Mors Principium Est – Darkness Invisible Review

By Angry Metal Guy

Mors Principium Est should, for longtime fans of Angry Metal Guy, need no introduction. Since 2003, these Finns have released eight full-length albums of top-notch melodic death metal. However, they really took flight in 2012 with …and Death Said Live!, which coincidentally is a year after Andy Gillion joined the band. Between 2011 and 2021, Mors produced melodic death metal that drew heavily on a strong Gothenburg vibe; guitar-forward, slick as fuck, and fun to listen to. Gillion was fired, however, in 2021. That was followed by the band releasing an album of re-recorded songs called Liberate the Unborn Inhumanity, which fans largely considered a half-measure. Darkness Invisible, then, marks the first truly new material since Seven. And I’ve been dying to know how this revamped Mors Principium Est would navigate the changes on album number nine.

Darkness Invisible presents a recognizable core sound that longtime fans will connect with, but its character reflects the shift in the lineup. With Ville Viljanen’s scathing roar still at the helm, the return of Jori Haukio and Jarkko Kokko on guitars reintroduces the early 2000s songwriting DNA, while bassist Teemu Heinola and (new guy) Marko Tommila give the rhythm section both drive and dynamic weight. Together, they summon a melodeath that is at once cinematic, technical, and blackened—evoking countrymen Children of Bodom or Kalmah. The themes that emerge are darker than before: a push toward massive symphonic density that occasionally brushes against Septic Flesh’s deathly grandeur, the arrival of deeper guttural vocals that tilt passages toward brutal death, and flashes of blackened riffing that lend a sharp edge. These elements intermingle across the album, creating a record that is both familiar and ambitious.

Much of Darkness Invisible’s character comes from its dark dynamics and cinematic presentation. The compositions weaponize contrast in vocals and atmosphere, making for a dynamic and entertaining record. Viljanen’s familiar bark remains the anchor of MPE’s sound, but the band now folds in cavernous gutturals that push closer to death metal extremity (“Summoning the Dark”), even contrasting these with operatic cleans and producing a clash of brutality and grandeur (“All Life Is Evil”). Additionally, there’s a frost that creeps into the riffs and drumming, with trem-picked riffs and blastbeats sharpening the band’s melodeath foundation toward something blackened and sinister (see: the chorus of “Venator,” or the end of “The Rivers of Avernus”). And even the more straightforward cuts employ these textures to broaden their weight, layering symphonic swells and bleak grandeur over increasingly technical riffing. The result is a record that sounds darker and denser than the glossy sheen of Seven. This expansion lends ambition and menace, though the density of choirs, gutturals, and orchestrations sometimes threatens to swamp the guitars that were the core of Mors’ sound.

For all its ambition, Darkness Invisible’s major drawback is that it’s undermined by an Industry Standard Production Job™ courtesy of Jens Bogren (mixing) and Tony Lindgren (mastering). Bogren has made dense orchestral metal soar before—think how cleanly he’s wrangled maximalist arrangements for acts like Fleshgod Apocalypse and Turisas—which makes this result unusual. The record is mastered loud and layered thick; climaxes hit hard,1 but the constant stacking of choirs, vocals, multiple guitar tracks, drums, and orchestration often clutters the field and can bury the guitars that most recently defined Mors Principium Est. On a proper stereo, the album sounds big and sinister—fully loaded with dynamics, pomp, and grandeur—but on earbuds and smaller setups, it can collapse into a busy blur. It’s been a long time since I popped in a new release and found it simply too crowded for casual listening—and it ends up being fatiguing to the ear at times. That busyness contributes to the album’s oppressive mood, but it also blunts individual performances. In reaching for monumental scale, the mix trades away clarity, leaving the listener torn between admiration for scope and frustration at execution.

Darkness Invisible has convinced me that this lineup can carry Mors Principium Est forward. The shift in sound works: the band leans harder into Children of Bodom and Dark Tranquillity on the melodic side, showing off fantastic guitar work while embracing a more cinematic and melodramatic identity. Without the bonus track, the album lands at a vinyl-friendly 46 minutes, and its structural pacing—variations in tempo, atmosphere, and density—make it a fun and dynamic listen despite the crowded mix. Darkness Invisible doesn’t bear much resemblance to the Gillion era, but that’s not necessarily a weakness.2 This darker and more melodramatic Mors Principium Est feels fresh, and tracks like “All Life Is Evil” and “The Rivers of Avernus” prove the style’s promise. So, I entered this review with concerns about what a Gillion-less Mors Principium Est would sound like, and I’m leaving it impressed and excited for what’s to come. I would call that a great success.

Rating: Very Good!
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s CBR MP3
Label: Perception [Reigning Phoenix Music]
Websites: Facebook | Instagram
Out Worldwide: September 26th, 2025

#AndDeathSaidLive #2025 #35 #AndyGillion #ChildrenOfBodom #DarkTranquillity #DarknessInvisible #FinnishMetal #FleshgodApocalypse #JensBogren #Kalmah #MelodicDeathMetal #MorsPrincipiumEst #OrchestralMetal #Review #Reviews #Sep25 #SepticFlesh #Seven #TonyLindgren #Turisas

Andy Gillion – Exilium Review

By Maddog

While underground solo albums can be a scary prospect, Exilium is an exception. Andy Gillion served as lead guitarist and primary songwriter for Mors Principium Est in their heyday, from 2012’s …And Death Said Live through 2020’s Seven. This has earned him a permanent spot in both melodeath royalty and my heart, and got me thrilled to review Exilium. Gillion’s prolific solo career has spanned video game soundtracks, melodeath, and chiptune-infused metal. However, Exilium goes out on no limbs, opting instead for a synthy, rifftastic style that will please fans of Mors Principium Est. It doesn’t rewrite the playbook, but it’s a damn good specimen nonetheless.

If we crudely divide melodeath along the axes of sad-energetic and simple-techy, Exilium falls squarely in the energetic/techy quadrant. Foremost a guitarist’s album, its chugging riffs carry on the melodeath tradition without dulling their fury, punctuated by soaring climactic guitar solos. Gillion’s signature bleeds through most clearly in the album’s techiest sections, which blend simple rhythms with light-speed fretboard gymnastics (“As the Kingdom Burns”). Just as MPE-evocative are the symphonic sections, which flow seamlessly with the guitar parts to create a thrilling interplay (“Prophecy,” “Avenging the Fallen”). Outside of a fantastic guest spot from Unleash the Archers’ Brittney Slayes, Gillion handles lead vocals for the first time in his solo career. Ranging from emotive growls to clean metalcore screams, the vocals are cookie-cutter but get the job done. Similarly, Dave Haley’s (Psycroptic) session drums are standard fare with occasional shining spots (“Acceptance”). Simply put, Andy Gillion’s newest record sounds like the Andy Gillion era of Mors Principium Est, tinged with metalcore from the aughts.

Accordingly, Exilium takes few risks. Textbook melodeath is fun, but it tarnishes over time. As a result, the album’s simpler tracks come off as kneecapped imitations of the highlights. This worsens as the album progresses; the latecomer “Call to Arms” is conspicuously inconspicuous, fading into the background on every listen. An over-reliance on simple poppy song structures dulls even the bangerest tracks, like “A New Path.” While Mors Principium Est’s best work excelled in both its creativity and its heft, Exilium shirks one for the other. Still, the highlights that bookend the album are a refreshing exception. The opener “Prophecy” nails its back-and-forth between keys and guitars, while the title track’s evolving dual-guitar assault is both unique and gorgeous. Exilium would benefit from more of this.

But as they say in Finland: riffity riff riff, motherfucker. Exilium ventures across the complexity spectrum and hits across the board. On one end, “A New Path” isn’t in contention for a Fields Medal, but its opening meloriff is irresistible nevertheless. On the other end, “The Haunting” drags me in with its noodly technicality. In the middle sits “Avenging the Fallen,” whose keyboard shenanigans and soaring melodies provide a vivid reminder of why metalcore was such a seductive temptress. However, these all pale in comparison to the closer “Acceptance.” Combining an unforgettable drum performance, a frenetic main melody that recalls …And Death Said Live’s closer “Dead Wings of Hope,” and unrestrained vocals, Exilium’s closer colonized my brain so hard that it delayed my progress on both a critical work assignment and my editing of Nameless N00b 89’s drivel.12 While AMG has vowed to murderize anyone who writes a track-by-track review, Exilium’s highlight is its highlights. Despite the album’s big-picture flaws, it’s got barnburner melodies.

Just listen to this album. It’s impressive, it’s fun as hell, and it’s a fantastic use of 35 minutes. Exilium is the archetypal 3.0; it doesn’t break new ground, but it showcases a formidable artist who’s mastered a style, with no air of pretension.3 Every human being should adore Mors Principium Est’s best records, which provide iconic examples of riffs with both sharp teeth and a strong unifying jaw. And anyone who loves MPE should give Exilium a shot. So whoever you are, just listen to this album.

Rating: 3.0/5.0
DR: 5 | Format Reviewed: WAV
Label: Self-Released
Websites: andygillion.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/andygillionmusic
Releases Worldwide: October 11th, 2024

#AndDeathSaidLive #2024 #30 #AndyGillion #BritishMetal #Exilium #MorsPrincipiumEst #Oct24 #Review #Reviews #SelfReleased

Andy Gillion - Exilium Review | Angry Metal Guy

A review of Exilium by Andy Gillion, available October 11th worldwide via self-release.

Angry Metal Guy