Einfach das Beste um 30 Minuten Wartezeit auf den Bus zu ĂŒberbrĂŒcken.
Einfach das Beste um 30 Minuten Wartezeit auf den Bus zu ĂŒberbrĂŒcken.
Svarta Havet â MĂ„nen Ska Lysa Din VĂ€g Review
By Kenstrosity
Hailing from Turku, Finland, post-hardcore/blackened post-punk activists Svarta Havet boast a passionate mission statement focused on denouncing fascism; raising connected communities; advocating queer, feminist, and transgender rights and justice; rejecting late-stage capitalist values and recognizing their wide reaching damages to society and the planet; and supporting animal rights. Oftentimes, material dealing with these ideals in the heavy music space trend towards the cynical, hopeless, and bitter perspectives. Those are all valid emotional responses of course, but for Svarta Havet, the primary message is one of hope. These Finns truly believe humanity can turn it around, and make the right choices together to one day repair our connection to ourselves as human beings, to the Earth as stewards of its land and inseparable members of the greater ecosystem, and to our communities as social creatures who thrive together and not apart.
Itâs this message that drew me to Svarta Havet, at Steelâs recommendation, having never heard a note of their music before. What I beheld in their sophomore record, MĂ„nen Ska Lysa Din VĂ€g, is exactly what my promo says on the tin. Post-punk and post-hardcore, with a blackened char. Comparisons to Oathbreaker, Unfurl, and early Downfall of Gaia fit right at home within Svarta Havetâs, albeit more stripped-down interpretation of the style. Building bridges between airy atmosphere and driven, punky attitudes, MĂ„nen Ska Lysa Din VĂ€g boasts a variety of moods, textures, and tempos to help enliven each of its tight 37 minutes. At the same time, it sports a bleak, monochromatic tone that grounds its lively performances inside the reality of our world. With this intriguing formula, Svarta Havet achieve a sound rooted in the trials and tribulations of society in the current era while the fire of change, of hope, and of a deep yearning for a better tomorrow roils just underfoot.
Because Svarta Havet designed MĂ„nen Ska Lysa Din VĂ€g to deliver hopeful, motivating messaging to its audience, I understood why many of these songs arenât as aggressive, depressive, or explosive as my aforementioned reference points. When âHĂ€rlig Ăr Jordenâ implements a slower, more deliberate motif as its primary structure right after opener âGöm Digâ lays across the landscape its blackened post-punk blade, the intent is clear. MĂ„nen Ska Lysa Din VĂ€g is a record for those who wish to listen with an active, open mind, separated from the primal need for relentless riffs and uncompromising violence. As âAvgrundenâ and later MENA-influenced cut âDjurâ raise themselves above the horizon with looming, overcast moods and textured leads, the grim reality of the world is placed firmly in the foreground. However, interspersed within those themes, a counterpoint of inspirational, almost exuberant tremolos and ascendant atmospheric blooms belie that spirit which is unwilling to yield to the shadows. âGöm Digâ and âAlla Stoverâ stoke that fire with the most riff-centric material Svarta Havet have to offer in this installment, brimming with a lively swagger and a punky attitude. In this back-and-forth, MĂ„nen Ska Lysa Din VĂ€g succeeds in its mission of finding the light in a world thatâs lost its way.
The main roadblock to making this record stand out more is one of balance in its compositions. Too often, passages which establish their purpose and achieve their desired effect within the first minute or two extend far past that point, which compromises their impact (âHĂ€rlig Ăr Jorden,â âDitt Rikeâ). Sometimes this detrimental quality comes about in the form of a heavy reliance on baseline repetition. Other times, it manifests in a meandering passage whose resolution doesnât always justify the wait. In other areas, Svarta Havetâs heavier passages can seem overly busy when placed as they are next to more thoughtful pieces (particularly the chorus to âAlla Stoverâ). Another byproduct of the imbalance MĂ„nen Ska Lysa Din VĂ€g carries, the most memorable material leaves very little room for the in-betweens to make a lasting impression. I easily recall âDjurâ for its doom-laden riffs and hypnotic depiction of those scenes of war that devastate the same animal ecosystems to which we all intrinsically belong, but I canât remember a note of its sequel âUnder Staden.â This is especially conflicting as âUnder Stadenâ is arguably the more important of the two to Svarta Havetâs mission, spotlighting the remarkable resilience we see in nature, particularly in animals and insects, within sprawling artificial developments.
When the dust settles, and MÄnen Ska Lysa Din VÀg heaves its last blackened breath, I find myself torn. I love the intent and passion Svarta Havet instilled within their sophomore album, and I think this style of music beautifully fits the prompt. However, I yearn to feel an unbridled enthusiasm for MÄnen Ska Lysa Din VÀg that keeps me coming back for more without a second thought. Instead, I feel a respectable excitement for what Svarta Havet might do to develop their material further going forward. So I wait, on the edge of my seat, to hear what they do next.
Rating: Mixed
DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Prosthetic Records
Website: facebook.com/svartahafvet
Releases Worldwide: May 9th, 2025
#25 #2025 #BlackMetal #DownfallOfGaia #FinnishMetal #MÄnenSkaLysaDinVÀg #May25 #Oathbreaker #PostBlackMetal #PostHardcore #PostMetal #postPunk #ProstheticRecords #Review #Reviews #SvartaHavet #Unfurl
Silhouette â Les Dires de lââĂâme Review
By Carcharodon
Thereâs a little bit of buzz about Montpellier, Franceâs Silhouette, ahead of their full-length debut, Les Dires de lââĂâme. This is built on the undeniable strength of their 2022 EP, Les retranchements (which, passing the 30-minute / seven-track mark as it did, was arguably an LP but thatâs by the by). There, the sextet blended various styles, including black and post-metal, and shoegaze to create a dark and dreamy atmosphere, which oscillated between ghostly beauty and harsh, post-black fury. A lot of the credit for those moods must go to Silhouetteâs dual vocalists, Ondine and Yharnam, who serve up gorgeous (female) cleans and anguished (male) post-hardcore screams, respectively. Now extending themselves into longer-form album creation, can the French group conjure up similarly enchantments on Les Dires de lâĂme?
If Les retranchements found Silhouette lost in a disturbing daydream, Les Dires de lâĂme sees them trapped in a labyrinthine nightmare of dense, swirling banks of bittersweet emotion. At times, honeyed darkness, at others crawling horrors, itâs the sort of thing you wake up from wide-eyed, shaking and moist with sweat. Evoking the hopeless misery of Amenra, combined with the gossamer, ethereal turbulence of Sylvaineâs Nova, Silhouette simply sweep you along with them on this journey. Despite running to a relatively modest 45 minutes, the sheer scale and grandeur, the epic feel, packed into this recordâs short run, remind me of Hulderâs Verses in Oath. However, Les Dires de lâĂme is a significantly more diverse record, subtly shifting between, at one end of the spectrum, soaring, percussion-free laments (âLâAppelâ) and huge, oppressive post-black, doom-tinged pieces (title track), at the other. At their most effective, however, Silhouette seamlessly blend these two sides of their sound, allowing them to twist into and around each other (âCatalepsieâ).
Undoubtedly Silhouetteâs greatest asset is its vocalists. On Les Dires de lâĂme, Ondine and Yharnam voices combine to create something of the magic found on Cult of Luna and Julie Christmasâ collaboration, Mariner. Although Silhouette also attracts the post-metal tag, they have relatively little in common with Cult of Luna musically (though see âSilhouetteâ, where a few similarities surface in the guitar work), save for that feeling that the dueling vocals of Joanneâs Persson and Christmas were able to call forth. The shades of light and dark, beauty and pain are spellbinding, even more so when the two run in parallel, with Yharnam howling over Ondineâs airy, elegant cleans (âUne Lame Ăprise,â and the back end of âDysthymieâ). All this praise for the vocalists should not detract from the work of guitarists Achlys and Vyartha. Together, they deliver towering post-metal soundscapes that crush like calving glaciers, alongside blackened tremolos but also delicately melodic, picked passages, which enhance the trance-like reverie. In places, the guitar work reminds me of the most recent Downfall of Gaia (âUne Lame Ăpriseâ and the title track), in others Alcestâs Ăcailles de Lune. Zhandâs drumming is similarly deft in touch, with progressive fills and restrained, almost post-rock, beats featuring as often as the metronomically precise blasts.
Itâs not just the songwriting, but also the overall pacing and structuring of the album, that makes Les Dires de lâĂme the massive success it is. Silhouetteâs ability to glide between harsh and delicate, or soften the blackened edges of their sound, both through Ondineâs voice but also the keen melodies of Achlys guitar, are second to none. They also made some bold writing choices, like on âAdoubĂ©e des Ă©toiles,â which sees Yharnam take a back seat, as Ondineâs vocals are double-tracked to stunning effect over claustrophobic, brooding guitar lines. The production is also generally strong, with drum sound particularly rich, which is not always the case for post-black bands. The positioning of the vocals in the mix also plays to their strength, putting them front and centre, allowing Ondineâs voice in particular to take flight, but without totally dominating.
The cover art, depicting a shrouded soul drifting up from a broken corpse toward a dark and starry sky, is a good metaphor for what Silhouette created with Les Dires de lâĂme. A haunting experience from start to finish, it is one that could so easily have fallen prey to the twin pitfalls of over-indulgent writing and terrible production. It did not and that is hugely to Silhouetteâs credit. They have crafted a hypnotic debut, which will truly be hard to top on their next outing. Donât be surprised to see this appearing on some year-end Lists (including mine).
Rating: 4.0/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Antiq Records
Websites: silhouettebm.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/SilhouetteBM
Releases Worldwide: October 20th, 2024
#2024 #40 #Alcest #Amenra #AntiqRecords #AtmosphericBlackMetal #BlackMetal #CultOfLuna #DownfallOfGaia #FrenchMetal #Hulder #JulieChristmas #LesDiresDeLĂMe #Oct24 #PostHardcore #PostMetal #Review #Reviews #Shoegaze #Silhouette #Sylvaine
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GRAND CADAVER, SKITSYSTEM, FRIDAG DEN 13:E & More Contribute To Anti-Suicide Benefit Compilation
Novarupta, BesvÀrjelsen, Downfall of Gaia, and more!
#GrandCadaver #Skitsystem #Novarupta #BesvÀrjelsen #DownfallofGaia #MentalHealth
Carcharodonâs and Cherdâs Top Ten(ish) of 2023
By Carcharodon
Carcharodon
Iâve been tetchy in 2023. Little things Iâd normally barely even noticeâabout people, records, life in general, Mrs Carcharodonâs recent insistence that we buy an air fryerâhave really irked me. Iâm (just about) self-aware enough that I clocked this, only to get more irked when I couldnât put my finger on why. Yes, I turned 40, so am officially Olde and probably have to start listening to Saxon soon but that doesnât fully explain it. Itâs been a pretty good year in the main. Iâm in a new job I like, Shark Pup No 1 has adjusted well to starting school and Shark Pup No 2 continues to get larger(!). Weâve had some good holidays, both as a family and, as a 40th treat to myself, a great trip to Islay, where very large quantities of smoky scotch1 were consumed with three very good friends. So why was I so tetchy? Maybe I was just tired?
As the year drew to a close, however, I realized I wasnât just tired, I was weary. Thereâs a difference and itâs an important one. While Iâm very lucky in many ways, thereâs also a lot going on in my life, lots of spinning plates, and I donât really take any time for myself. That was a bit of a realization. Iâve never been much for self-care or introspection; if Iâm quiet, it doesnât mean that Iâm having deep thoughts, Iâve simply powered down for a bit. So, my resolution for 2024 is to find a little time to do a bit more for myself. I want to up my exercise game. I want to start reading more again. In short, I need to make time to do things I want to do, not just things I need to do. Needy, hey?
Apparently, I also needed a new list mate, after my emotional support sponge of several years ascended to a new name and (deservedly) to a new list status. Farewell Kenstrosity, Iâll miss you but maybe the real List mates are the ones we made along the way. In general, the USS AMG has charted a steady course through choppy waters in 2023, with Steel Druhm a steady, if stern, presence at the helm, while the editors dealt out the daily lashes and suspiciously cloudy grog. Thanks to them for all their efforts (only sometimes literally) whipping us into shape, and to all my fellow writers. You are all, to quote everyoneâs favorite A.N.Gry Doc, idiots and I love less than half of you, half as well as you deserve but you are still better than many alternatives (like the Commentariat, who are awful(ly loveable)).
And with that, I have indulged myself enough. So, without further ado, here is the List of the writer who last year won the First Annual Killjoy Kudos for Best Taste Award (although, strangely, the statuette to which I assume I am entitled, has thus far failed to materializeâŠ).
#ish. Omnivortex // Circulate â Tech deathâindeed, death metal in generalâisnât really my thing, and the adulation heaped on Omnivortexâs 2020 effort, Diagrams of Consciousness, caused only bemusement for me. However, Circulate is a different beast. Itâs interesting that my (now former *sob*) listmate Kenstrosity awarded Diagrams⊠his #1 spot in 2020 but, in his review of this yearâs effort, said that it took Circulate a while to click for him, with the consistency of songwriting more pronounced here, over its predecessorâs spiky highlights. Perhaps that says something about the difference between what my erstwhile partner and I respectively look for in records. Perhaps it doesnât. Either way, Omnivortex bullied and beasted their way onto this List because there was no force to stop them.
#10. Warcrab // The Howling Silence â Warcrabâs Damned in Endless Night made it to #6 on my first-ever List here at AMG, way back in 2019. Looking back now, it probably should have been higher. Itâs been a long wait for The Howling Silence but it didnât disappoint. Operating at that sweet intersection between doom and sludge, the UK veterans sound as filthy and pummelling as ever and, as Cherd pointed out, are now allowing elements of OSDM to bleed into their rumbling assault. The combination makes them as brvtal as theyâve always been but brings a sense of freshness and revitalized energy to Warcrab that I didnât expect but loved to see.
#9. LeiĂŸa // Reue â I had a sneaking suspicion that I underrated the second record from LeiĂŸa, when I reviewed it back in January. This was confirmed when AMG awarded it ROTM in extremely timely fashion, on February 1st, declaring it to be a âmasterful platter of greatâpotentially even excellentâblack metal.â And so it has proved. Itâs an album Iâve returned to over and over as the year went on. Itâs hard to overstate the sheer raw, dark emotion that Reueâs creator Noise channeled into this record. For all that, the great songwriting brings a surprising amount of melody, although this only serves to heighten the sense of loss, remorse, and bitter self-loathing that drenches this (potentially) excellent album. Itâs a devastating album.
#8. Vanishing Kids // Miracle of Death â Itâs hard to put into words exactly what makes Vanishing Kidsâ brand of progressive doom so damn good. Sure, Jason Hartman is a fucking great guitarist but heâs not completely alone in that. Nikki Drohomyrekyâs vocals are hauntingly beautiful but again, other vocalists can achieve that. In his review of Miracle of Death, Steel highlighted the âgraceful, ethereal, and dreamy atmosphereâ conjured by the band from the opener âSpill the Darkâ (also my undisputed song of the year) and thatâs probably about as close as weâll get to the pinning it down. The fact is that Vanishing Kids have that very rare something, that je ne sais quoi. Combining trad doom, psychedelia, 70s occult rock, and more, to create something truly unique requires genuine craft and these guys have it in spades.
#7. The Circle // Of Awakening â I only went back to The Circle to be sure I could cross it off my Listâs longlist. After all, it only got a 3.5 from Dear Hollow, whose taste overlaps with mine to a fair degree. That was about six weeks ago and Iâm here to tell you DH underrated it. Of Awakening has been in heavy rotation ever since. Drawing together the likes of Ahab, Dark Funeral, and My Dying Bride, this is a crushingly dark album, that, despite its beautifully trim runtime, has a real sense of grandeur and majesty about it. Contrary to DHâs thoughts, for me, Of Awakening is so tightly written that The Circle can get away with being as pummelling as they want but thereâs also a lot more nuance and refinement here than one might hear on the first spin. Trust me. Iâve spun this a lot.
#6. Convocation // No Dawn for the Caliginous Night â Thereâs a sweet spot in the year for dropping records. Too early and they may be forgotten; too late and people may not have enough time with them. November 24th definitely falls into the latter camp. With more time, No Dawn for the Caliginous Night could probably have laid siege to my top three but I just didnât get to spend the same amount of time with Convocationâs massive slab of outstanding doom as I did with the other outstanding things you will read about below. Be in no doubt though, Cherd was correct2 to drop a 4.5 on this majestic beast of a record.
#5. Antrisch // EXPEDITION II: Die Passage â Atmoblack comes in for a lot of stick. Some of it is even justified. But, when itâs done right, itâs a thing of beauty and Antrisch undoubtedly does it right. Frigid atmosphere pours out of EXPEDITION II in icy waves but never at the expense of the music, which is killer. Every time I press play, Antrisch drags me away to a tale of terror in the frozen arctic wastes, woven in shades of deepest black. The tremolos cut through me and the rasping vocals cause the hairs on the back of my neck to rise. I feel this record, as much as I hear it and thatâs exactly the way atmoblack should be.
#4. Chained to the Bottom of the Ocean // Obsession Destruction â Chained to the Bottom of the Ocean understand claustrophobia. When I listen to Obsession Destruction it feels like the walls are closing in, like the air is getting thick and hard to take in. The record feels like itâs pressing in on you. That is what sludge should do and Chained is drawing on inspiration from doom to heighten that sense. Itâs beautiful, anguished, and bludgeoning all at once, and despite passing the hour mark, itâs compelling. I loved this record from the moment I heard it, even as it crushed the life out of me.
#3. Fires in the Distance // Air Not Meant for Us â I donât usually accuse I have never accused Thus Spoke of underrating anything. Until now. The faintly progressive, doom-tinged melodeath of Air Not Meant for Us is not great. It is excellent. And I almost slept on it. For whatever reason, the first time I span this album, I didnât even make it to the end and discarded it. But I came back, some months later, and was floored by this record. The deep seams of melody, the excellent use of keys, the soaring guitars, the whole package hit me with a force that only two other records did this year. Whatever was wrong with me the first time around has been scorched away, as Fires in the Distance burn with emotional intensity. The album is beautifully written and paced, which for all its weight and heaviness, also feels fragile and honest, revealing new depths on each revisit.
#2. Wayfarer // American Gothic â Wayfarerâs 2020 effort, A Romance with Violence, was so close. So close to fulfilling the promise of their Wild West black metal. But for all that it did well, as with their earlier two efforts, too many of the tracks went on too long, suffocating under their own weight. As Doom_et_Al said in his review, however, this yearâs âAmerican Gothic is the album Wayfarer have been threatening to make for years ⊠Wayfarer take the violence and beauty of the land they inhabit and translate that to music that reflects that dichotomy.â Iâm not sure thereâs a better way to say it. American Gothic is the album where everything that Wayfarer has struggled to bring together for years finally clicked into place and itâs something truly special.3
#1. Cursebinder // Drifting â Polandâs Cursebinder kinda crept up on me. Since its April release, I have seen little acclaim for it, and my attempts to sell it to my fellow scribes have been met with non-committal murmurs of appreciation. But there is something about Driftingâs progressive black metal, borrowing heavily from both doom and post-metal, that just kept me coming back. Again. And again. Thereâs a shimmering intensity to the record, driven as much by the bright synth work, as Hubert FudaĆaâs crushing riffs and Maciej Proficzâ sulphuric vox, which means that I tend to find myself stopping whatever it is that Iâm doing and simply staring into the middle distance while Drifting washes over me. Itâs not the most technically complex thing on this list, nor is it a record that defies categorization. Itâs simply the album that speaks to me in a way nothing else I heard this year did and what more can you look for in an Album of the Year?
Honorable mentions
Songs oâ the Year:
Cherd
Iâve heard it said that the older one gets, the faster time seems to pass. Thatâs why your memories of childhood seem to take place over an interminable timespan, while your children seem to blast through developmental phases and clothing sizes faster than a grindcore song. Take the little goober directly to the left. He was six weeks old when AMG announced their open call for writers that would eventually lead to my tenure here. Now heâs five and a half and draws pictures of angry carrots and ninja-bread men (a subset of gingerbread men). Since gaining the summit of middle age, I now face the downward slope of lifeâs back half, with its ever-increasing velocity and promise of an abrupt end. All this to say, I donât have any wry observations about 2023 because the fucking thing blew by way too fast.
Perhaps the only way to dampen the breakneck pace of life and reclaim oneâs sanity is to partake in some nice, slow doom metal. In this respect, the universe was merciful as it gifted us with the finest year for down-tuned, down-tempo misery weâve had in ages. There are no fewer than seven doom or doom adjacent entries on my list this year and another handful that only just missed the cut. Yearly disclaimer: if you read my list or any of the others, and wonder why you donât see your pet record, remember that I am but one man with but one kindergartner who robs me of time and life force. I probably didnât get to it. Or maybe I did and your taste is just terrible. Iâd like to thank Steel Druhm for keeping the good ship AMG afloat through a combination of duct tape, bungee cords, and brutal yet dispassionately professional beatings, AMG himself for forgetting that I work here, thus ensuring I wonât be fired, and of course you for reading. With that, hereâs my objectively correct list.
(ish) Chained to the Bottom of the Ocean // Obsession Destruction â This wouldnât be a Cherd list without some sludge doom, and Chained to the Bottom of the Ocean put out one of the finest examples of the genre in 2023. Always a prolific EP band, Obsession Destruction is only their second full length of the last six years, but it sees the band finally shrug off their reputation as a Thou knockoff and come fully into their own. âThe Altarâ and âThe Gates Have Closed and They Will Never Openâ have forever entered my rotation of killer sludge doom tracks. The only band to beat them at their game in 2023 was Warcrab, but weâll get to them in a bit.
#10. Xoth // Exogalactic â No one has more fun with cosmic horrors than Xoth, except maybe those of us who get to smash the play button over and over again on their albums. I got on the âParty Lovecraftâ bus four years ago when I first heard Interdimensional Invocations, and while it may have taken a complete remixing of the album at the 11th hour to get there, Exogalactic does not disappoint as a follow-up. Songs like âReptilian Bloodsport,â âSaga of the Blade,â and âMap to the Stars, Monument to the Ancientsâ take their rightful place alongside the bandâs best work as they continue to hone their winning combination of blackened melo-death and tech-thrash.
#9. Oromet // Oromet â Iâm always thrilled when a new band impresses me with their debut record enough to land a hard-fought spot on my yearly top ten. This year it happened twice. The first entry is Orometâs self-titled LP of expansive, airy funeral doom. The album art of a dramatically jutting rocky peak piercing the firmament while bathed in golds and blues could hardly be a better visual representation of the music. This two-man project of Patrick Hills and Dan Aguilar is an exercise in judiciously balanced light and shadow, weight and buoyancy. Thereâs as much empty space on this record as there is tectonic heft, with overt beauty and ragged desperation embraced in equal measure.
#8. Big|Brave // Nature Morte â In the grand tradition of quoting myself out of laziness: âThe most impressive thing about Nature Morte is its meticulous construction. No matter how sparse it gets, no matter how repetitive the drum strikes or how loose the guitar squalls, thereâs no wasted space. None of the three out of six tracks that stretch past nine minutes feel remotely that long thanks to well-placed transitions, hypnotic rhythms, and the commanding presence of (Robin) Wattieâs vocals⊠Big|Brave delivers a stunning, unique statement on Nature Morte. Without changing the core of the bandâs sound, it signals a remarkable refinement of vision a decade into their existence.â
#7. Curtaân Wall // Siege Ubsessed â Abysmal Specterâs MO has always been to knock down the castle gates with his goofy parade of wizards, knights, and witches riding ostriches and walruses while sneaking infectious melodies and riffs in through the kitchen servantsâ entrance. This is true of Curtaân Wall, one of his dozen or so projects other than his flagship band Old Nick, but on Siege Ubsessed, the black metal mad scientist stands at his infernal machine, turns the knob marked âraw black metalâ down to its lowest setting, and the knobs marked âaccordion,â âbagpipes,â âharpsichord,â and âpan fluteâ to 11. This is jaunty, stupid medieval folk music and an absolutely essential release in Abysmal Specterâs ever-growing oeuvre.
#6. Warcrab // The Howling Silence â Warcrab is the premier death/sludge outfit operating today, and this is their most refined release to date. As I said in my review, âWith The Howling Silence, Warcrab both re-instates their sludge doom bonafides and leans into proper OSDM in ways they havenât before.â Itâs quite the trick making not only one of the best death metal songs of the year in âSword of Mars,â but also the best sludge doom song in âSourlands Under a Rancid Sky,â but Warcrab pulls it off with aplomb. Even as more bands join this burgeoning style, none approach these Brits in terms of talent or execution.
#5. Agriculture // Agriculture â The second of my two favorite new bands of 2023, Agricultureâs âecstatic black metalâ is unlike anything else I heard this year, and I listen to A LOT of black metal. By turns stark and lush, these Californianâs debut record was forged in the fires of blazing black riff craft and the contemporary post-rock zeitgeist. While that usually means some form of black gaze, this is not remotely the case with Agriculture. Thereâs nothing laconic or detached here. The almost shocking earnestness may leave some a bit taken aback, but itâs not as if theyâre any different in that regard than the countless self-serious black metal musician basement dwellers the world over.
#4. Carnosus // Visions of Infinihility â Iâm sure many of my colleagues will fall all over themselves in their respective lists about how much good death metal came out in 2023. I enjoyed my share of it as well, with Dying Fetus, Fossilization, and the mighty Incantation all turning my head, but the only purely death metal record I couldnât stop spinning was Carnosusâ tech-death barn burner Visions of Infinihility. Tight, vicious, and catchy, this record also features the second-best harsh vocal performance of the year behind only the one found on my number-one record. A lot of vocalists can oscillate between death growls and blackened shrieks, but precious few can give you four different tones in one song while putting affected spins on individual words the way Jonatan Karasiak can.
#3. Somnuri // Desiderium â Iâve been pushing this NYC progressive sludge band like a used car dealer with a quota to meet since they dropped their debut in 2017. Theyâve rewarded my faith in them by improving on each subsequent release. From my review: âSomnuri has done exactly what you want to see a promising band do with their third record. Namely, take anything that worked with the first two, amp that up a bit, and commit fully to a new wrinkle to elevate the material. The addition of (Soundgarden-esque) throwback radio alt-rock into their roiling pot of hardcore and progressive sludge makes Desiderium these Brooklynitesâ strongest outing to date. Itâs rare that an album this aggressive and energetic goes down this smooth.â
#2. Hellish Form // Deathless â This record is special. In any other year, it probably would have been my number one. As I said in April, âConsidering it embodies three of the most miserable subgenres in all of metal (funeral doom, sludge, and drone), the remarkable thing about Deathless is how powerfully hopeful it is. The themes of the album are pointedly heavy and political. Itâs an admonition of an oppressive world delivered with withering vitriol by the aggrieved, but both musically and lyrically, (Willow) Ryan and (Jacob) Lee steadily fix their gaze upward.â I doubt there are any more affecting lines in metal this year than Ryanâs delivery in the title track of âYou can take my life, but I am deathless. I am deathless.â
#1. Convocation // No Dawn for the Caliginous Night â What else can I say about the first 4.5 Iâve ever awarded on this site? âBy the time you reach the halfway point in opening track âGraveless yet Dead,â youâve heard swirling organs, ominous violins, harmonized choirs, riffs that measure their gravity on the scale of celestial bodies, and (Marko) Neumanâs enormous death roar. The whole thing keeps escalating like a light growing in intensity until, nearly blinding, a biblically accurate angel emerges with its six wings and concentric wheels full of eyes and multiple heads and burnished bronze appendages and it bellows in an inhuman voice, âBÌŽÌ̧EÌŽÍÍ ÌžÌÌ«NÌ·ÍÌŠOÌžÌÌTÌžÍÌ ÌžÌÌAÌ·ÍÍFÌ”ÌÌŻRÌŽÌœÌłAÌ·ÌÍIÌžÍÌD̶ÍÍ.ââŠWith No Dawn for the Caliginous Night, LL and Neuman have completed their transformation from practitioners of impressive if well-trod death doom to a unique voice in the ranks of funerophiles. This is a towering celebration of deathâs enormity, packaged in the heaviest and most shimmering of vessels.â
Honorable Mentions
Songs oâ the Year
In alphabetical order by band:
#2023 #Aetherian #AGLO #Agriculture #AntiGodHand #Antrisch #BigBrave #Blackbraid #BlogPost #Briqueville #Carcharodon #CarcharodonSTopTenIshOf2023 #CarcharodonSAndCherdSTopTenIshOf2023 #Carnosus #ChainedToTheBottomOfTheOcean #Convocation #Cursebinder #CurtaNWall #DownfallOfGaia #FiresInTheDistance #GodDisease #Gridlink #HellishForm #Inherus #Leitha #Listurnalia #Lo_ #MoonlightSorcery #Omnivortex #Oromet #Saturnus #Somnuri #Stortregn #Sworn #TheCircle #VanishingKids #Warcrab #Wayfarer #Xoth
Thus Spoke and Maddogâs Top Ten(ish) of 2023
By Thus Spoke
Thus Spoke
Mum, Iâve made it; Iâve got my own official year-end list on Angry Metal Guy dot com. Just two years ago I had begun my probation period in what would come to be characteristically overzealous fashion, slapping a 4.5 on my first ever review, before deciding that words are much better than numbers. At the time, uncertain of my tenancy in these hallowed halls, I was juggling n00b reviews with short-form reviews on Instagram,1 the latter pursuit being what led me to apply here in the first place. And Iâm glad I did!
My first complete year here as a writer has been pretty great, all things considered. Iâve reviewed (and not reviewed) some Excellent (with a capital âEâ) albums and discovered new favoritesâsome of whom will be appearing below. It continues to humble me and blow my mind that I get to put my thoughts about music out here on the internet and that people actually read them; that I get to write about bands and records with a critical voice that actually garners some respect, like Iâm a proper person who knows things; and that I have the chance to gush about artists Iâve loved for a long time, or only just hit upon. Reviewing Panopticon was a wonderful year-end highlight. Of course, not everything was rosy. It was another year of silence from Ulcerate2, not the greatest year for truly stand-out black metal (with some clear exceptions), and a year in which I struggled with some significant challenges at work. But disappointing promos and unavoidable life hurdles aside, 2023 has been the year that AMGâthe reviewing, the staff, and the commenting communityâhas cemented itself as an important part of who I am. Iâm grateful for all of you. Thank you.
Having not made one of these before, this has been my first proper taste of the agony (and perhaps joy) of choosing what to list and where to list them. Can I pen a Contrite Metal Guy piece about my picks later down the line? No, I canât. So if Iâve forgotten something, please just donât bring it up or itâll torture me for at least the entirety of 2024.3 Now, on with the list before I change my mind!
#ish. Convocation // No Dawn for the Caliginous Night â Not only did this album floor me on first listen, but it also made me discover how much I love to say the word âcaliginous.â *Annunciates* Cal-ig-in-ous. No Dawn⊠is just as satisfying, but in a very different way. Its drama, potency, and sheer scale are wondrous to behold and instantly catapulted it into my list (well, close enough). I had been thinking in recent months that Iâd kind of fallen off the doom wagon. But Convocation was there right as the year was about to end to shove me firmly back on board. As Cherd opined âThis is a towering celebration of deathâs enormity, packaged in the heaviest and most shimmering of vessels,â and I concur. Itâs really only down to a totally stacked year of music that this behemoth doesnât rank higher.
#10. Thantifaxath // Hive Mind Narcosis â This album scares the shit out of me and I absolutely love it. Everything about its wacky, dissonant, bendy, manic, and malevolent intensity borders on the hallucinogenic and nightmarish. And as a piece of extreme metal, aiming to confront with the harshest of blackened death metal, this is a very good thing. Thantifaxath were a 2023 discovery for me, and this, their sophomore effort, thoroughly convinced me that I should be paying attention to them. It always sends me into a state of heavy foreboding, anxiety, and nausea at confrontation with the absurd. When I reviewed Hive Mind Narcosis, I talked about its contradictory coherence and beauty under a façade of erraticism and ugliness, and I believe this to be what makes it continue to stand out amidst many other unapproachable extreme metal records that came out in 2023, worthy as they may be.
#9. Downfall of Gaia // Silhouettes of Disgust â While Iâve had an appreciation for Downfall of Gaia since Atrophy, Silhouettes of Disgust has been the first one thatâs really made an impression on me. Itâs stuck with me nearly all year since it dropped in March, and I find myself continuing to return to it again and again. When I donât know what to listen to, Iâll stick this on, and Iâll enjoy it every time. Melodically and emotionally powerful, it contains some of my favorite musical moments of the year, including in particular the building surge of drama and catharsis that ends âOptograms of Disgustâ and the album entirely. I think the reason Silhouettes has had this effect was pinned down nicely by Carcharodon when he wrote: âthis is the [album] that manages to blend most effectively all the disparate facets of Downfall of Gaiaâs sound.â And I would go further and assert what he only hinted at, that Silhouettes is indeed the best of the bandâs career.
#8. Stortregn // Finitude â I feel like Stortregn have been getting more and more fun with every album, or at least definitely on the last few. While Emptiness Fills the Void (2018) was light enjoyment, Impermanence (2021) stepped things up a gear into real grin-inducing territory. Finitude, however, blows those records out of the water with what is possibly the most fun Iâve had with technical death/black metal of any kind. Everything about it works towards this, from constantly evolving, circularly composed song structures that sweep you away with their drama and flair, to a flipping flamenco break in âXeno Chaosâ which I should hate, but instead, I absolutely fucking love because it works so brilliantly. Its melodies are gorgeous, its energy undeniable, its rhythms irresistible. Damn, I think Iâm gonna go and listen to it again now, Iâve really given myself the itch.
#7. To the Grave // Directorâs Cuts â This started off higher on my list. Itâs not that Iâve cooled off on it. Quite the contrary, as To the Grave are my most-listened-to artist on Spotify this year, and I will still ardently defend, to anyone who bothers to vocalize their disagreement, that this is an Excellent album. Itâs simply a testament to the strength of those youâll find below. But let that not take away from the immensity that is Directorâs Cuts. Itâs a stunning slab of deathcore that utterly wipes the floor with anything else released in that subgenre this year, not just br00tal and groovy as all hell, but possessed of a powerful and righteous message of animal liberation, wrapped of course, in a super mean metal mien. âManhunt,â and indeed most of the album, powered many a top set in the gym, while stone-cold classic-in-the-making, âAxe of Kindnessâ easily makes it to the Songs of the Year playlist. Itâs just fantastic all-round. Until all are free! *Headbangs violently.*
#6. Wayfarer // American Gothic â I was not initially overly enamored with American Gothic. I donât know what I was playing at though, because itâs quite clearly brilliant. Itâs grown on me like no other album has this year, quickly and assertively muscling its way almost into my top five. Though at first I thought it was inferior to its predecessor A Romance with Violence, as Iâve mentioned, I was being silly, and itâs actually far superior. With a more coherent and consistent compositional structure, more powerful and punchy songs, with stronger, more memorable melodies, and a better integration of that uniquely Western vibe into vibrant and vicious black metal, this is my favorite Wayfarer album by a country mile. Brilliantly evocative, both satisfyingly savage and stirringly soft when it needs to be, American Gothic never ceases to transport me to the old West in its turbulent transformation with drama, passion, and beauty. And itâs wonderful to experience.
#5. Night Crowned // Tales â It was surprising enough that none of my esteemed colleagues had nabbed Tales before I did. But for it to be so mind-blowingly fantastic that it would end up this high on my year-end list was something else. With a songs-of-the-year-lister for an opening cut and, in general, a tracklist stuffed full of back-to-back bangers, and a blazingly bombastic, infectious spirit all around, Tales charges ahead of the competition with savage glee. Itâs actually hard to overstate just how good this album is, particularly given how ridiculously easy it is to listen to with its catchy melodies, (relatively) snappy song lengths, and dynamic energy. The culmination of Night Crownedâs fiery and dramatic style of black metal, and the best of their already stellar discography, Tales calls me back ceaselessly and Iâm more than happy to oblige.
#4. Fires in the Distance // Air Not Meant for Us â This album is magical. Nothing has changed since I first heard it in its entirety this spring. Elegantly composed, stirring, and effortlessly graceful, itâs hands-down the most straightforwardly beautiful thing on my list. Itâs moving without being sappy, and pretty without being saccharine. And Air Not Meant for Us also wins points for including a midway instrumental thatâs not only just as good as the other tracks, but possibly better, and bridges the two sides of the album in this lovely way that makes for a dreamy kind of interlude. Fires in the Distance have such a distinctive form of ethereal, key-accented melodeath/doom that I can only see the immense strength of Air Not Meant for Us as a huge, incredibly exciting sign of more brilliant records to come. As it is, I still havenât had enough of this one.
#3. Serpent of Old // Ensemble Under the Dark Sun â Back in June, I confidently declared that âSerpent of Old have crafted one of the best metal records of 2023 so far, no exaggeration.â Well, it turns out I wasnât exaggerating, because here it is, number three on my list. Clear as day I can recall hearing the opening notes of âThe Sin Before the Great Sin,â as Ensemble Under the Dark Sun began playing for the first time. Straight away I knew that Iâd landed a monster of an album, and 42 or so minutes later I was completely engulfed in its intoxicatingly atmospheric darkness. Like their eponymous snake, Serpent of Old wound their blackened death metal around and around my brain. Ensemble is intense, and yet utterly captivating, dripping with oppressive, haunting melodies and deep, angular dissonance. And it also features the best drum performance of the year in my opinion. To think this is a debut is frankly astonishing, and I am extremely keen to hear more.
#2. DĂždheimsgard // Black Medium Current â For a long time, this sat comfortably in first place. Why is no mystery. Unlike anything DĂždheimsgard have put out in the past, or anything else released this year, Black Medium Current challenged, confronted, and mesmerized me. Weird and discomfiting one moment, tear-jerkingly beautiful another, this album is an emotional and musical rollercoaster that treads perfectly that line between avant-garde wackiness and sincere black metal passion. I recall how stunned I was to discover its 72+ minute length, after already spinning it back-to-back multiple times because itâs so engrossing and intelligently composed. I also recall just how close I came to awarding my first âIconicâ when reviewing it, simply due to the lasting power I perceived it to possess. While the Contrite Metal Guy piece is not on the roadmap for anytime soon, I still believe Black Medium Current to be incredibly special, and an album that absolutely must be heard by everyone in the metalsphere, even if itâs to rapidly discover itâs not oneâs cup of tea. DĂždheimsgard have made an almost perfect record here. A worthy holder of the top position, were it not for one, equally lengthy rivalâŠ
#1. Panopticon // The Rime of Memory â As itâs so recently reviewed, perhaps this was obvious. But with Panopticon, I can be sure that its immense influence is not just due to proximity bias. Just like its predecessor âŠAnd Again into the Light, The Rime of Memory knocked me flat off my feet and buried me like an avalanche, with all of the intensity and force, and yet none of the cold. Because this burns white hot with passion and pain. I havenât yet decided whether it sits above that prior record, but right now, it doesnât matter, because it easily stands above all others in 2023. âCedar Skeletonsâ alone snatches the song of the year accolade, but the whole is something I have to experience again and again. It would just be wrong to give anything less than first place to an album that quite literally brings me to tears because of how emotionally poignant and compositionally powerful it is. As with my #2 pick, its epic duration is immaterial in the face of its effect, which is utterly unmatched by any of my other list contenders. Panopticonâparticularly on more recent recordsâseems to have a unique ability to tug on my heartstrings and to blend the most ferocious of black metal with the most serene and evocative Appalachian folk, and to have it all bleed pure pathos. The Rime of Memory more than matched my lofty hopes, and it already has a very special place in my heart.
Honorable Mentions:
Songs of the Year:
Guilty Pleasure of the Year:
Maddog
My earballs had a mixed year. A headbangerâs field day, 2023 boasted a solid array of death metal and some doom that won over skeptics like me. But this yearâs music lacked emotional weight. Few 2023 albums sounded as beautiful as Inexorumâs Equinox Vigil, as heart-wrenching as Darkherâs The Buried Storm, or as monumental as Glosonâs The Rift, all of which rocked my 2022 list. There was still plenty to love, but something felt missing.
And so, I found solace in music from years past. Trees of Eternityâs Hour of the Nightingale, perhaps the most underrated record in AMG history, offered me catharsis on dark days. Emma Ruth Rundle held my hand,4 expressing boundless empathy through Marked for Death. Every Enshine release whisked me into a secluded world of sorrowful beauty. Conversely, LiveWireâs thrilling Under Attack!, my favorite 2022 record, kept hopelessness at bay; no matter what, Iâm happy to inhabit a world that has LiveWire in it. On the fiercer side, I rekindled my love for Morbid Angelâs Covenant (1993), Suffocationâs Effigy of the Forgotten (1991), and Dying Fetusâ Killing on Adrenaline (1998). This deep bench of yesteryear highlights helped scratch the itches that 2023 albums missed.
The scarcity of tear-jerking 2023 music also re-taught me an important lesson: music that isnât overtly emotional can still offer consolation or escape. Indeed, my favorite 2023 records brought a smile to my tired face rather than feeding my wallowing tendencies. A comment from the recent Suffocation review expressed this sentiment best:
All things fall to ruin in this world, and thatâs why we have death metal.
Iâll give thank-yous a shot, though theyâll inevitably be incomplete. Thank you to AMG for his fearless leadership, Madam X for her tireless work, Grier for his insults, Steel for his bourbon (and also his bourbon), Sentynel for keeping us alive, and Dear Hollow for doing all the writing. Thank you to the UK staff for tolerating my occasional visits, and to everyone whoâs supported me through bouts of melodrama. And thank you to everyone who makes my world more musical: artists, comment-section banterers, fellow writers, friends who share music with me, kind people at shows, and more. Iâll be on board 70,000 Tons for the first time next month, and Iâm excited to keep deepening my musical community.
Finally, thank you to Thus Spoke, my (list) partner in (vegan) crime. Her intense emotional connection to music bleeds through her words, inspiring me to listen more closely and write more goodly. Read her list first; you wonât regret it.
#ish. Ne Obliviscaris // Exul â Exulâs peaks show Ne Obliviscaris at the top of their divisive game. The bandâs balance of beauty and brutality is as strong as ever, as the strings, clean guitars, and death metal riffs move in lockstep. Bassist Martino Garratoniâs hyperactive melodies round out Exulâs rich soundscape. Itâs a pleasure to hear Ne Obliviscarisâ compositions unfold, ebbing and flowing among the bandâs diverse strengths. Exulâs bloat is the only major splotch on an otherwise stellar record. Listen to Exul with an open mind; itâs easy to get clouded by the hype or the popular hatred. Exul offers a lot to love, and there isnât much else like it.
[Pairing: Maison Ferrand (Ars, France), Citadelle Jardin dâĂtĂ© Gin. This gin is easy to sneer at; itâs contemporary, a newcomer, and French. But give it a chance. You might find your mind wandering through a chĂąteau garden in bloom.]
#10. Gorod // The Orb â I slept on The Orb at first because of its lackluster bass. After a decade of spectacular performances, bassist Benoit Claus inexplicably dialed back his wizardry after 2015âs A Maze of Recycled Creeds. Still, Gorod makes it work. The Orbâs unhinged harmonic leads showcase guitarists Pascal and Alberny at their finest. Meanwhile, the albumâs energetic peaks and valleys give space for the drums to take the driverâs seat. Every moment of The Orb amps me up for the next moment, most notably on career highlight âBreeding Silence.â The Orb isnât memorable enough to land near the top of Gorodâs formidable discography, but Gorodâs brand of hyper-technical death metal is still fun as hell.
[Pairing: Founders Brewing (Grand Rapids, MI), Porter â 6.5% ABV. Less rich than some of its Founders brethren (e.g. Breakfast Stout), but still a flavorful feast.]
#9. Altari // Kröflueldar â I donât know what the hell this is, but I love it. Altariâs distinctive debut melds black metal and psychedelic rock. While those genre labels might provoke knee-jerk comparisons to Oranssi Pazuzu or A Forest of Stars, Altariâs sound is peerless. Stalwart rhythms ground you while swirling melodies emerge from nowhere to whisk you away, echoing Loveâs Forever Changes and Jefferson Airplaneâs Surrealistic Pillow. And yet, Kröflueldarâs blackened edge makes it a haunting experience. While Kröflueldarâs abrupt song endings have room for improvement, Altariâs hypnotic debut is a triumph. It might be tucked too far underground to turn many heads, but itâs well worth your time.
[Pairing: Brandy Soymilk Punch (made with Paul Masson VSOP Brandy). âWhat the hell is this? Why would I ever drink⊠Errr, why is my glass empty? Fill me up!â]
#8. Sodomisery // Mazzaroth â The melodic black metal resurgence of 2023 peaked with Sodomisery. Mazzaroth checks every box. Dissection-lite blackened death riffs collude with soaring Misturious melodies to lure you into the fray. The albumâs clean sections and Sodomiseryâs newfound symphonic elements add emotional depth without sounding generic. Mazzarothâs strengths coalesce in its belt-along choruses, which maintain the albumâs somber mood while still worming into your brain. Because Sodomisery executes every component so well, the record sounds fresh despite trodding well-trodden ground. Even Sodomiseryâs less-than-ideal name inspired three of 2023âs most iconic comments. Mazzaroth has captured the hearts of old fans and newcomers alike, and the attention is well-deserved.
[Pairing: BrewDog (Ellon, UK), Drop D â Cascadian Dark Ale, 8.1% ABV. Perfectly balances hoppiness and roasty stout flavors, without reinventing any wheels.]
#7. Faithxtractor // Contempt for a Failed Dimension â While 2023 had no shortage of compelling no-frills death metal, the genre peaked in January with Faithxtractor. This is what you get when you cross faith unforgiving death metal with a tractor meticulous songwriting. Contempt for a Failed Dimensionâs single-minded focus keeps it concise and fearsome across both its crushing slow sections and its frantic riff carnivals. Faithxtractorâs creativity elevates the album from âmereâ fun to the top of its genre. Even at its most unhinged, Contempt for a Failed Dimension never trips over itself. Every riff inhabits its optimal location, and each one is essential to the final product. Iâm not sure which dimension has failedâI hope it isnât a spatial oneâbut I know Faithxtractor will punish it mightily.
[Pairing: Lagunitas Brewing (Petaluma, CA), IPA â 6.2% ABV. A familiar beer in a familiar style, but it always hits the spot. Sometimes thatâs all you need.]
#6. Xoth // Exogalactic â Xothâs brand of technical blackened death-thrash is a sci-fi spectacle. Exogalacticâs futuristic riffs, twisting melodies, and narrative arcs make it feel like reptilian aliens are indeed enslaving humans as gladiators like hordes of warriors are really battling for the galaxy. Hearing Xoth play Tetris with electrifying melodies of all shapes and sizes is thrilling. While the albumâs peaks fall short of its predecessor, youâll be belting out its colossal choruses in no time. Xothâs style is unique, but it shares a strength with Archspire, First Fragment, and Jane Austen: you can hear Xoth grinning through their art. Every time I listen to Exogalactic, I canât help but grin alongside.
[Pairing: Brouwerij Huyghe (Melle, Belgium), Delirium Tremens â Belgian Golden Strong Ale, 8.5% ABV. A paradox in a glass: strong and flavorful, but light-hearted and bright. Itâll put a smile on your face.]
#5. Raider // Trial by Chaos â Trial by Chaos is as dense as its cover art. Over 39 minutes of hectic death-thrash, Raider tells tales of dystopia, science fiction, and righteous defiance. Every element of Raiderâs onslaught finds its mark. The guitars range from Floridian death metal steamrollers to three-piece melodic leads, nailing both styles. The thunderous rhythm section raises hell at climactic moments and stitches Trial by Chaosâ disparate pieces together. Most strikingly, Angelo Bonaccorsoâs vocal variety imbues the music with emotional force and narrative structure. This is only Raiderâs second full-length record, but its cohesion and show-stopping power make it best in class. Expect Raider to be a torchbearer for death-thrash in the years to come.
[Pairing: 3 Floyds Brewing (Munster, IN), Permanent Funeral â Imperial IPA, 10.5% ABV. Unforgiving in its strength, its hoppiness, and its intense flavor. Intimidating but irresistible.]
#4. Wayfarer // American Gothic â Seamlessly blending their Western aesthetic with black metal, Wayfarer transports the listener to the Western United States circa 1900. This is not a romanticized Magic School Bus trip; everything around you is greed, senseless violence, and environmental devastation.5 American Gothicâs emotional palette matches this landscape, leading through righteous anger (âThe Cattle Thiefâ),6 longing (âTo Enter My House Justifiedâ), and hopelessness (âBlack Plumes over Godâs Countryâ). The albumâs fantastic rhythm section and its rich production, both uncharacteristic strengths for black metal, allow Wayfarerâs diverse compositions to shine. Even though Wayfarer isnât the only band playing this style, theyâve won my heart. Concise but powerful, American Gothic is the new American gothic.
[Pairing: Buffalo Trace Distillery (Frankfort, KY), Sazerac Rye. Accessible for the wallet and the palate, but with a fierce rye edge. A flavor bonanza and a perfect companion for an evening of reminiscences or regrets.]
#3. Hellripper // Warlocks Grim & Withered Hags â The âold Hellripperâ is still alive and well, after two riotous slabs of blackened speed metal. The ânew Hellripperâ is no less formidable. Forays into death metal and old-school speed metal add flair around the edges. Meanwhile, Warlocksâ longer tracks leap out of Hellripperâs comfort zone while balancing melodic variety and narrative cohesion. Scottish folk influences add depth throughout the melodies, the lyrics rooted in Orkney mythology, and the unexpected bagpipes. With these forces combined, the recordâs narrative pieces feel like captivating campfire tales rather than bedtime stories. And still, Warlocksâ speedy killers are the most fun Iâve had all year. Warlocks is both an exhilarating listen and a massive step forward for Hellripperâs songwriting.
[Pairing: St. George Spirits (Alameda, CA), Terroir Gin. The juniper-heavy palate will placate gin gatekeepers, while the Douglas fir and sage will transport open minds to a California coastal redwood forest. Classic, innovative, and delicious.]
#2. Onheil // In Black Ashes â In Black Ashes is melodic black/death/speed/thrash at its finest. But that description is both a little too much and much too little. The albumâs irresistible speedy riffs alone deserve Grierâs 3.5. Onheilâs mastery of melody and songwriting elevates In Black Ashes into the stratosphere. Led by the indomitable âVoid,â In Black Ashesâ powerful melodies offer catharsis like none other. As the album progresses, Onheil flexes their compositional muscles more, melding narrative meloblack epics with Mors Principium Est-adjacent bangers. Every track is a winner, and Onheil strikes an impossible balance between enthralling riffs and emotional heft. In Black Ashes deserves a lot more love.
[Pairing: Haymanâs Distillery (London, UK), Royal Dock Navy Strength Gin. This isnât just another boring London gin; spices and citrus add a twist. Bottled at the 114 proof point where soaked gunpowder can still ignite, Royal Dock is fierce but shockingly smooth.]
#1. Theophonos // Nightmare Visions â Nightmare Visions throws everything at the wall, and everything sticks. I struggled to describe this album once, and it isnât getting easier. Theophonosâ debut feels like a grind-paced tour through metal history, squeezed through a blackened filter. Armed with razor-sharp riffs, a vicious rhythm section, and a refusal to sit still, Theophonosâ dissonant style is both neck-shattering and evocative. The albumâs density makes it a gripping experience, while Jimmy Hamzeyâs (Serpent Column) masterful transitions hold the Jenga blocks together. Theophonosâ blood, sweat, and tears glisten through details like the inter-song callbacks and the blurring of frenzied black metal and serene rock. Ten months into our love affair, Nightmare Visions still reveals new facets on every listen. Even if blackened grind isnât your home turf (trust me, it isnât mine), give Nightmare Visions a shot. Iâd never heard anything like it, but now I canât stop listening.
[Pairing: Fifth Hammer Brewing (Queens, NY), POGlodyte â Sour Ale with Passionfruit, Blood Orange, and Guava, 5.5% ABV. The description is accurate but inadequate. Wilder than your wildest dreams, this sour is what you never realized your life needed. Rapture for every taste bud.]
Honorable Mentions:
Disappointments oâ the Year:
Songs oâ the Year:
#Ahab #Altari #Convocation #Dödheimsgard #DownfallOfGaia #DymnaLotva #Faithxtractor #FiresInTheDistance #Gorod #Hellripper #Kalmah #Lists #Listurnalia #MÄnbryne #Myrkur #NeObliviscaris #NightCrowned #Nightmarer #Onheil #Panopticon #Raider #ReverendKristinMichaelHayter #Saturnus #SerpentOfOld #Sodomisery #Stortregn #Thantifaxath #TheCircle #TheOcean #Theophonos #ThusSpokeSAndMaddogSTopTenIshOf2023 #ToTheGrave #TombMold #Top10Ish_ #Voidsphere #Wayfarer #Xoth
Happy #BandcampFriday! If you don't know what to purchase, March #MetalMatters is out and (surprisingly!) has quite a few personal favs.đ€đ„ł
#Metal #MonthlyBestOf #BestOfMarch #PopMatters #71TonMan #AcidKing #Anarkhon #AtTheAltaroOfTheHornedGod #DawnRayd #DownfallOfGaia #Enslaved #Gorod #Kommand #LampOfMurmuur #Liturgy #Majesties #NeObliviscaris #Necropanther #RottenSound #SkryingMirror #SpiritPossession #TheTurinHorse #ĂlfĂșð #Unpure