out this spring. Three tracks are up on Spotify and Bandcamp and this sounds like it could be their best since Veanir back in 2015.

This looks like is shaping up to be a good year for doom metal. Alongside these two giants there are also new releases from Khemmis, Witchsorrow and Doomcult due over the next two months

210
Daniel

The debut album "Sahara" from Israel melodic death metallers Orphaned Land includes enough progressive metal for inclusion in The Infinite while maintaining its position in The Horde.

https://metal.academy/hall/636

0
Daniel


Angelo Badalamenti & David Lynch - "Twin Peaks: Season Two Music & More" (2007)

This is third Twin Peaks soundtrack release I've checked out over the years & I'd also suggest that it's also the weakest of the three. 1990's "Soundtrack From Twin Peaks" (i.e. the soundtrack from the original TV series) is comfortably the best of them & I return to it semi-regularly. 1992's "Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me" (i.e. the score from the film) is a little hit & miss but is generally enjoyable while this release offers a similarly wide array of wins & losses, coming out on top overall though thanks to some remarkable highlight pieces that usually come from the deeper, darker side of Badalamenti's creative mind. I don't really think you need all three of these releases if you've already got the first one as it provides all of the Twin Peaks you really need in my opinion. I'll be taking some nice playlist inclusions from this one though.

For fans of Dean Hurley, Bohren & der Club of Gore & Johnny Jewel.

3.5/5


12
Daniel

May 2026

1. An Abstract Illusion – Emmett (2025)

2. Black Crown Initiate – Withering Waves (2014)

3. Mr. Bungle – My Ass is on Fire (1991)

4. Disillusion – Am Abgrund (2022)

5. The Faceless – The Spiraling Void (2017)

6. Green Carnation – The Slave That You Are (2025)

7. Karmanjakah – Breathing (2023)

8. Leprous – Mb. Indifferentia (2012)

9. Plini – Manala (2026)

10. Protest the Hero – Limb From Limb (2008) (31)

11. Rolo Tomassi – Tempest (2025)

12. Speaking to Stones – The Human Strain (2022)

13. Stormhaven – Dominion (2023)

14. TesseracT – Eden (2011)

15. Twelve Foot Ninja – Kingdom (2012)

16. VOLA – Applause of a Distant Crowd (2018)

57
Daniel


JPEGMAFIA - Experimental Rap (2026)

Genres: Hardcore Hip Hop

This one goes for some extra-edgy influences I never expected from him: brostep, industrial metal, 2000's stuff.  Gonna repeat what I said on Movieforums: The fans are hating on it since it's such a farcry, but I don't really hate it. The production is quite skillful, the samples work, the attitude is effective. The vocals take a big backstep, but it's not bad. Of course, I consider JPEGMAFIA a hip hop giant just as the rest of the world does, but this is more in acknowledgement of his talent rather than a deep emotional devotion, and I promote the idea of expanding horizons anyway. If JPEGMAFIA hasn't earned that yet, who has?  I wouldn't mind more albums that sound like this, if he does more with his vocals.

73/100

15
Daniel

Nine Inch Nails - "Pretty Hate Machine" (1989)

I introduced Ben to NIN off the back of the bangin' industrial metal tunes on 1992's "Broken" E.P. which saw him becoming a little bit obsessed with them during the early 1990's. He soon picked up their debut full-length "Pretty Hate Machine" on CD & found that it was much less metal than the much heavier E.P. he'd grown to love so much. From memory, I ended up stealing his CD & playing it day & night in my bedroom with my first real girlfriend who was heavily into the grunge scene & alternative rock. In fact, I think I may have lost my virginity to this album (I'm sure Ben will immediately throw his CD out now if he still has it). While it's certainly not as strong as NIN's next couple of releases, "Pretty Hate Machine" is devoid of any real blemishes & still has some great stuff on it, particularly when Trent Reznor strips things back & goes for more of an introspective sound (see the brilliant "Sanctified" & "Ringfinger" or spectacular album highlight "Something I Can Never Have"). If you're into NIN in any capacity then you really should devour their debut at some point as it's a high-quality industrial rock/electro-industrial record in its own right.

For fans of Filter, Gary Numan & "Sins of the Flesh"-era Sister Machine Gun.

4/5

7
Daniel

Ben, please add the new Orphaned Land live album A Heaven You May Create.

103
Daniel

Empyrium - "Where at Night the Wood Grouse Plays" (1999)

This German act began life as a folk metal outfit before deciding to drop the metal altogether in favour of a purely organic dark folk sound with their third full-length "Where at Night the Wood Grouse Plays" which is essentially the product of multi-instrumentalist Markus Stock (Noekk/Sun of the Sleepless/The Vision Bleak/Autumnblaze/Deinonychus) & his flutist wife Nadine Mölter with Empyrium & Noekk band mate Thomas Helm providing some guest vocals here & there. It's obviously been inspired by Ulver's "Kveldssanger" sophomore album & certainly has its moments (see wonderful album highlight "Dying Brokenhearted" or the excellent "The Sad Song of the Wind" for example) but it fails to reach those peaks regularly enough to see this becoming one of my go-to dark folk releases. I do think the duo have managed to achieve a similar level of quality to the Ulver record that inspired it though. In fact, I think I might slightly favour "Where at Night the Wood Grouse Plays" to tell you the truth but I won't be placing Empyrium on the same shelf as artists like Tenhi or Vàli just yet.

For fans of Uaral, Vàli & "Kveldssanger"-era Ulver.

3.5/5

17