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COGNIZANCE Streams Steamrolling New Single 'A Game Of Proliferation'
#COGNIZANCE #StreamsSteamrollingNewSingle #GameOfProliferation #deathmetal #single #lineup #MetalInjection #metal #music
#TheMetalDogArticleList
#MetalInjection
COGNIZANCE Streams Steamrolling New Single 'A Game Of Proliferation'
#COGNIZANCE #StreamsSteamrollingNewSingle #GameOfProliferation #deathmetal #single #lineup #MetalInjection #metal #music
Die britischen Technik-Deather COGNIZANCE melden sich zurĂŒck: Am 1. Mai erscheint das neue Werk "In Light, No Shape". Das offizielle Musikvideo zur ersten Single âWitness Marks" gibt einen Vorgeschmack auf die neue Scheibe der Jungs aus Leeds. #cognizance #technicalDeathMetal #ProgressiveDeathMetal

Die britischen Technik-Deather COGNIZANCE melden sich zurĂŒck: Am 1. Mai erscheint das neue Werk "In Light, No Shape". Das offizielle Musikvideo zur ersten Single âWitness Marks" gibt einen Vorgeschmack auf die neue Scheibe der Jungs aus Leeds: "In Light, No Shape" markiert n...
Ich feiere ja "Malignant Dominion" total. Cool, dass es Neues von den Jungs gibt! Wer auf proggigen Techdeath steht, gerne mal antesten! #deathmetal #progressivedeathmetal #cognizance

Die britischen Technik-Deather COGNIZANCE melden sich zurĂŒck: Am 1. Mai erscheint das neue Werk "In Light, No Shape". Das offizielle Musikvideo zur ersten Single âWitness Marks" gibt einen Vorgeschmack auf die neue Scheibe der Jungs aus Leeds: "In Light, No Shape" markiert n...
Stuck in the Filter: October 2024âs Angry Misses
By Kenstrosity
Never fear, the blogâs penchant for deep lateness punctuality persists! It is likely the new year already by the time you see this post, but weâre taking a step back. Way back, into October. I was deep in the shit then, and therefore couldnât do anything blog-related. And yet, my minions, those very laborers for whom I provide absolutely no compensation whatsoever, toiled dutifully in the metallic dinge that is our Filter. Unforgiving though those environs undoubtedly are, they scraped and scoured until, at long last, small shards of precious ore glimmered to the surface.
These glimmers are the same which you witness before you. Some are big, some are small. Some are short, some are tall. But all are worthy. Behold!
Kenstrosityâs Belated Bombardments
Cosmic Putrefaction // Emerald Fires atop the Farewell Mountains [October 4th, 2024 â Profound Lore Records]
I was originally slated to take over reviewing duties for Cosmic Putrefaction this year, as Thus Spoke had a prior commitment and needed a buddy to step in. Unfortunately, I was rendered useless by a force of nature for a while, so I had to let go of several items of interest. But I couldnât let 2024 go by without saying something! Entitled Emeral Fires atop the Farewell Mountains, Cosmic Putrefactionâs fourth represents one of the smoothest, most ethereal interpretations of weird, dissonant death metal. The classic Cosmic Putrefaction riffsets under an auroric sky remain, as evidenced by ripping examples â[Entering the Vortex Temporum] â Pre-mortem Phosphenesâ and âSwirling Madness, Supernal Ordeal,â but there lurks within a monstrous technical death metal creature who rabidly chases the atmospheric spirits of olde (âI Should Great the Inexorable Darkness,â âEudaemonist Withdrawalâ). While in lesser hands these distinct aesthetics would undoubtedly clash on a dissonant platform such as this, Cosmic Putrefactionâs particular application of sound and style coalesces in devastating beauty and relentless purpose (âHallways Engraved in Aether,â âEmerald Fires atop the Farewell Mountainsâ). Were it not for some instances wherein, for the first time ever, Cosmic Putrefaction threatens to self-plagiarize their own material (âEudaemonist Withdrawalâ), I would likely consider Emerald Fires atop the Farewell Mountains for year-end list status.
Feral // To Usurp the Thrones [October 18th, 2024 â Transcending Obscurity Records]
Another one of my charges that I unfortunately had to put down against my will, Swedish death metal fiends Feralâs fourth salvo To Usurp the Thrones deserves a spotlight here. Where Flesh for Funerals Eternal impressed me as my introduction to the band and, arguably, my introduction to modern buzzsaw Swedeath, To Usurp the Thrones impresses me as a singularly vicious record in the style. Faster, meaner, more varied, and longer than its predecessor, Thrones offers the punk-tinged, thrashy death riffs you know and love, with bluesy touches reminiscent of Entombedâs Wolverine Blues adding a bit of drunken swagger to the affair (âVile Malediction,â âPhantoms of Iniquity,â âInto the Ashes of Historyâ). Absolute rippers like âTo Drain the World of Light,â âDeformed Mentality,â âDecimated,â and âSoaked in Bloodâ live up to the bandâs moniker, rabid and relentless in their assault. In many ways, Thrones evokes the same bloodsoaked sense of fun that Helslaveâs From the Sulphur Depths conjured, but itâs angrier, more unhinged (âSpirits Without Rest,â âStripped of Fleshâ). Consequently, Thrones stands out as one of the more fun records of its ilk to come out this year. Donât miss it!
Sun Worship // Upon the Hills of Divination [October 31st, 2024 â Vendetta Records]
Back in 2020, our dear Roquentin offered some damn fine words of praise for Germanyâs Sun Worship and their third blackened blade, Emanations of Desolation. Itâs been six years since that record dropped, and Upon the Hills of Divination picks up right where Emanations left off. That is to say, absolutely slimy, post-metal-tinged riffs bolstered by dense layers of warm tremolos and mid-frequency roars. Opener âWithin the Machineâ offers a concrete encapsulation of what to expect: bits and pieces of Hulder, Gaerea, and Vorga melding together into a compelling concoction of hypnotic black metal. Using the long form to their utmost advantage, Sun Worship craft immersive soundscapes liable to scald the flesh just as quickly as they seduce the senses, leaving me as a brainwashed minion doing a twisted mysticâs bidding unconditionally (âSerpent Nebula,â âCovenantâ). Yet, there roils a sense of urgency in these songs, despite many of them occupying a mid-paced cadence, which unveils a bleeding heart willingly wrenched from Sun Worshipâs body (âFractal Entity,â the title track, and âStormbringerâ). This is what sets it apart from its contemporaries, and what makes it worthy of mention. Why itâs gotten so little attention escapes me. It is with the intent of rectifying that condition that I pen this woefully insufficient segment.
Dolphin Whispererâs Duty Free Rifftrocity
Extorted // Cognitive Dissonance [October 16th, 2024 â Self Release]
You donât need to read this review to know that the Kiwis of Extorted plays pit-whipping death/thrash. Though not adorned with other obvious symbols, like Vietnam War paraphernalia or crushed beer cans, the Ed Repka-penned brain-ripped head figure screams âno thoughts only riffâ all the same. With snares set to pow and crashes set to kshhh, Cognitive Dissonance finds low resistance to accelerating early Death-indebted refrains. Vocalist Joel Clark even plays as a dead ringer for pre-Human Schuldiner or Van Drunen (Asphyx, ex-Pestilence) as the torture in many lines grows (on âInfectedâ and âGhastly Creaturesâ in particular). And in a continued tour of Van Drunen-associated sounds, Extortedâs ability to find a push-and-pull cadence that twists the fury of thrash with the cutting drag of death hits that hard-to-nail early Pestilence pocket with studied flair (âDeception,â âLimits of Realityâ). Though a considerable amount of the Extorted identity rests in ideas borrowed and reinterpreted, a modern tonal canvas gives Cognitive Dissonanceâs rhythms a punchy and balanced low-end weight that doesnât always present itself in the world of old. Couple that with hooks that reach far beyond the limits of pure homage (âTransformation of Dreams,â âViolenceâ), and itâs easy to plow through the thirty minutes of tasteful harmonies, bending solos, and spit-stained lamentations that Extorted offers with their powerful debut.
BrĂi // Camaradagem PĂłstuma [October 11th, 2024 â Self Release]
With Camaradagem PĂłstuma we enter the hazy, folky world of Caio Lemosâ unique vision of what experimental electronic music can be colored by the underpinnings of atmospheric black metal and jazz fusion. Using terraced melodies like baroque music of old and distant breakbeats like the Bong-Ra of recent yesteryears, Brazilâs BrĂi represents one manâs highly specific melding that rarely occurs in this space. The guitar lines that do exist play out as textural, slow-developing passages. On tracks âAparecidosâ and âBaile Fantasmaâ this looping and hypnotic pattern shuffle resembles ambient Pat Metheny or King Crimson colors, the kind where finding the end of nylon pluck into a weaving, high-frequency synth patch feels not impossible but unnecessary. And on the more metallic side of things, Lemos cranks programmed blasts that carry his tortured, panning, and shrouded wails as a guide for the melodic evolution of each track, much in the same way a warping bass line would in a progressive house track. But maintaining the tempo of classic drum and bass, Camaradagem PĂłstuma wisps away in its atmosphere, coming back to a driving rhythm either via pummeling double kick or glitching break. Despite the hard, danceable pulse that tracks âEnlutadosâ and âEntre Mundosâ boast, BrĂi does not feel built for the kvlt klvbs of this world, leaning on a gated, lo-fi aesthetic that makes for an ideal drift away on closed cans, much like the equally idiosyncratic Wist album from earlier this year. And similarly, Camaradagem PĂłstuma sits in an outsider world of enjoyment. But if any of this sounds like your jam, prepare to get addicted to BrĂi.
Thus Spokeâs Rotten Remnants
LivlĂžs // The Crescent King [October 4th, 2024 â Noctum Productions]
LivlĂžs are one of those bands that deserves far more recognition than they receive. With LP three, The Crescent King, they might finally see it. Their punchy intriguing infusion of Swedish and US melodic death metalâthough the band themselves hail from Denmarkâhas a pleasing melancholia and satisfying bite. Here in particular, thereâs more than a passing resemblance to Hath, to Cognizance, and to In Mourning. Stomping grooves (âMaelstrom,â âUsurpersâ) slide in between blitzes of tripping gallops, and electrifying fretwork (âOrbit Weaver,â âScourge of the Starsâ). Mournful, compelling melodies woven into this technical tapestryâsome highlights being the title track, âHarvest,â and âEndless Majestyââturn already good melodeath into great melodeath; melodeath thatâs majestic and powerful, without ever feeling overblown. With its relentless, groovy dynamism, the crisp, spacious production seals the deal for total immersion. If this is your first time hearing about LivlĂžs, youâre in for a treat.
Sordide // Ainsi finit le jour [October 25th, 2024 â Les Acteurs de lâOmbre Productions]
And So Ends the Day, whilst another begins where I rediscover Sordide. I know not how I forgot their existence despite the impression that 2021âs Les IdĂ©es Blanches made upon me, yet all I could recall was the disturbingly simple, melty art.1 Ainsi Finit le Jour arrives with a hefty dose (53 minutes no less) of punky, dissonant black metal thatâs even rawer and more pissed-off than their usual fare. âDes feux plus forts,â âLa poesie du caniveau,â and the title track stand out as the most vicious, near-first-wave cuts the trio have ever laid down, with manic, group wails, and chaotic, jangling percussion. But as is so often the case with Sordide, perhaps the truest brutality comes in the slower discordant crawls of âSous Vivre,â âTout est a la mort,â and the particularly unsettling âLa beautĂ© du desastre,â whose creeping, half-tuneful teasing and turns to eerie spaciousness get right under your skin. It is arguably a little too long for its own good, given its intensity, but its impressiveness does mean that, this time, Sordide wonât be forgotten.
Dear Hollowâs Droll Hashals
Annihilist // Reform [October 18th, 2024 â Self Release]
What Melbourneâs Annihilist does with flamboyant flare and reckless abandon is blur the lines of its core stylistic choices. One moment itâs chugging away like a deathcore band, the next itâs dripping away with a groove metal swagger, ope, now itâs on its way to Hot Topic. All we know is that all its members attack with a chameleonic intensity and otherworldly technicality thatâs hard to pin down. An insane level of technicality is the thread that courses throughout the entirety of this debut, recalling Within the Ruins or The Human Abstract in its stuttering rhythms and flailing arpeggios. From catchy leads and punishing rhythms (âThe Upsend,â âGuillotineâ), bouncy breakdowns, clean choruses, and wild gang vocals (âBloodâ), djenty guitar seizures (âVirus,â âBetter Offâ) to full-on groove (âN.M.E.,â âThe Hostâ), the likes of Lamb of God, early Architects, Born of Osiris, and Children of Bodom are conjured. Lyrics of hardcore punkâs signature anarchy and societal distrust collide with an instrumental palette of melodeath and the more technical kin of metalcore and deathcore, groove metal, and hardcore. As such, the album is complicated, episodic, and unpredictable, with only its wild technicality connecting its fragmented bits â keeping Reform from achieving the greatness that the band is so capable of. As it stands, though, Annihilist offers an insanely fun, everchanging, and unhinged roller coaster of -core proportions â a roller -corester, if you will.
Under Alekhines Gun
Theurgy // Emanations of Unconscious Luminescence [October 17th, 2024 â New Standard Elite]
In a year where slam and brutal death have already had an atypically high-quality output, international outfit Theurgy have come with an RKO out of nowhere to shatter whatever remains of your cerebral cortex. Channeling the flamboyancy of old Analepsy with the snare abuse and neanderthalic glee of Epicardiectomy, Emanations of Unconscious Luminescence wastes no time severing vertebrae and reducing eardrums to paste. Donât mistake this for a brainless, caveman assault, however. Peppered between the hammiest of hammers are tech flourishes pulled straight from Dingir era Rings of Saturn, adding an unexpected technical edge to the blunt force trauma. The production manages to pair these two disparaging elements with lethal efficiency. Is it the techiest slam album, or the wettest, greasiest tech album? Did I mention thereâs a super moldy cover of Devourmentâs âMolesting the Decapitatedâ? It slots right into the albums flow without feeling like a tacked-on bonus track, highlighting Theurgyâs commitment to the homicidal odes of brutality. Throw in a vocal performance that makes Angel Ochoa (Abominable Putridity) sound like Anders FridĂ©n (In Flames), and youâre left with one last lethal assault to round out the year. Dive in and give your luminescence something to cry about.
GardensTaleâs Great Glacier
Ghosts of Glaciers // Eternal [October 25th, 2024 â Translation Loss Records]
Ghosts of Glaciersâs last release, The Greatest Burden, was a masterclass of post-metal flow and has become a mainstay in my instrumental metal collection since my review in 2019. Dropping in tandem with several other high-profile releases, though, I could not give its follow-up the kind of attention it deserves. And make no mistake, it absolutely deserves that attention. The opening duo, âThe Vast Expanseâ and âSunken Chamber,â measure up fully to The Greatest Burden, though it takes a few spins for that to become clear. Both use repetitive patterns more than before, but closer listens reveal how subtle variations and evolution of each cycle build gradual tension, so the release becomes all the more satisfying. Iâm a little more ambivalent on the back half of Eternal, though. âLeviathanâ packs a bigger punch than more of the bandâs material, it lacks the swirling and sweeping currents that pull me under and demand full and uninterrupted plays every time. Closer âRegeneratio Aeternaâ is a pretty but rather demure piece that lasts a bit longer than it should have. But despite these reservations, the great material outstrips the merely good, and Eternal is a worthwhile addition to any instrumental metal collection.
#AbominablePutridity #AinsiFinitLeJour #AmericanMetal #Analepsy #Annihilist #Architects #Asphyx #AtmosphericBlackMetal #AustralianMetal #BlackMetal #BongRa #BornOfOsiris #BrazilianMetal #BrĂi #BrutalDeathMetal #CamaradagemPĂłstuma #ChildrenOfBodom #CognitiveDissonance #Cognizance #CosmicPutrefaction #Death #DeathMetal #DeathThrash #Deathcore #Devourment #DissonantBlackMetal #DissonantDeathMetal #Electronic #EmanationsOfUnconsciousLuminescence #EmeralFiresAtopTheFarewellMountains #Entombed #Epicardiectomy #Eternal #ExperimentalMetal #Extorted #Feral #FrenchMetal #Gaerea #GermanMetal #GhostsOfGlaciers #GrooveMetal #Hardcore #HardcorePunk #Hath #Helslave #Hulder #InFlames #InMourning #InternationalMetal #ItalianMetal #KingCrimson #LambOfGod #LesActeursDeLOmbreProductions #LivlĂžs #MelodicDeathMetal #Metalcore #NewStandardElite #NewZealandMetal #NoctumProductions #OSDM #PatMetheny #Pestilence #PostBlackMetal #PostMetal #ProfoundLoreRecords #Reform #RingsOfSaturn #SelfRelease #SelfReleased #Slam #Sordide #SunWorship #SwedishMetal #TechnicalDeathMetal #TheCrescentKing #TheHumanAbstract #Theurgy #ThrashMetal #ToUsurpTheThrones #TranscendingObscurityRecords #TranslationLossRecords #UponTheHillsOfDivination #VendettaRecords #VertebraAtlantis #Vorga #Wist #WithinTheRuins
My top 5 metal releases of the year for #GroupMetalAOTY2024
- "Coma" #Gaerea
- "Les dires de l'Ăąme" #Silhouette
- "The way of Ancients" #Volcandra
- "De Republica" #Griffon
- "Phantazein" #Cognizance
âA San Francisco store is shipping LGBTQ+ books to states where they are banned.â
If there isnât already gay samizdat in a bunch of these places controlled by slackjawed cavemen, there will be soon.
A bookstore in San Francisco is sending boxes of LGBTQ+ books to parts of the country where they are banned. The effort at Fabulosa Books seeks to counter increasing attempts by conservative advocacy groups and lawmakers to get the materials out of public schools and libraries. The bookstore started sending the books in May and has mailed over 700 books to places where many of the bans have been implemented, including Florida, Texas, and Missouri. One recipient is a recently opened LGBTQ+ community center in Florida. nonprofit literature advocacy group PEN America says in a report that 30% of books that have been banned include LGBTQ+ characters or themes.
Stuck in the Filter: Januaryâs Angry Misses
By Kenstrosity
March is but a few days away (at the time of writing), so, naturally, we at AMG and Sons feel itâs finally time to leave 2023 behind. Entering 2024 with a fresh vat of anger juice to fuel our findings, we trudge through the thin metal walls of our ever-taxed filtration system. And boy howdy did we get lucky this month!
Januaryâs Filter is stuffed to the gills with great options, sure to find a home in the arms of one of you despicable rascals lovely readers. If there was ever a Filter stocked enough to feed an entire readership in one fell swoop, itâs this one. Now, go! Feast!
Kenstrosityâs Scuzzy Slags
Dark Oath // Ages of Man [January 18th, 2024 â Self Release]
Portuguese symphonic, melodic death metal five-piece1 Dark Oath quietly dropped its sophomore effort Ages of Man to an unsuspecting public midway through January. After a whopping eight years since their debut When Fire Engulfs the Earth released, surely expectations for fans run high. As for me, this is my first foray, and this follow-up is nothing short of striking. Immediately recalling Aephanemerâs excellent Prokopton and Aetherâs In Embers, riffs arenât Ages of Manâs focus. Rather, epic guitar licks and leads command the charge with a cavalcade of orchestral layers forming an army of triumphant melodies and counterpoint just behind (âGold Iâ and âGold IIâ). Prominently featured and wonderfully effective, acoustic plucking from what sounds like a bouzouki evokes the magnificence and reverent tones of Gorgonâs Elegy, creating another core character for this epic journey that deepens the experience further (âSilver I,â âBronze I,â âBronze IIâ). While I occasionally pine for more engaging, groovy riffs to provide greater dynamics than the chugging gallops utilized instead, thereâs no denying that Dark Oathâs infectious melodies and danceable rhythms punch far above the weight of forty-two minutes of lush, epic material (âSilver II,â âHeroic I,â âIronâ). At the end of the day, if you wanna go on cinematic adventures in the near future, queue up Ages of Man. It will be your guide.
RhĂ»n // Conveyance in Death [January 26th, 2024 â I.K. Productions]
Falls of Raurosâ founding member Aaron Charles, known for his emotive and vicious howls and creative guitar work, established solo act RhĂ»n back in 2021. Over the past year, a set of singles hinted at what debut full-length Conveyance in Death might hold for the Portland, Maine multi-instrumentalist. Now that itâs unleashed upon the world, this record proves to be a compelling amalgam of atmospheric black metal, post-black, and death metal. Opener âMorningstarâ showcases all of these facets with aplomb, shifting from crushing riffs to a gorgeous trem-based ascension in the final third. Further down the line, Song oâ the Year contender âBone Ornamentâ suitably shatters my bones with its awesome main riff, swaggering groove, and vicarious pacing. Other interesting forays into multifaceted modality and doom-laden marches help define the darker âTomb of Andesiteâ and âCitadels in Ruins.â At a tight thirty-seven minutes of quality material, thereâs little here that needs editing, although some lengthier passages in âHowl of Gleaming Swordsâ and closer âNightâs Glacial Passingâ could stand a thirty-second trim here or there. Nonetheless, this is a strong launch for the fledgling project, and I canât wait to hear how Aaron develops it in the future.
Niemaracz // The Tales of the Dense Forest [January 31st, 2024 â Self Release]
Hailing from Almaty, Kazakhstan, uber-obscure stoner doom black metal band Niemaracz doesnât even have a date of establishment listed on Metallum. Pulling from fuzzy doom metal, languid stoner rock, folk-tinged heavy metal, and witchy black metal, debut record The Tales of the Dense Forest ushers in a sound I canât say Iâve ever heard before. Icy and warm, rich and sharp, relaxed and blistering, these sprawling soundscapes challenge every preconception I held for not one, but four distinct styles. Yet, coming in at just under thirty minutes, this record marries them all as fluidly as a babbling brook glides over stone. With the immersive opener, âThe Experiment,â Niemaraczâs high-fantasy fueled melodies and classic riffs impress with their uncanny synchronicity, while the fuzzy and warm production deepens the musicâs cohesion. Album highlight, âThe Faithful Horse,â manages to blend classic Iron Maiden gallops with the sort of furious black metal Iâd sooner expect from Emperor, all wrapped up in stoned fuzz, and itâs fascinating. Sometimes, the clean baritones are far too forward in the mix, throwing that delicate balance of tones and textures way off. Thankfully, the consistently entertaining and novel songwriting makes it all worthwhile (âThe Secret of Longevityâ). Go check them out, and give their lone Bandcamp supporter a new friend!
Tales From the Garden
Slift // Ilion [January 19th, 2024 â Sub Pop Records]
I am going to preface this glowing recommendation by saying that this fucking behemoth is far too long. Itâs nigh-on 80 minutes of dense, twisting, and very French psychedelic madness, and the brain can only contain so much of that for so long. The reason I am posting it here anyway is that it is really good dense twisting French psychedelic madness. Slift became an underground darling after 2020âs Ummon, which got them enough acclaim to be Artist in Residence at the 2022 edition of Roadburn, where I first became acquainted with the Toulouse formation. Ilion is a feverish album, a chase through winding soundscapes that always change but never end, layers of vocals and synths passing in and out of view, the hefty riffs hammering your back and Frenchmen hollering at you from behind. Slift has been getting heavier with each release and now firmly finds itself in sludge territory. The phenomenal drums are the tone, the pace, and the foundation here, a colossal presence even if their sound isnât massive per se. They remind most of the climactic sequences Dvne so excels at, a bludgeoning dynamic shuffle that feels like getting caught in an avalanche, but retaining their old-school jam-band roots. Thankfully thereâs enough variation to mitigate the bloat a bit, from left-field saxophone intermissions to more mid-paced material like the excellent atmospheric doom of âWeaversâ Weft.â Ilion is a deep, deep well, but a richly rewarding one for fans of heavy psych.
Carcharodonâs Fanged Fancies
áœÏλίÏÎ·Ï // ΠαÏαΌαÎčÎœÎżÎŒÎΜη [January 12th, 2024 â Self-released]
At this point, I am almost relieved that the Chinese black metal-making machine known as áœÏλίÏÎ·Ï (Hoplites, for those of us not well versed in Ancient Greek) resolutely continues to not send us promo. Such is his level of productivity and, crucially, consistency, that I fear I would spend a fair chunk of my time just writing >3.0 reviews for his various projects (Vitriolic Sage being another good one). A case in point, his latest offering, áœÏλίÏηÏ, is another absolute banger. Î âαâÏâαâÎŒâαâÎčâΜâÎżâÎŒâÎâΜâη actually offers something slightly different from previous outings. While still very much playing in the almost clinically harsh black metal space, there is a more present and more vicious bass groove to this (fifth track âÎŁÏ ÎŒÎŒÎčαÎčΜÏΌΔΜαÎč ÎÎčÎżÎœÏÏáżł áŒÎ»Î”Ï ÎžÎÏÎčáżłâ), as well as, more surprisingly, a lot of freeform jazz elements. Screaming sax and trumpets are a big component, particularly in the first half of the record, giving the whole a feeling of White Ward and John Zorn having a particularly raucous threesome with Vredehammer. There is nothing tender about whatâs happening though; itâs furious, pummelling, experimental⊠at least one of which is a thing that a threesome should be. A punishing, relentless listen, with unexpected twists, áœÏλίÏÎ·Ï has once again cranked out a fascinating record, and in record time.
Infant Island // Obsidian Wreath [January 12th, 2024 â Secret Voice]
Infant Island is new to me but, apparently, not to allâIâve seen a fair bit of buzz around these guysâand Obsidian Wreath is the Virginiansâ third record. Probably best tagged as blackened screamo, this record has contradictory feelings of warmth and utterly despairing rage. The band themselves cite Panopticon and Deafheaven as influences. I can hear both in their sound, the melodic complexity of the former, and the atmospheric wall-of-sound style of the latter. However, there are a few other things going on in the mix, with something of the frantic, chaotic precision of Pupil Slicer (âFulfilledâ), as well as the haunted and melodic deathgaze of Kardashev (âAmaranthineâ and âKindlingâ). Guitarists Alexander Rudenshiold and Winston Givler create such a dense morass of sound, that it often feels like there are more than two guitar lines in play, while Kyle Guerraâs bass adds something faintly grindcore-esque to the mix. All five members are credited with the vocals, which are throat-shredding and packed with pain, mourning, and frustration. Obsidian Wreath is a brutal, percussive listen, that feels like itâs tearing open your ears so that it can scream directly into your brain. At the same time, dark and unsettling electronica and arrangements (âFound Handâ) play a part in lulling the battered listener, preparing you for the next assault, as does the mix, which is surprisingly rich for all the pummelling. Although Infant Island is a screamo band, they reach with confidence into other genres for inspiration, making for a much more interesting proposition.
Thus Spokeâs Reviled Ramblings
Cognizance // Phantazein [January 26th, 2024 â Willowtip]
As most of them are from Leeds, I would have expected Cognizance to know that the objectively correct, British spelling is Cognisance, actually.2 But what the Loiners3 might lack in grammatical precision, they more than makeup for in musical style. Finessing their brand of tech-death, which falls somewhere between The Faceless and Allegaeon, Phantazein realizes the convergence of grooviness, melodic catchiness, and technicality with panache. Stomping, neck-snapping, and irresistibly foot-tapping rhythms tumble over one another with precise eagerness (âCeremonial Vigour,â âFutureless Horizon,â âThe Towering Monumentâ). Punchy, satisfyingly urgent melodies lead the way in chunky, groovy guitar dances (âA Brain Dead Memoir,â âShock Heuristics,â âShadowgraphâ). With the exception of the (unnecessary) echoing interlude âAlferov,â this thing wrestles and roils its way into and around your general head area. Itâs snappy, slick, and smooth. Phantazein (I think) comes from the Greek meaning âto appear,â as in, to seem a certain way. It seems to me, at least, that Phantazein is a banger.
Resin Tomb // Cerebral Purgatory [January 19th, 2024 â Transcending Obscurity Records]
Having stolen this from Feroxâs rightful hands due to his punishing work schedule, I find myself, not for the first, or the last time this year Iâm sure, singing the praises of a Transcending Obscurity release. But Cerebral Purgatory deserves praise in its own right. Punishingly heavy, yet remarkably listenable, it sees Resin Tomb filter grindy percussive assaults and dissonant death metal through a hard/grind-core medium. Barking screams breaking across ringing, tremolo-ing descending scales and tempos from charge to crushing, headbanging groove. Clanging, twanging guitar beats aggressive and menacing patterns (âFlesh Brick,â âScalded,â âPutrescenceâ). Sometimes, this makes for pleasingly slick, melancholic melodies, that play out with stalking grace (title track, âHuman Confetti,â âConcrete Cryptâ). Other times, relentless blastbeating or chonky bass chugging provides the background for the axeâs more dissonant angularity (âDysphoria,â âPurge Fluid,â âFlesh Brickâ). Like âa more hardcore-y Nightmarer,â4 or perhaps even an extreme metal Knocked Loose mixed with Nothingness. Seriously, just listen to it.
Mystikus Hugebeardsâs Stupendous Scrolls
Albion // Lakesongs of Elbid [January 27th, 2024 â Self-Release]
Iâve been on a folk metal streak of late, yet Iâve struggled to find something that really gripped me the way I wanted. Thus did fate decree that some watery tart hanginâ about in ponds would lob a sword at me in the form of Lakesongs of Elbid, the debut album by the British folk band Albion. This album transposes Celtic folklore into lush, lightly proggy folk metal in the vein of Big Big Train, and is written like the music you hear in your head when you picture a grand quest to Camelot or the Isles of Avalon. âArthurian Overtureâ begins the journey in earnest, the music cresting triumphant, orchestral hills and striding through valleys of flute passages, all to the rhythmic footsteps of the guitars. From there, Lakesongs of Elbid explores a wide array of musical locales that can range from direct, determined metal riffs (âFinding Avalonâ), traces of British tavern rock (âBarretâs Privateers,â âSilvaplana Rockâ), or somber, acoustic folk (âCamlannâ). The quest is spearheaded by Joe Parrish-James, whose vocals effortlessly merge the buttery smooth cadence of a seasoned storyteller with a youthful yearning for adventure. That idea of adventure is the beating heart of Lakesongs of Elbid; I can think of a few bands that so easily transport the listener to a new world of vibrant color and sound. Adventurous, enchanting, tons of fun, and extraordinarily British.
Dolphin Whispererâs Slippery Sermon
Cancer Christ // God Is Violence [January 5th, 2024 â Seeing Red Records]
HAIL CHRIST! HAIL CHRIST!! DO YOU SEE THE LIGHT? DO YOU SEE IT?? ITâS AT THE END OF A TUNNEL FILLED WITH RAPISTS, SATANISTS, PEOPLE WHO DONâT BELIEVE IN GODâS LOVE. âSATAN IS A BITCH.â SEE THE LIGHT. SEE JESUS CHRIST. JESUS KNOWS THE WORLD CAN BE A BETTER PLACE. JESUS KNOWS THE WORLD NEEDS RIFFS. JESUS KNOWS THE WORLD DOESNâT NEED COPS. âGOD HATES COPS.â THEY STAND IN THE WAY OF GODâS POWER. HUBRIS! JESUS KNOWS THAT WEâRE ALL BETTER DEAD THAN ALIVE. JESUS CAN KILL US ALL JUST FINE HE DOESNâT NEED COPS. DID YOU HEAR? DID YOU HEAR JESUSâ WORD?? WE NEED TO âBRING BACK THE GUILLOTINEâ â WE NEED TO CIRCLE PIT AROUND THE SINNERS AND CHOP THEIR HEADS OFF. CHOP THEIR HEADS OFF!! THE ONLY WAY THEYâLL SEE GODâS LOVE IS IF THEYâRE DEAD. DO YOU HEAR THE SCREECHING? THAT HIGH-PITCHED SQUIRMING? THAT THRASHY RHYTHMIC PULSE? THATâS THE ONLY WAY WEâLL GET THESE SINNERS WHO HAVE BEEN âBAPTIZED IN PISS AND SHIT.â HAIL CHRIST! HAIL CHRIST!! WE HAVE SKANKS (BEATS)! WE HAVE MENTAL BREAKDOWNS! âJESUS GOT A BIG OLâ COCKâ TOO! IF YOU DESIRE SALVATION YOUâLL WORSHIP CHRIST IF YOU KNOW WHATâS GOOD FOR YOU. SPREAD JESUSâ LOVE LIKE HEâS SPREAD HIS SEED ACROSS THE WORLD. CANCER CHRIST HAS LAID THE PATH BEFORE YOU. DONâT LISTEN TO LESSER GOSPELS EVEN IF THEY SOUND SIMILAR. DEAD KENNEDYS ARE OLD BUT NOT AS OLD AS HIS WISDOM. CHILD BITE HAS NO CLUE OF THE PATH OF GOD. TRAP THEM DOESNâT EVEN KNOW HOW TO BUILD A CROSS LET ALONE HOW TO NAIL JESUS SINNERS TO ONE. COVER YOURSELF IN âTHE BLOOD OF JESUSâ TO PROTECT YOURSELF FROM THESE DIRECTIONLESS GOSPELS WHO KNOW NOTHING OF THE LOVE OF GOD. FILL YOUR LIFE WITH MEANING. FILL YOUR LIFE WITH JESUSâ CUM. âGOD BLESS THE RAPISTS.â GOD IS THRASH. GOD IS NOISE. GOD IS LOVE. GOD IS VIOLENCE. HAIL CHRIST!!! HAIL!!!! CHRIST!!!!!5
Dear Hollowâs Magnanimous Muddle
Her Last Sight // Picture Perfect [January 19th, 2024 â Liron Avital Productions / Self-Released]
You see metalcore, you run? Well run, bitch, run. Cuz Her Last Sight is bringing back the 2000s metalcore that made Hot Topic-obsessed millennials go absolutely bananas. Being that this was my well-trod path to the harsher realities of metalâs more textured offerings, I was all for giving Picture Perfect after seeing the Israelisâ incredibly accomplished guitarist Ofek Asulinâs insane licks on TikTok. While completely acknowledging that this bad boy is not going to change your mind on metalcore, Picture Perfect is core nostalgia through and through. Parkway Driveâs fist-pumping brutality collides with As I Lay Dyingâs wild technicality, fed through the riff-happy arpeggio machines of Killswitch Engage or Trivium with clean choruses and heart-wrenching melodies straight outta In Hearts Wake or The Amity Affliction. Breakdowns and wild riffs dominate tracks like âIn Dying Light,â âHorizons,â and âR.I.P.â, while the soaring choruses of âParalyzed,â âCareless,â and âHeart // Mindâ remain seared in the mind. While the too-loud and frail clean vocals are too often a weak link, the album is overlong, and the sparse electronic trip-hop influence feels largely unnecessary, the formidable technicality and solid songwriting grant Her Last Sight a relatively guilt-free nostalgia trip with Picture Perfect.
Hyloxalus // Make Me the Heart of the Black Hole [January 26th, 2024 â Self-Release]
For those of you who have read my reviews before, you know how much I am not a power metal guy. I reviewed Moonlight Haze twice to make myself more marketable when I first joined these halls, but it is far and away not my cup of tea. Thus, I was cautiously intrigued by the âdark power metalâ tag of the Edmonton trio Hyloxalus. How this translates is that we are graced with the powerful operatic vocals of Nina Laderoute while instrumentalists Danial âAniMalâ Devost and Mike Bell offer a noisy and relentless thrash riff-forwardness that feels both kickass and cold. Channeling Nightwishâs weirder and heavier moments, the trio rockets its sound to the cosmos, where weâre granted sounds expansive, exploratory, and epic (âUndead in Ward 6,â âSailors Underneath the Wavesâ), while unforgiving coldness and isolation are constant reminders of the darkness (âHe Dies in the Swamp,â âSevered from the Reborn Sunâ). Donât get me wrong, Hyloxalus is far from perfect in a tinny production and wonky mixing, while slower tracks like âDream Chasmâ and âBeyond the Soilâ get bogged down by sluggish tempos. However, Make Me the Heart of the Black Hole is a ton of fun from a young band with a unique and weirdass sound that may just capture your heart.
#Aephanemer #Aether #AgesOfMan #Albion #AmericanMetal #AsILayDying #AustralianMetal #BigBigTrain #CancerChrist #CerebralPurgatory #ChildBite #ChineseMetal #Cognizance #ConveyanceInDeath #DarkOath #DeadKennedys #Deafheaven #DeathMetal #DissonantBlackMetal #DoomMetal #Dvne #Emperor #FallsOfRauros #FolkMetal #FrenchMetal #GodIsViolence #Gorgon #Grindcore #Hardcore #HeavyMetal #HerLastSight #Hoplites #Hyolaxus #IKProductions #Ilion #InHeartsWake #InfantIsland #IronMaiden #JohnZorn #Kardashev #KazakhstaniMetal #KillswitchEngage #KnockedLoose #LakesongsOfElbid #LironAvitalProductions #MakeMeTheHeartOfTheBlackHole #MelodicBlackMetal #MelodicDeathMetal #Metalcore #MoonlightHaze #Niemaracz #Nightmarer #Nightwish #Nothingness #ObsidianWreath #Panopticon #ParkwayDrive #Phantazein #PicturePerfect #PortugueseMetal #PowerMetal #ProgressiveBlackMetal #ProgressiveMetal #PsychedelicMetal #PupilSlicer #ResinTomb #Review #Reviews #RhĂ»n #Screamo #SecretVoids #SeeingRedRecords #SelfRelease #Slift #Sludge #StonerDoom #StonerMetal #StuckInTheFilter #SubPopRecords #SymphonicMetal #SymphonicPowerMetal #TechnicalDeathMetal #TheAmityAffliction #TheTalesOfTheDeepForest #TranscendingObscurityRecords #TrapThem #Trivium #UKMetal #VitriolicSage #Vredehammer #WhiteWard #WillowtipRecords #áœÏλίÏÎ·Ï #ΠαÏαΌαÎčÎœÎżÎŒÎΜη
#NowPlaying this wonderful new #FullAlbum by Cognizance from Leeds, UK. It's a concept album called Phantazein "and delves into the intricate interplay between art, obsession, and the profound influence of one's environment".
You can find it on bandcamp here:
https://cognizance.bandcamp.com/album/phantazein
#Music #Metal #TechnicalDeathMetal #ProgressiveMetal #Cognizance
11 track album
#TheMetalDogArticleList
#MetalInjection
COGNIZANCE Returns With Technical New Single "The Towering Monument"
Cognizance doesn't miss.
https://metalinjection.net/video/cognizance-returns-with-technical-new-single-the-towering-monument
#Cognizance #NewSingle #TheToweringMonument #TechnicalMetal #SurpriseRelease #BlueprintOfTheFallen #MetalInjection #ProgMetal #DeathMetal