#swedish #progrockband #beardfish #DriveTimeTunes
Gustosissmi #Beardfish
Il #prognordico non delude mai
E guai a chi dice che sono "freddi" perché non sa quel dice
Beardfish â Torrential Downpour
https://www.metgitarenenzo.nl/2025/01/beardfish-torrential-downpour/
Beardfish â Torrential Downpour
https://www.metgitarenenzo.nl/2025/01/beardfish-torrential-downpour/
11 track album
Aujourd'hui sur Blog Ă part â
Beardfish: Songs for Beating Hearts
Il y a des retours quâon nâattendaient pas. Beardfish sort de lĂ©thargie avec un nouvel album, Songs for Beating Hearts, et dĂ©barque dans mon top 2024.
El Cuervoâs, GardensTaleâs, and Eldritch Elitistâs Top Ten(ish) of 2024
By El Cuervo
El Cuervo
After more than a decade in this job, the years start to blur. While there may be an almost imperceptible feeling that some years are musically stronger than others, Iâve started to reach the realization that theyâre all basically the same. 99% of heavy metal spawned into the world is destined to be forgotten or disparaged.
Thatâs not to say Iâm bored of this state of affairs. The metal community, and in particular its underground, remains in a robust position to peddle the best non-mainstream music in the world, boasting a wide array of sub-genres from all over the globe. Just look at my list below: nine of the selections are from the atypical regions of Northern Europe and North America, hitherto unknown for their metal output.
Nonetheless, itâs the year-to-year consistency that highlights the importance of gathering our thoughts at annual intervals to assemble a list of real quality. This process reminds me why I still spend hundreds of hours each year consuming and reviewing new music. These stand-outs justify my decision and I deeply enjoy commemorating them in this ranking extravaganza. Revel in the albums that most excited me in 2024.
#10. A Burial at Sea // Close to Home â As much as music may impress you with its technical chops or hook you with its bold melodies, itâs music that makes you feel something that endures. The idiosyncratic brand of post-rock heard on Close to Home, dipping into brassy jazz and techy math rock as much as it does shoegaze, always prioritizes its emotive impact above all else. I love the gentle lilt, the crashing apices, the shimmering walls of noise, the orchestral edges. A Burial at Sea ebbs with slow rhythms and delicate chords, but flows with heavy drums and tremolo-picked melodies. The natural cadence across tracks makes the album feel complete. Each year yields one or two âmoodâ releases for me to savor in a dark room with my headphones and my thoughts; 2024âs is Close to Home.
#9. Kanonenfieber // Die Urkatastrophe â As much as I initially enjoyed Die Urkatastrophe as a studio album, it took the Kanonenfieber live experience to really get its hooks into me. This isnât just blackened death metal. Itâs theatrical, energetic, and catchy, without devolving into something as simple as âmeloblackâ. The shout-along choruses and grooving leads were accentuated in a live setting, and I was incentivized to dig back through the Kanonenfieber back catalog. But the gig wouldnât have been as entertaining as it was without the underlying music being of high quality. Iâve been to plenty of shows which have encouraged me to revisit an artist â but where the studio release is far less potent. Die Urkatastrophe has the chops and power to excel in both formats.
#8. Aquilus// Bellum II â Lots of black metal adopts the adjective of âatmosphericâ but few come as close to this as Aquilus. Horace Rosenqvist forges music that harmonizes but transcends classical and black metal, beguiling and terrifying in equal measure. Bellum II may be marginally the lesser of Bellum I, but itâs still among the best music released this year. Its compositions are extraordinary, as they subtly and satisfyingly transition from delicate piano and strings to towering black metal blasts. This is the prime example of the albumâs devastating dichotomies that I previously described (âelegance and savagery; serenity and chaos; airiness and crunchâ). Rosenqvist is a singularly mesmerizing instrumentalist and composer, able to pull contrasting music into a brutal but beautiful whole.
#7. Hamferð // Men Guðs hond er sterk â Itâs hard to conceive of a more metal homeland than the Faroe Islands. Cold? Dark? Remote? Check, check, check. This results in Hamferðâs frigid, towering block of death-inflected doom metal that owes as much to its isolated island roots as it does to any other metal band. Men Guðs hond er sterk is a crushingly heavy album, but one gilded with a hopeful edge derived from its concept wherein a survivor of a whaling accident emphasizes the miracle of his life. While prioritizing the sheer weight of mass and exquisitely despondent leads, the album also benefits from one of metalâs most talented vocalists in JĂłn AldarĂĄ, who runs the gamut from bellowing growls to melancholic croons. Though it runs out of steam by the gentle acoustic conclusion, the preceding thirty-nine minutes are monumental.
#6. Blood Incantation // Absolute Elsewhere â Blood Incantation is plainly an excellent band. But Iâm struggling to explain why Absolute Elsewhere became the underground cross-over metal album of the year, favored by big and small publications alike. Perhaps itâs the savage but technical riffs that make you mosh and think simultaneously. Perhaps itâs the Floydian approach to song structures. Perhaps itâs the penchant for meandering, Tangerine Dreamy interludes. Perhaps itâs the sophisticated fusion of something heavy so listeners feel edgy, with something chill so listeners feel safe. Perhaps itâs the conspiratorial orientation around our alien overlords building the pyramids. Perhaps itâs all of these and more. Hmm. On reflection, I think I do understand why everyone loves Absolute Elsewhere as much as they do.
#5. Crypt Sermon // The Stygian Rose â We all know that doom is the worst core metal sub-genre. To my abject horror, 2024 saw not one but two excellent examples of it. Crypt Sermon stormed the top five of my list, folding excellent leads and engaging solos into some of the most captivating metal of the year. While the front half is good, itâs the back half where things hit another level. âHeavy Is the Crown of Boneâ until the title track exemplifies the best of the sub-genre through their epic proportions, memorable melodies and fat, crunchy guitar tones. While the riffs have immediate impact, the detailed compositions give the songs real staying power. Layers of guitars, a tempo that eschews dirge speeds, varied vocals and progressive song constructions march the album to a conclusion that comes too quickly.
#4. Syst3m Glitch // The Brave Ones â The remainder of this list documents my love for heavy metal and all things progressive. But synthwave is the third pillar of my music library and the most joyous. The best of the year comes from Floridaâs Syst3m Glitch. Heâs not always been my first pick for synths, but The Brave Ones dramatically outperformed his prior output and muscled its way into my favorite albums from 2024. Itâs stuffed full of catchy, memorable tunes that traverse the synthwave soundscape, from the pop-laced sweetness of âCalifornia,â to the pulsing rhythms of âThrill Ride,â to the darksynth pastiche of âTommy Danger,â and finally to the smooth retrowave of âRaining in Tokyo.â Itâs rare for one release to cover this much territory, and rarer still that itâs so successful in doing so.
#3. Dissimulator // Lower Form Resistance â February is early in the year but I knew then that Lower Form Resistance would be high on my list. Dissimulator inherits death metal traits from the membersâ other bands (including Beyond Creation and First Fragment) but builds these into uber-tight, technical thrash metal. The excellence of the riffs here is fucking relentlessness; no other 2024 release can boast such a fine repertoire. From the ridiculously good âNeural Hackâ until the closer, the album generates such entertainment value that it feels half as long as it is. The exemplary instrumentation, chaotic energy and technological feel make Lower Form Resistance sound like Voivod reinvented for the 2020s. In a sub-genre so preoccupied with rehashing old ideas â I do not accept that thrash metal must sound like 1986 â Dissimulator thrives by looking forward.
#2. In Vain // Solemn â Itâs no secret that Iâm a prog nerd. While In Vain has always been plenty progressive through varied and unpredictable songwriting, what I envy most is the knack for incorporating myriad styles into one cohesive sound. Solemn follows two prior records demarcated by their fusions of melodic death metal, black metal, progressive rock, and Nordic folk music. This fusion has never been more seamless than it is in 2024. The expansive songs feel like they should be extremely long and complex but in reality, they hardly exceed seven minutes and utilize powerful melodic anchors. As if all this wasnât enough, the quintessential In Vain guitar and vocal harmonies, and orchestral pomp, elevate the songs into metal magic. Solemn is pure Cuervo catnip.
#1. Opeth // The Last Will and Testament â It feels like Iâve spent much of the last few months describing just how much I admire Opeth. This year-end list is no exception as I properly rank The Last Will and Testament as 2024âs best release. With the Opeth ranking articles so recent, I think it would fall into the upper half of their work. In a discography littered with records revered by both metalheads and prog nerds, this demarcates a record of rare quality. Though â yes â Ă kerfeldt returns to growled vocals here, this is just a small piece of what makes The Last Will and Testament so good. From the sophisticated compositions to the entertaining story, and the exemplary instrumentation to the immaculate production, its knotty harmonization of death metal with progressive rock has the aura of perfection. No other record from 2024 can make such a claim.
Honorable Mentions
Songs oâ the Year
GardensTale
Fucking hell, what a year. Ordinarily, Iâd try and wax poetically on the passing of time or some shit here. Looking back with melancholy and whatnot seems to be the intention for opening paragraphs to arbitrary lists of what music this one rando that I happen to be got the most enjoyment from this year. But I think this time, Iâll try some brutal honesty instead. Itâs not been a great year overall. I wonât bore you with a tedious list, numbering my shades of the various common mental issues people my age and disposition face, but suffice it to say Iâve closed out most prior years in better spirits. But Iâm getting help, Iâm fighting it, and Iâm learning. Learning to give myself grace, to step back when I need to. And if that sometimes means slowing down on a review, well, itâs a small price to pay.
One consequence is that I have spent less time listening to music I wasnât reviewing. That shows below because this list will look like the most self-congratulatory thing I ever wrote. The vast majority of entries I penned myself, be it as a full article, a TYMHM or even a filter entry. But the funny part is, I thought it was a really strong year! I had quite a sizeable shortlist to whittle down. But then I was done whittling and discovered Iâd almost exclusively cut albums I did not review, like APES, Crypt Sermon and Hamferð for instance. Additionally, I find Iâve added less to the list in the second half of the year, and my sullied brain has questioned myself many times: was autumn weaker than usual, or is my growing ennui obstructing my ability to like things as much as they deserve?
I donât know, to tell the truth. And Iâm unlikely to find out, because time marches on and new releases darken the horizon of January even now. There are only so many hours in the day, so much music hitting the virtual marketplaces and streaming colossi. To give each year its proper due would take 5 years, or having no job or other hobbies. So I canât give you a fair, balanced and complete list of the best records of the year, because I do have a job and other hobbies, and no time machine. I can only give you the records that made me feel good. I hope they made or will make you feel good, too.
(ish). Dool // The Shape of Fluidity â Iâve been aware of Dool for a while now, even before vocalist Raven van Dorst became a national television personality. But it wasnât until I caught âVenus in Flamesâ on the metal radio station in the car that I became interested in their music. The Shape of Fluidity crystallizes Van Dorstâs lifelong struggle with identity into a fierce, defiant, and intensely personal album. The androgynous vocals sizzle with raw emotion, and the instrumentation is likewise fluid in its presentation, swaying from almost post-punk energy to Anathema-adjacent prog and dipping into epic doom. An excellent album that really puts Dool on the map.
10. Alcest // Les Chants de lâAurore â Hereâs a fun fact: I always thought Souvenirs dâun Autre Monde wasnât Alcestâs first album. It was the first album of theirs I heard, but since about 97 out of 100 bands that evolve their sound go softer rather than harder, I assumed there was something more extreme preceding it. Alcest tends to do things differently, though, changing things up rather radically from album to album. Les Chants de lâAurore has elements from many of its older siblings, but the mood it sets is such a beautiful warm summer melancholy, it sets it apart in a very special way. And seeing it performed live a few weeks ago was a very special experience that seared the album in my mind.
9. Madder Mortem // Old Eyes, New Heart â No, Iâll never stop proselytizing Madder Mortem, why do you ask? Old Eyes, New Heart wasnât what I expected, yet in many ways was just what I needed, and was strangely prophetic at times. Itâs the most intensely personal album from the Norwegians (which is saying something) and through the healing power of shared misery, sitting down with it is like a good session with a therapist.
8. 40 Watt Sun // Little Weight â Patrick Walker could sing me The Cat In The Hat and Iâd still feel like weeping. Iâm not sure the man could earn anything below a 4.0 from me if he tried. That being said, Little Weight still takes a spot by the sunny window that 40 Watt Sun hasnât explored before. Where Perfect Light and Wider Than the Sky were steeped in sadness, Little Weight expels it. It might be the most hopeful album Iâve heard this year, a return to the light from the deepest darkest places. Itâs been a comforting hug on bad days, a warm blanket to fight the cold.
7. Walg // IV â The second year in a row I get to feature this duo. Walg is quickly becoming one of my favorite black metal bands. IV fits any mood, really. Itâs got anger, itâs got despair, but it also has enough catchy tunes and energy for when youâre in a good mood. You can play the whole thing start to finish, and you can pick out your favorites and stick âem in a playlist. As such, itâs been this yearâs olâ reliable, the album to return to when nothing else sparks joy.
6. Kanonenfieber // Die Urkatastrophe â If I had a nickel for every time an acclaimed blackened death metal band exclusively used historically accurate World War I accounts and even performed in uniform, Iâd have two nickels. Itâs kind of difficult for me to mentally separate Kanonenfieber and 1914 for obvious reasons. Luckily there is space for both in the trenches because Noiseâs project has become a mean Menschen mĂŒhling machine. âDer Maulwurfâ grabbed me by the throat from the first spin, and everything else followed over and over again. Epic, bludgeoning and harrowing.
5. Labyrinthus Stellarum // Vortex of the Worlds â I canât stop playing this album. It is stuck in my algorithm. The bleeps and bloops that summon Hastur from the depths of space and time live in my head and they do not pay rent. How did two kids1 from a war-torn country manage this? Labyrinthus Stellarum is so goddamn good at composing addictive melodies in 4 dimensions it should be considered unfair. The only reason itâs not higher is because at this point the competition becomes even more unfair.
4. Iotunn // Kinship â A lot of people told me in the comments that the closing track on Kinship is a great song and shouldnât have affected my rating of the album as a whole. They are wrong on both counts. This is a shame because up to that point, this is the album of the year. Earning what amounts to a 4.495 despite a disappointing closer is an incredible feat, but the songwriting on the best couple of tracks here is simply unparalleled. âMistland,â âThe Coming Endâ and especially âEarth to Skyâ are just massive in a way few bands ever achieve, and Iotunn make it seem effortless.
3. Vredehammer // God Slayer â One improvement to my life is that I am returning semi-regularly to the gym these days. Iâve struggled with working out consistently, but I can usually get a session a week in these days. And my number one companion for these outings has been God Slayer. The bridge in the title track alone gives me enough energy to break whatever personal record Iâll be working on at the time. Just looking at the album art gives me an extra pound of gains for the week.
2. Meer // Wheels Within Wheels â Yeah, itâs not really metal, but itâs proggy and itâs fucking gorgeous so up yours, elitists! Iâve come to the opinion that Norway is simply the best country for prog in general, and Meer is just another notch in that belt. Whereas Playing House didnât really grab me at the time, I couldnât stop spinning Wheels Within Wheels. I had to start every day with âCome to Lightâ for a while, and the climax of that track is so uniquely empowering itâd help beat down whatever funk I found myself in at the time. The symphonic composition and multi-vocal approach are just beautiful and it truly does not get old. Meer has outdone itself.
1. Huntsmen // The Dry Land â Iâve had multiple comeback stories this year. Outside of metal, both Elbow and That Handsome Devil returned with fantastic albums after the last was simply disappointing. The biggest comeback and biggest surprise was, without a doubt, Huntsmen. Mandala of Fear was such a slog, I could never have expected the perfect tight flow of The Dry Land. Every track is a journey in and of itself, and the diversity is immense. The Dry Land has become one of those albums where I canât put it on without finishing it entirely; Iâll just keep going âOh yes the next song has these awesome mournful vocalsâ or âAh here comes that mindblowing transition.â Itâs been a great year for metal and music in general, but the way Huntsmen returned from the grave and far surpassed even their vaunted debut was the absolute peak for me, and it has not since been surpassed by any other release.
Honorable Mentions
Non-Metal Albums
This is a metal blog, despite our occasional forays into tangential material like Meer. But several of my favorite non-metal artists all released some excellent albums, and considering the year Iâve had and the state of the world, Iâd rather end with some positivity for the open-minded among you, who are secure enough in their trveness to partake in some decidedly vntrve yet excellent releases.
Songs oâ the Year
Eldritch Elitist
Huh. Itâs apparently been four fucking years since I last penned a proper 2 Records oâ the Year list for Angry Metal Guy. This time last year, I wasnât sure whether Iâd be contributing such a list ever again. I still love this blog and the music we celebrate, but making regular contributions to AMG requires a not-insignificant time investment, and Iâve found myself spread ever-thinner over the years. And then January happened, in which a startling number of fantastic releases in that month alone resulted in the crystallization of a single goal: To make 2024 my most complete year of musical indulgence to date. If there was an album released that even slightly piqued my interest in a given week, I was going to find time to listen to it, ideally to completion. This resolve resulted in so many discoveries that I could have penned Top Ten Records oâ the Month articles for multiple months of 2024.
When I say âmultiple months,â I really mean âJanuary through Marchâ, as my momentum dwindled when mid-April rolled around. Compounding factors between life and work suddenly left me with much less time in which to indulge in new music. Once I fell behind, I quickly realized that it would be virtually impossible to keep up the listening schedule I had set for myself, and subsequently gave up the ghost. As badly as I wanted to contribute the most confidently comprehensive year-end list possible, this list might as well be titled âEldritch Elitistâs Top 10 Records oâ Q1 2024 & Friendsâ. Lopsided though it may be, thatâs no excuse to not take a legitimate stab at a list at all, especially not when comments like this keep rolling in⊠Wait, why the hell has that guy been hanging around the AMG break room? Christ, I really need to work on staying in the loop around here. Anyway, hereâs some albums I like; no -ishs, HMs, or butts about it.
#10. Cruce Signatus // Cruce Signatus â While Cruce Signatus sits at the bottom of my top 10, I have listened to it more than any other record this year outside of my number 1 pick. Itâs become a go-to record to throw on thanks to its instrumental nature and soundtrack-like ebb and flow. More than that, Cruce Signatusâ unique blend of metal and synthwave is legitimately compelling, feeling distinct from similar acts as an actual soundtrack to an in-progress animation project. The downside is that this record feels partially complete because it literally is. The upside is that the experience of listening to this record will surely evolve retroactively as this project continues, and in the meantime, Iâll remain content to absorb one of the most ambitious cross-media offerings of 2024.
#9. Myrath // Karma â The release of Karma marked my first prolonged exposure to Myrath, and while I donât adore it as heavily as some of my AMG colleagues, it remained in heavy rotation throughout 2024 all the same. Karma is an uncommonly proficient slab of pop metal, one that smartly leverages its latent progressive and folk metal leanings in sublimely bombastic fashion. It lacks variety, but Myrath navigates Karmaâs narrow aesthetic with such precision as to maximize its scope, resulting in an album that compels through efficiency. Ultimately, the most important quality of any pop record is its ability to lodge its hooks into my brain, and I have had every single one of these songs stuck in my head many times throughout the year. If that kind of recurring impact isnât worthy of a spot on this list, I donât know what is.
#8. Soulmass // Principality of Mechanical Violence â Despite Soulmassâ previous LP basing its concept on my favorite video game, Principality of Mechanical Violence hit me way harder despite unfamiliarity with its source material. My knowledge of Gundam may only go so far as that handsome blonde fellow in red who apparently did nothing wrong, but I do know that this Gundam concept album rocks unlike any other Soulmass record. It largely culls the bandâs moodier death/doom passages in favor of concise riffage, yet is also densely melodic, neatly slotting melancholic guitar leads alongside meaty riffs that echo Bolt Thrower and Cannibal Corpse. The resulting listening experience is equally absorbing and exhilarating, enticing me to get in the robot time and time again.
#7. Mega Colossus // Showdown â Mega Colossus just gets it. Not once in my years of listening to this band have I gotten a sense that they are trying to recapture the heyday of traditional metal, or otherwise be anything in the moment other than themselves. Showdown further cements my impression, as it sees Mega Colossus reaching ever further into their bottomless bag of nerd fixations. The resulting songs cover topical ground ranging from Porco Rosso to Mad Max: Fury Road, but more importantly, they masterfully weave inspirations as far-reaching as Kansas and Megadeth into their core aesthetic of Iron Maiden-inspired trad metal. Combine the playfully loose hold on genre convention with Mega Colossusâ ever-effusive lyrics, and you have one of the most purely entertaining records of the year from one of the best modern bands in the genre.
#6. Black Curse // Burning in Celestial Poison â Unlike other albums on this list, I have not returned to Burning in Celestial Poison to reconfirm its standing. Call me irresponsible, but I must emphasize that my memory and impression of this record â one formed after multiple days of consecutive spins â remains fully crystalized in my mind. Black Curseâs sophomore outing is one that continues to linger in the darker corners of my mind, a wholly unique vision of blackened death metal that, while not as traditionally thrilling as the bandâs debut, is more than the sum of its parts. That âmoreâ manifests as an incorporeal malefic entity seemingly possessing motives independent of the artists who spawned it. Burning in Celestial Poison feels like a living, breathing work, one which unsettles as much as it entices.
#5. Oak, Ash & Thorn // Our Grief is Thus â Our Grief is Thus is one of those albums that feels made specifically for me, with power metal vocals and melodeath riffage wrapped in an overarching aesthetic of black metal, folk metal, and crust punk. Beyond gifting me the forbidden knowledge that power metal with d-beats can and does work, itâs also a generally excellent example of effective genre splicing, feeling as though it belongs in both all and none of the styles from which it cleverly pulls inspiration. What Oak, Ash & Thorn has accomplished with this sophomore outing is an explosively energetic yet cohesive record, and one so melodically effervescent as to be compulsively replayable. Our Grief is Thus is the most surprising record of 2024, and I am firmly seated on the OAT boat for whatever comes next.
#4. Madder Mortem // Old Eyes, New Heart â Madder Mortem is a name Iâve heard tossed around since 2009, and who I never bothered to check out because I thought they were some sorta high falutinâ, artsy fartsy doom metal band. That may have been the case once upon a time, but at some point they evolved into the accessible sort of dark progressive metal showcased on Old Eyes, New Heart. Immediately gripping and heavy yet disarmingly vulnerable, this record converted me to Madder Mortem fandom almost instantly. Its songs wormed their way under my skin with atomic precision and never left; as early as my third listen, they felt like old friends, albeit ones prone to trauma dumping. There may be records I liked more in 2024, but none moved or shook me quite like Old Eyes, New Heart.
#3. Galneryus // The Stars Will Light the Way â Iâve read dozens of comments all parroting a mildly irksome take: The Stars Will Light the Way feels like Galneryus on cruise control. While this has mostly been opined through a positive lens, it still feels unfairly reductive when considering the sheer quality and consistency of this album. Sure, Shoâs voice is notably strained at this point, but he excels at utilizing his current strengths in the strongest collection of Galneryus tracks since 2014âs Vetelgyus. Itâs also the most straightforward record Galneryus has released since Vetelgyus, nixing much of the experimentation and darker leanings of recent offerings (âIn Waterâs Gazeâ notwithstanding) in favor of unbridled jubilance. So yeah, sure, The Stars Will Light the Way is a âsafeâ record if you want to call it that. Itâs still one of the best records from the best power metal band in the world.
#2. Nemedian Chronicles // The Savage Sword â I can hardly believe that Nemedian Chronicles is not a Greek band. They sound so in step with acts like Sacred Outcry that I can practically feel the lamb and tzatziki sauce falling out of an overloaded gyro and onto my lap. Yet the appeal of Nemedian Chronicles is singular. There is a lot of love for Blind Guardian and Sacred Outcry on The Savage Sword, but there is also a distinctly epic, cinematic quality that hearkens back to Bal-Sagothâs overwrought storytelling. Between the propulsive riffs and sweeping melodies, Iâm immediately absorbed into the experience with every listen, and thatâs to say nothing of the engaging and often unpredictable songwriting. In most years, The Savage Sword would handily take the crown for best power metal release. HoweverâŠ
#1. Fellowship // The Skies Above Eternity â You know that little bit of text under my review of The Skies Above Eternity that says âRating: 4.0/5.0?â That number is technically correct per the AMG style guide, but what that number canât account for is the fact that The Skies Above Eternity is a record Iâll be listening to for the rest of my life. 2022âs The Saberlight Chronicles is a true 5.0/5.0 by any objective or subjective metric, and while The Skies Above Eternity is not as good from a technical standpoint, it fully recaptures the strengths that made its predecessor a modern power metal icon. Fellowshipâs debut may have had higher and more frequent peaks, but The Skies Above Eternity excels through consistency and conciseness. The bandâs trademark earnestness, vulnerability, and impeccable sense of melodic craft can be felt in every second of the experience. It doesnât matter whether this record is the best material Fellowship is capable of producing because it warms me in the exact same way theyâve been doing since their first EP, making The Skies Above Eternity one of my most treasured records by default. This album may be a 4.0 in my brain, but itâs a 4.5 in my heart and a 5.0 in my soul.
Song oâ the Year
Fellowshipâs âHold Up Your Hearts (Again)â â I was present in the audience when Fellowship debuted this song live, and everyone was so on board with the silliness of its title that we enthusiastically welcomed it into the Fellowship canon with a communal sea of heart hands. It doesnât top âGlintâ as my favorite Fellowship song, but its concentrated formula of speedy Euro-power metal and the lyricsâ pitch-perfect shonen anime energy handily clear second place status.
Disappointment oâ the Year
Various âArtistsâ â The Continued Proliferation of Crappy AI Album âArtâ â This blog has not adopted a formal stance on albums featuring generative AI artwork, nor do I feel it needs to. But this is my list, and Iâm taking the opportunity to say that if I get so much as a whiff of AI coming off of an album going into 2025, I wonât be giving it the time of day, much less a review. It is unfathomable to think some musicians can devote so much time and creative energy into creating an album, only to hold zero value in the image that is supposed to be introducing that album to the world. In fact, if an album features an AI-generated cover, I automatically assume that the devaluation of art permeates the music itself in some form. Either pay a fucking artist to create an album cover for you, or go outside to take a picture of a cool tree or something and slap a Photoshop filter on it. If that proves too difficult, the public domain is your friend. If itâs good enough for Bolt Thrower, itâs sure as hell good enough for your shitty bedroom black metal project.
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