Angry Metal Guyâs Top Ten(ish) of 2023
By Angry Metal Guy
The Year of Our Angry Overlord 2023 saw an AngryMetalGuy.com that continues its upward trajectory. We produced 713 posts (mostly reviews), which, in terms of raw numbers, is the lowest since 2015 and can be improved upon, but the 890 word-per-post mark that we are at, is the highest average word count in our history. This means, we ended up with a hefty 634,674 words in 2023. We also averaged 39,539 views a day, leading us to our highest readership numbers ever at 14,420,637 total page views in 2023. The readership of AMG is also global, though the English-speaking world dominates our readership, with the USA, England and Canada taking up spots 1 to 3 on our highest views list. Happily, in my opinion, Germany has overtaken Australia as our fourth biggest readership and that means itâs only a matter of time before Iâm asked to perform a live review writing at Wacken. Spots 6-10 are taken up by the Netherlands, Sweden, France, Spain and Brazilâa whoâs who of excellent footballing nations (and an excellent Eurovision nation) that also love our brand of high quality, long form analytical reviews. So, thanks to all of you from all over the world for loving us almost as much as we love you! And to the one guy (literally) in Vatican City who visits our blog once a year, we appreciate you so much.
That we continue to outstrip our previous performance is entirely because of you, our readers, who are so loyal and open to new music that we can claim an Angry Metal Guy Bumpâą, because when we review stuff, you listen to it. Iâve received plenty of personal correspondence from bands and PR people reporting that AngryMetalGuy.com gives better numbers than Decibel in terms of listens and purchases. This means that Angry Metal Guy matters, and we intend to use that power to ⊠do exactly the same thing we always do: listen to great music, promote music that we love and trash popular bands for all the engagement it brings us.1
The year 2023 also saw us welcoming in new writers, and despite some people fading away or stepping back (both Madam X and Grymm will be missed), I feel like we have as strong a profile for our writing as we ever had. Again, it makes me beyond happy that all my stupid little ideas about how a music blog should be run have turned into this bazaar of the bizarre, with writers whose taste in music I pretty much detest, as well as some good eggs who hold true to the AngryMetalGuy.com vision of giving everything from Scandinavia a 4.0 or better. Anyway, regardless of how bad your taste is, thanks to you all for your hard work and dedication. Youâll be especially fond of meâeach and every one of youâwhen you read the footnotes to this post. Itâs footnote 6 thatâs of particular interest to you. I would also like to especially thank our dedicated editing staff, headed up byâbut certainly not limited toâSteel Druhm as well as Sentynel, whose steadfast dedication to keeping the site running warms my heart.
On a personal note, this year was supposed to be one of the best of my life. It has been an unmitigated pile of shit, with only a few bright spots. As usual, Iâll try to make 2024 a better year, where I am Angry Metal Guy in practice, not just in spirit. A new year always brings unreasonable and unrealistic goals that get broken in shame by April, doesnât it? Well, thatâs mine.
I love you all. Except the Discord. You guys are terrible.
#ish: Fellowship // The Winterlight Chronicles [December 22nd, 2023 | Scarlet Records] â Oh man, they did piano versions of songs from The Saberlight Chronicles? RotY. <3
#ish: Riverside // ID.Entity [January 20th, 2023 | InsideOut Music] â Back and forth between the 10-spot and then the 9-spot and now an #ish, ID.Entity is a genuinely good album from a band that I am happy has regained some of its swagger. I didnât need another morose, overly wet album full of painfully sad songs and a Great Plains style mastering job.2 I needed a record that was absolutely swimming in references to The Police and â80s Yes, and Riverside obliged. At 53 minutes, I decided, that âThe Place Where I Belongâ just mars the whole a little too much to put it higher up the list. But color me excited for whatâs next for Riverside, because ID.Entity definitely got my attention again.
#ish: Soen // Memorial [September 1st, 2023 | Silver Lining Music] â Once before Iâve missed a review for a Soen album, but that time I had our much missed Huckster to cover me. Memorial continues down the path the band started down on Imperialâwell, on Lotus, in actualityâof making tight, poppy groove metal with an emotional edge. I particular enjoy Memorialâs fast paced tracks and the introduction of the Iron Maiden-style guitar harmonies that litter the album. There have been some gripes that Memorial hews too close to the arc of Imperial, but I think the album has both its own sound and is loaded with great songs. And unlike its predecessor, Memorial seems to genuinely peak in terms of the heaviness that these old guys are willing to put on (proverbial) tape, while still leaning into savvy pop choruses with Eklöfâs unique emotional cadence. We shouldnât have missed it and neither should you.
#10: Vomitory // All Heads Are Gonna Roll [May 26th, 2023 | Metal Blade Records] â Vomitory is not trend. Vomitory is not kvlt. Vomitory makes death metal to mosh your brains out to. They are very good at it. And thatâs why their first album since their deeply underrated Opus VIII was a happening in the Angry Metal Guy household. As time has worn on, I have become less and less excitable before a new release. But in this case, I was right to be excited. All Heads Are Gonna Rollâdespite its Swenglish title3âdelivers the kind of decapitating death metal that the worldâby which I mean meâhas missed in the 12 years that the pride of Karlstad has been missing in action. And weirdly few bands are living in the sphere that Vomitory runs in right now, meaning that All Heads Are Gonna Roll is an even more vital contribution to the propagation of good, grinding, groovy death metal that isnât trying to be Gorguts or Ulcerate OR to relive the glory years of the Stockholm scene. Long live Vomitory!
#9: Crypta // Shades of Sorrow [August 4th, 2023 | Napalm Records] â Years ago, I remember reviewing Vomitoryâs Opus VIII and thinking it was remarkable because it was direct and to the point and it just felt like âgood, honest death metal.â I had a similar feeling hearing Cryptaâs debut record, Echoes of the Soul, and I became enamored with the album. But, as with so many successful bands experiencing success,, Crypta lost a key member almost immediately; their glam-as-fuck guitarist who was, at least in part, responsible for the bandâs strong melodic core. This gave rise to worry that Shades of Sorrow might suffer from Ye Olde Sophomore Slumpe. Fortunately, Brazilâs favorite daughters found an excellent replacement and are filled to the brim with riffs. Shades of Sorrow pumps out another 52 minutes of memorable, groovy death metal (albeit with a darker, more blackened vibe) and has been a constant companion since I first heard it. After what must have been an absolutely crazy year for themâhaving toured with Morbid Angel and lost their rented RV in the processâI hope that theyâre leaning back and appreciating what theyâve accomplished in the last three years. Two Angry Metal Guy top 10s? Does it get better than that?
#8: Gorod // The Orb [March 10th, 2023 | Self-Release] â Gorod is my favorite active tech death band for a reason. To paraphrase myself: greatness is hard; consistent greatness is Gorod. Thatâs because these French death metallers are a breed apart, with a sound thatâs truly special. The Orb, which dropped back in March, helped to re-solidify my admiration for the bandâs dynamic, guitar-driven approach. Every time I put it in, Iâm immersed in the most captivating riffs, the boldest ideas, the most intense rasps and growls, and a compositional variety that consistently engages. There are, of course, minor things that make it a little less my favorite than its predecessor, but The Orb exudes Gorodâs unique character and is so flawlessly executed that any criticisms seem trivial. The Orb shows Gorod being true to its essence, a spectacle we should be thankful to experience.
#7: Haken // Fauna [March 3rd, 2023 | InsideOut Music] â I have to be honest: I didnât expect Fauna to get anywhere near this list during 95% of the year. The reality is that when I first got it, I couldnât get into it. I have two different partially written drafts that I could never finish because it kept losing me. I wanted to like it. I didnât like it, but I couldnât put my finger on why. So, I ascribed it to me going through some stuff, since I wasnât enjoying much of anything. Recently, it popped up and I gave it another chance. As these things can go, it clicked. And of course it did. Haken, a ridiculously good band despite going Full Djentâą a few years ago, has a history of throwing curveballs and exploring sounds. Fauna finds them working in the artistic tradition of writing music thatâs meant to evoke other creaturesâbulls, monkeys, elephants, etc.âand this artistic device helped them to diversify their sound on Fauna. The result is an album that is as diverse as it is expansive andâfirst and foremostâfun! Like the best albums, Fauna reveals new things every time I go back to it, and I can never quite decide what my favorite song is. It also serves as a reminder that Haken is one of the best active prog bands, honestly, the only limits they have are the ones they set for themselves.
#6: Isole // Anesidora â Iâve always respected Isole and enjoyed their material. But Iâve never been overly enamored with them and Iâve never considered myself âa big fan.â Anesidora has changed that. Isoleâs newest opus hits that sweet spot between a classic Candlemass record and a classic My Dying Bride record that I didnât even know I needed. The result of this unholy blending of sounds and feels is a doom metal that I love as much as nearly any doom in my collection. Anesidora sports all the best traits of great albums; memorable songs; a listening time that results in instant re-listens; and, first and foremost, addictive melodies and themes. After weeding its way into regular rotation, Anesidora has simply never left. Itâs a combination of excellent songwriting, great performances and some of the most subtly sticky composition Iâve heard in years. Itâs clear to me now why Isole is only second to the Christmas Goat on the list of âfamous people and/or entities from GĂ€vle, Swedenâ on Wikipedia.4
#5: LeiĂŸa // Reue [January 13th, 2023 | Noisebringer Records] â Iâll never recapture the feeling of sheer and utter wonder that I felt hearing Windir for the first time. Nor will I relive the naĂŻvetĂ© of enjoying Halmstad without having heard of Kvarforth. But if Iâm going to get close, LeiĂŸaâs epic Reue would be the thing that did it. This may be the first time that a one-man black metal side project (this time from Kanonenfieberâs Noise) has graced one of my Top 10(ish) lists, and that should be enough to make you sit up and take note. LeiĂŸa has wrought a masterful work of greatâpotentially even excellentâblack metal that deftly balances the genreâs past and present. The album, which Carcharodon correctly diagnosed as both ârich and textured,â is uncompromising, cutting a unique path through the depressive black metal subgenre with aggressive riffing and production which is on the attack. Yet, despite being free of the bed of reverb endemic to anything âdepressive,â Reue exquisitely evokes the existential angst of remorse while evoking the melodic black metal chops reserved for Norwayâs most underrated black metal band. I will not rue the day I heard Reue, because it helped to define 2023 for me.
#4: Anareta // Fear Not [April 8th, 2023 | Self-release] â One of the first revelations of 2023, Anaretaâs particular approach to extreme metal surprised and enchanted me. Throughout the year, Fear Not has continued to show up on my playlist and every time, Iâm just as impressed with it. One can criticize the production, but thereâs something that feels genuine and authentic about Anaretaâs not-that-great-sound and that simply works for me. But for me, thereâs no point in rehashing a debate about production on the debut album from a self-released artist. The musicâand that musicâs impeccable vibesâspeaks for itself. From start to finish, Fear Not regales listeners with an idiosyncratic take on orchestral metal that evokes some all time classics. But itâs not enough to hear potential in a band; thereâs also something about Anareta that radiates agility and an oppenness for new ideas. In a field filled with rehashes, Anareta offer something meaningfully different, and that meaningful difference will keep getting spins for years to come.
#3: Xoth // Exogalatic [November 3rd, 2023 | Self-release] â I remember hearing Xoth for the first time: frenetic guitars; frantic vocals; blasts from hell bolstering ripping riffs made all the sharper with biting guitar tone. But aside from its intensity, Xoth sported great songs with slick hooks that made all the energy and enthusiasm feel genuine and justified. Exogalactic continues the bandâs triumphant march across the universe to pillage and revel in the spoils of war.5 Sporting the consistently best thrashy melodic death metal this world has heard since the early-90s, Xoth has started to cement themselves as one of my favorite bands. If you arenât listening to this album on repeat, do you even like metal?6 Iâll leave you to ponder that as you cry alone in the shower (I hear it gets great natural reverb). In the meantime, Iâll be over here, trying to figure out to make my Xoth, Carnosus, Gorod triple headlining tour happen and whether I can afford the subsequent neck surgery.
#2: Angra // Cycles of Pain [November 3, 2023 | Atomic Fire Records] â If you had told me that I would become a fast fan of Angra back in 2000s, when I was siding with the then-simply-monikered Rhapsody about whether Sascha Paeth wrote their music, I would have laughed in your face. Thus, there is a level of irony that I have come to really love Angra now, for the first time, when they have saved ex-[(Luca) Turilli(/Lione)âs] Rhapsody [of Fire] singer Fabio Lione from his old life. And, for my part, I think that Cycles of Pain is on par with previous end-of-year-list-gracers like Secret Garden and Ămniâyes, and even with the bandâs classics like Temple of Shadowsâwith Fabio sounding better than he ever has in his career and with vital, engaging, energetic writing.7 Cycles of Pain was a late-year release, but it was one of my most anticipated for a reason. From start to finish, Cycles of Pain features truly great songs and performances and demonstrates that Angra is as vital as ever.8
#1: Carnosus // Visions of Infinihility [February 10th, 2023 | Self-release] â The term tour de force was coined to describe albums like Visions of Infinihility. Sometimes an album simply rules and your record oâ the year choice is uncomplicated. Carnosusâ sophomore album is such an album. The music is intense and techy, but thereâs something that feels remarkably direct about an album that crushes this hard from start to finish. From the word go Visions of Infinihility oozes addictive riff after heart crushing riff and lodges itself in your headbanging muscle. Itâs impossible to listen to Carnosus without wanting to fuck some shit up and thatâs exactly how Iâand I assume everyone reading a website named after meâwants their Record oâ the Year to sound. And unlike other years, where I spent a lot of time agonizing over the choice and regretted it later, this was easy.. Sure, thereâs been plenty of competition throughout the year from awesome bands who make excellent music; see the foregoing list! But Visions of Infinihility stands out in its steadfast and stubborn place at the top of my playlist. And I know Iâm not alone. Now that these guys have signed to Willowtipâwhich Iâm taking as a win for usâI cannot wait to see what these guys do in the future.9
Honorable Mentions
Insomnium // Anno 1696 [February 24th, 2023 | Century Media Records] â Insomnium will never release another Winterâs Gate, I just have to get used to that. But 2023 saw Anno 1696, which was a good record that I have enjoyed a lot. The problem that I have is that Anno 1696 all too often has sent me packing to listen to Winterâs Gate, because I feel like it starts too damned slow and really peaks once Iâm about a third of the way. Still, Iâve been listening to it a lot because the songwriting is great, the vibes are legit and Insomnium is a great band. Just missed the cut.
In Flames // Foregone [February 10th, 2023 | Nuclear Blast Records] â In Flames didnât threaten to genuinely list, if Iâm honest. But I need to bring this album up as one of the best surprises I had all year. I donât care what you think, Foregone has some of the best material the band has put out since Colony and I am fucking here for it.
By Fire and Sword // Glory [September 22nd, 2023 | No Remorse Records] â This album has been threatening to make this list for a while now. I am creeped out by it and amused by it and I think the biggest problem I have with it is that the singer lacks that power metal edge that I like, but also doesnât have the silky smooth delivery of a Tony Kakko. Still, the songwriting here is fantastic and funny and I suspect that I will regret not spending more time with this prior to Listurnalia. Though, what does it replace?
Sacred Outcry // Towers of Gold [May 19th, 2023 | No Remorse Records] â It ainât âSworn in the Metal Wind,â but after reading Metal Pigeonâs rant about power metal not taking power metal seriously anymore, I checked out Sacred Outcry. And he was right, Towers of Gold is a fantastic record that shows what could be happening in power metal if fans of it werenât so fucking embarrassed to like it.
Twilight Force // At the Heart of Wintervale [January 20th, 2023 | Nuclear Blast Records] â At the Heart of Wintervale is adventurous, epic, and surprisingly agile power metal from Dalarna in Sweden (+ a brilliant Italian singer). Throughout this epic romp through Wintervale, these (mostly) Swedes serve up âbombasticâ and âflamboyantâ songs that develop a diverse, more experimental sound than what Twilight Force trafficked in previously. The result is an extremely diverting record with only minor blemishes, and the future has never seemed brighter for Twilight Force.
Fellowship // The Saberlight Chronicles [July 13th, 2022 | Scarlet Records] â Okay, okay, this is a stupid stunt. But it is my second most listened to album in 2023 and itâs really hard to move on from it. Just great music, lyrics, and all around vibes. These dorks speak the language of intense angst and fantasy novels and, letâs face it, Iâm fluent in that shit.
âŠand Oceans // As in Gardens, So in Tombs [January 27th, 2023 | Seasons of Mist] â Did everyone forget that âŠand Oceans released its second great âreunionâ record? Well, you shouldnât have. Itâs fucking good. Itâs weird how this one kind of fell off the map for a lot of people.
Frozen Dawn // The Decline of the Enlightened Gods [February 10th, 2023 | Transcending Obscurity Records] â Spanish meloblack that cuts a path through the overly wet, overly repetitive atmoblack people with an ice pick and trem picked melodies. These guys have some growing to do in terms of writing, but The Decline of the Enlightened Gods is a great album and I look forward to hearing more from them in future.
Top 10(ish) Songs oâ the Year
#ish: Katatonia â âImpermanenceâ from Sky Void of Stars â I didnât include âdisappointmentsâ on this list, but needless to say, I found Sky Void of Stars to be lacking. Still, when Katatonia hits, they really hit. âImpermanenceâ â which coincidentally also features Joel Eklöf from Soen â hits exactly the vibe Iâm looking for from Katatonia. Give me 45 minutes of this, guys, and youâll be printing your own Excellent reviews.
#10: In Flames â âForegone, Pt. 1â from Foregone â My biggest surprise this year was that I liked an In Flames album for the first time in two decades. With the reintroduction of their classic sound and, in particular, that 6/8 counterpoint to the guitar solo at 2:36, these guys cemented in me a deep hope that the next one will be even better.
#9: Isole â âMonotonic Screamâ from Anesidora â This whole record is filled with hooks and ideas that I adore, but âMonotonic Screamâ is likely the song that brought me back to to Anesidora after hearing it the first couple times. Two things stand out about this track for me. First, I love the classic doom sound and that eighth note doom feel, but itâs the chorus that really gets me with its strong My Dying Bride vibe. Daniel Bryntseâs vocal performance here absolutely nails the exact vibe I crave in my doom metal. Everything fits perfectly and sounds great. The repetition of the riff and chorus that starts at 5:43 is powerful as hell.
#8: Soen â âMemorialâ from Memorial â Itâs actually hard to choose a song from Memorial because I think the music is very strong. What I love about âMemorialâ is that it shows off what the album does well. The combination of huge poppy choruses with a genuinely heavy crunch and a scooped, American sound on the production with harmonized guitars and Eklöfâs emotive vocals just works. The dual lead at 3:19 helps to illustrate the way that Memorial has added a wrinkle to the bandâs sound and it all builds into the kind of melodramatic outro that I canât get enough of. These guys speak my musical language of love.
#7: Carnosus â âTowards Infinihilistic Purityâ from Visions of Infinihility â Sometimes the only thing I need is a blast beat, a ska riff, and a weird fucking eBow guitar drone to get me to listen to a song 700 times in a row. This grinds super hard and feel is perfect. Shout out to the formerly tightly betrousered and hilariously beswooped Jonatan Karasiak for his totally wild performance throughout this whole record.
#6: Riverside â âSelf Awareâ from ID.Entity â If this were the style and vibe of all future Riverside material, I would take it. Bass-driven, The Police-referencing, awkward vaguely moralistic lyrics, but with that slight underlying sadness that shows up on everything these guys has ever done? Yeah, Iâd take it. In particular, I love this main riff and the strong â80s vibe. More of this, plz!
#5: Gorod â âWe Are the Sun Godsâ from The Orb â The interplay between the guitars here is pretty much the only thing I need in my life. In particular, listen to the harmonies in the pre-chorus. These fuckers are ridiculous and their style and sound make me so happy. Now, check that clean tapping section that starts at 2:16 and tell me that isnât one of the coolest things youâve heard all year. I especially love how the drums get more intense as the part goes on.
Gorod is better than humanity deserves.
#4: Haken â âSempiternal Beingsâ from Fauna â This may be the best song Haken has written since The Mountain. Obviously, this still has a kind of djenty rhythmic approach, but the mix of sounds and feelsâthe clean, melancholic sounds and melodyâculminates in an absolutely epic chorus. Hereâs a special shout out to the section that starts around 5:20 that sounds like Radiohead as interpreted by Muse as interpreted by Haken before breaking into a ridiculous guitar solo.
#3: By Fire and Sword â âLeave a Little Roomâ from Glory â Iâm going to be totally honest, the singerâTom Newbyâsounds a little bit like your buddy singing along with music in the car at times. But what makes Glory such a crazy, fun album is the songwriting. âLeave a Little Roomâ features a straightforward and memorable chorus (love those harmonies under the vocals). It has a direct, classic metal vibe thatâs hard not to nod your head to. But itâs that moment at 3:46ââLeave a little room, leave a little room, leave little room, leave itâŠââfollowed by Tom Newbyâs fundy pastor impression that left me going âWait, what?â and replaying the whole thing. Again. And again. And again. Honestly, I canât get enough of this record, and this is the song that got me hooked.
#2: Xoth â âThe Parasitic Orchestraâ from Exogalactic â This whole album is fantastic, but I just canât get past the totally majestic chorus in this song. Great riffs. Great vocals. Majestic-ass chorus. Also, love those harmonized solos at the end of the track. They remind me of The Black Dahlia Murderâs best work with Ryan Knight. I could listen to this on a loop for 24 hours and be okay with myself. Though the next six months âdoo doo dooingâ the guitar melody from the chorus might eventually drive me mad.
#1: Angra â âTears of Bloodâ from Cycles of Pain â My hot take over recent years has been that Rafael Bittencourt should just take over the vocal duties in Angra. This was in part because every time they released a record, they would have a duet where it was Bittencourt who took on the vocal duties. These tracks features as my song of the year twice (that is, going 2 for 2 in the Fabio era) and I have to say that I love the manâs voice.
âTears of Bloodâ may be the argument that what I love is Bittencourtâs writing, instead of his voice. Going 3-for-3, Cycles of Painâs big culminating track is a duet that this time features Fabio and Amanda Somervilleâjust check her Metal Archives to figure out why you know her even though you donât know that you know herâand itâs everything Iâm looking for.10 Fabio sounds, again, as good as heâs ever soundedâkeeping his vibrato in check, while flexing his opera musclesâand Somerville has a fantastic voice. These are bound up in the kind of operatic duet that you could imagine Italy sending to Eurovision. Itâs all power and melodrama, orchestra swells and big olâ voices. And itâs my favorite song of the year.
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