Record’s o’ the Month – October 2025

By Steel Druhm

The holidays are in full swing, turkeys have been stuffed, and thoughts turn to gift-giving, tree trimming, and snow golem building. Into this hectic, Mariah Carey-voiced silly season comes the October Record(s) o’ the Month. Yes, it’s a lot to process this time of year, and yes, it may be the Ho, Ho, HO that breaks your Christmas spirit like a wishbone, but we must endure for the good of the children. Unwrap these generous gifts and be thankful you didn’t get cesspool coal or spoiled pruno, you greedy fooks!

What more can we say about the progressive death metal of An Abstract Illusion? We fanboyed long and hard on their 2020 opus, Woe, and now in 2025, a new reviewer picked up the mantle and fanboyed just as hard over The Sleeping City. It’s almost like they paid us! Loaded with synths and emotional textures, The Sleeping City doesn’t try to replicate the melancholy of Woe, but instead finds its own groove with hints of Blood Incantation in its tasteful ferocity and venom. Violin, cello, and multiple vocalists help round out the scope and tapestry, and everything is played for and with emotion and feelz. Words like “masterpiece” have been thrown around the AMG offices despite my regime of brutal whippings and electro-torture. As a gobsmacked Killjoy gushed, “The Sleeping City is different enough to further expand An Abstract Illusion’s fanbase while retaining the heartfelt compositions that garnered such a large following before.” I guess there must be something special here after all.1

Runner(s) Up:

Aephanemer // Utopie [October 31, 2025 | Napalm Records | Bandcamp] — Number one on my pile of shame is Aephanemer’s brilliant Utopie, which takes the things that make these French neoclassical melodeath dealers great and continues building. Fortunately, while I’ve been trapped in the nether realm—a glass cage of emotion and questionable well-being—I have capable wordsmiths who are willing to climb over my near-corpse to produce brilliant reviews. Grin Reaper waxed poetic and had the added benefit of waxing correctly: “Utopie is the sound of a band with a vision so crisp and vivid that all you need to do is close your eyes to be whisked away to paradise. Aephanemer oozes jubilance and confidence, harnessing the successes of previous albums and honing them to an eager edge,” he gushed, “sallying forth with nary a concern for detractors. In a year when melodeath claimed two of 2025’s Records o’ the Month and saw huge releases from legends and newcomers alike, Utopie claims the top spot in the genre. Aephanemer in 2025 best embodies the spirit and triumph of what symphonic melodeath can do, mustering a celebration of undeniable charm and panache.” I mean, that’s pretty close to what I would’ve said. Just, y’know, late and with unearned confidence. – AMG

Dawnwalker // The Between [October 24th, 2025 | Independent Release | Bandcamp] — U.K.’s Dawnwalker are the kind of band that evolve and mutate from album to album. On The Between, they offer a single 30-plus-minute song showcasing a delicate blend of progressive, post, folk, doom, death metal, and New Age sounds,2 without forfeiting their metal credentials. With a concept centered on death and dying, things won’t exactly be cheery, but the music’s ebbs and flows take you on a real journey. The album’s seamless movement between heaviness and serenity lets it slip beyond strict genre boundaries and into something more cinematic. The Between feels meticulously structured and, because of its grand scale, continues to reveal new layers with each listen. As Twelve exuberantly exclaimed, “Writing a half-hour song in any context is a mighty undertaking, and it’s impressive how well Norgate and Dawnwalker pull it off on The Between.” Dawnwalker walks the walk.3

Howling Giant // Crucible & Ruin [October 31st, 2025 | Magnetic Eye Records | Bandcamp] — Nashville stoner/psychedelic rockers Howling Giant have a pretty unique sound that references multiple genres and some better-known acts, yet they never lose their own unmistakable identity. Their rock-forward foundation carries traces of sludge and a healthy dose of prog, all wrapped around hooky choruses and riffs built to level small buildings. The new record sharpens that formula: the songwriting feels broader and more ambitious, with layered guitars, soaring vocal harmonies, and psychedelic atmospheres that push them well beyond the usual stoner-rock palette. At the same time, they’ve kept the crushing low-end and riff-driven punch that makes their catalog so replayable, giving the album an immediacy that sticks from the first spin onward. All of it is cloaked in just the right amount of stoner smoke and mirrors, and there’s a rowdy, anthemic groove running through the whole affair—complete with nods to Helmet—so you know fun will be had. As Dear Hollow screamed at unsuspecting readers, “Songwriting prowess on full display, the kitchen sink of riff, solo, melody, and catchiness has never looked so clean!” Howl with the giant pack.

#2025 #AnAbstractIllusion #CrucibleRuin #Dawnwalker #HowlingGiant #RecordSOTheMonth #TheBetween #TheSleepingCity

Howling Giant – Crucible & Ruin Review

By Dear Hollow

Howling Giant occupies such an odd place within its scene. The Nashville collective is stoner metal and psych rock to the core in an energetic way that recalls the down-and-dirty acts like High on Fire or Mastodon, but layers of melody and creative chord usage feel progressive a la Intronaut or Baroness and the triple vocal harmonies are catchy yet evasive, not unlike Torche or Helmet. They also don’t take things too seriously, with a solid sense of humor and a relatable relationship with fans to bring their formidable technical skill to earth.1 Now a release removed from the formidable debut full-length The Space Between Stars and even more from the Black Hole Space Wizard suite, Howling Giant proves their worth once more.

To address the elephant in the room, Glass Future saw Howling Giant’s progressive tendencies flying their freak flag too much. While attempting to keep the stoner murk and reconcile it with aptly crystalline melody, the band lost what is so great about them: solid songwriting. It’s completely contrary to what gave them the edge over genre mates Sergeant Thunderhoof in their dueling split – their head-first dabbling in more elusive chord progressions felt like a more stoner-inclined dime-store version of Intronaut’s Habitual Levitations. This is what makes third full-length Crucible & Ruin so refreshing:2 it’s everything you love about the Nashville now-quartet – and more. The template of killer riffs, soaring choruses, searing solos, and stoner haze is amplified by new guitarist/synth player Adrian Zambrano – adding layers and textures to Howling Giant’s already winning formula.

Howling Giant feels reinvigorated with Crucible & Ruin. Songwriting prowess on full display, the kitchen sink of riff, solo, melody, and catchiness has never looked so clean. While some remnants of Glass Future hang around in more evasive chord structures and emphasis on melody (instrumental “Lesser Gods”), the tracks shift from the anthemic to the kickass, rounded out by the understated Helmet-esque triple-vocal attack – a potentially divisive element of Howling Giant’s sound –3 and that warm stoner haze. Chunky riffs dominate and add a jolt of energy (“Hunter’s Mark,” “Beholder I: Downfall”), while anthemic choruses and transcendent chord progressions take listeners to a psychedelic heaven (“Archon,” “Archivist”). Southern fried bluesy vibes a la All Them Witches also grace the vibe with a backwoods atmosphere (“Beholder II: Labyrinth,” “Melchor’s Bones”), paying homage to their home state of Tennessee. All assets culminate in the two parts of “Beholder,” the Phrygian key giving them a more epic and grandiose feel.

With the addition of Zambrano, Howling Giant has never felt so fleshed out. Compared to the flashy vocals and melodies of Sergeant Thunderhoof, Howling Giant has always been a meat-and-potatoes type of band, but Crucible & Ruin finds the band building upon this template using more versatility in its musical arsenal. Layers of melodic overlays grace rhythmic punch a purpose and intensity (“Canyons,” “Scythe and Scepter”), the tasteful balance between the melodic and the skronky add intrigue and madness (“Hunter’s Mark,” “Archon,” “Beholder I: Downfall”), and ethereal atmosphere is built atop and duels with more downtuned riffs and bass (“Lesser Gods,” “Archivist,” “Beholder II: Labyrinth”). The dueling guitars add a much-needed and ridiculously tantalizing dimension that takes Howling Giant’s already solid sound to new heights.

Howling Giant’s vocal approach of hyper harmonies will remain a divisive element, the central riff and spoken word of “Melchor’s Bones” can get a bit repetitive, and instrumental “Lesser Gods” is a bit questionable, but don’t let that distract you from the fact that it’s the band’s best album to date. Crucible & Ruin distills everything that makes Howling Giant great and beefs it up, weaponizing their already formidable songwriting with Zambrano’s melodic and textural synth and fretwork. Featuring riffs upon riffs with complex songwriting that doesn’t fly over listeners’ heads, relatable vocals that don’t lose their punch, and new guitar work that takes the band to new heights, across a forty-eight-minute runtime that zips by, it’s hard not to bob your head. While comparisons to Mastodon, Baroness, and Anciients are fair, Howling Giant is its own beast, an intersection of stoner haze, riffy intensity, and melodic taste. Crucible & Ruin caught me by surprise in the best way, and is sure to appear at year-end.

Rating: 4.0/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Magnetic Eye Records
Websites: howlinggiant.bandcamp.com | howlinggiant.com | facebook.com/howlinggiant
Releases Worldwide: October 31st, 2025

#2025 #40 #AllThemWitches #AmericanMetal #Anciients #Baroness #CrucibleRuin #CryOfTheAfflicted #Helmet #HighOnFire #HowlingGiant #Intronaut #MagneticEyeRecords #Mastodon #Oct25 #PsychedelicRock #Review #Reviews #SergeantThunderhoof #StonerDoomMetal #StonerMetal #StonerRock #Torche