Beheaded – Għadam Review

By Dear Hollow

I’m not sure which is worse: to release terrible or forgettable albums. Unfortunately for Maltese death metal outfit Beheaded, it has been the latter for the vast majority of their career. Always releasing competent material but nothing that sticks, their tenure within these hallowed halls has been rife with mediocrity, both 2017’s Beast Incarnate and 2019’s Only Death Can Save You lauded acknowledged for sounding like brutal death metal by the inimitable Kronos – the definition of “mixed” territory. Even 1998 highlight Perpetual Mockery has been covered up by the sands of time. This is precisely why Għadam is such a monumental release for this death metal stalwarts.

For Għadam, Beheaded becomes “il-kittieb” of their own horror – both lyrically and musically. Nearly forsaking all brutal tendencies without sacrificing its bite, the quintet focuses instead on channeling its heritage. The songs are entirely in Maltese, each track named after and capturing the storytelling of local horror writer Anton Grasso:1 the songs grapple with folk horror, local struggles, and the supernatural, and reflect the nation’s troubled history with religion and Christianity. For the first time in Beheaded’s history, it feels as though the band is writing their own music rather than regurgitating what brutal death ought to sound like. While the album is imperfect, Għadam is a motion from a band previously stuck in the muck of their own habits to rise from the dead and make the future bright again.

While elements of Beheaded’s brutal death peak through periodically, Għadam is remarkably atmospheric and dread-inducing. Drawing from Maltese folk music, the melodies here give an otherworldly flare, conjuring horrors both tangible and surreal. While the opening title track and the concluding instrumental “Irmied” feature harp guitar that sets the tone for a more focused and streamlined affair, the meat of Għadam is ominous, dense, and foreboding. From dirging riffs layered with doomed menace and vicious vocals (title track, “Iħirsa”), the kickass guitar work amplified by wild solos (“Iljieli bla qamar,” “Jidħaq il-lejl”), or the blackened tremolo and subtle synths that add a whole new dimension of intensity (“B’niket inħabbru l-mewt,” “Ix-xjaten ta’ moħħi”), riffy motifs and haunted leads are streamlined and consistent across the board. Cleans are used sparingly, but utilize a mournful mumble that adds to the desolation of the atmosphere. Ultimately, Beheaded feels reborn into a sound that feels very much theirs, despite newfound comparisons to God Dethroned, Belphegor, and Angelcorpse.

Given highlights and individual song identity, the structure of Għadam feels more intentional than Beheaded has offered before. Most notably, the track “Il-kittieb” serves as a centerpiece not only for being the fifth track in the nine-track album, but as a sonic eye of the storm; while it utilizes the same tricks as its surrounding tracks, they are weaponized in a slow-building crescendo whose climax serves as the most satisfying moment of the album. Intertwined dissonant leads and ethereal solos collide in a 6/8 timing that feels like a waltz through hell. Even last full song “Jidħaq il-lejl” feels like a culmination of the two tracks preceding it, a riffy and ominous trek through dark territory. This structure makes it easy to forget the weak links, such as the frenetic and anchorless (“Xtrajt l-infern”) or the forgettable (“B’niket inħabbru l-mewt,” “Iħirsa”). The spoken word passages scattered throughout are also hit or miss.

Beheaded has forsaken their long-time forgettable signature in favor of something that ironically suits them better. Għadam is imperfect in its experimentation, but is surprisingly realized regardless, a consistent thread of viciousness and menace woven into all its movements gives exposure to its homeland, a culture tragically neglected in the annals of history. While “Maltese death metal” would have traditionally conjured images of brutal death’s relentless pummeling in Beheaded or Abysmal Torment, Għadam’s sinister and atmospheric approach to blackened death metal tinged with local dark lore and haunting melodics, even if imperfect, sets Beheaded out onto a new and unforgettable path.

Rating: 3.5/5.0
DR: 5 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Agonia Records
Website: facebook.com/BeheadedMT
Releases Worldwide: July 25th, 2025

#2025 #35 #AbysmalTorment #AgoniaRecords #Angelcorpse #Beheaded #Belphegor #BlackenedDeathMetal #BrutalDeathMetal #DeathMetal #Għadam #GodDethroned #Jul25 #MalteseMetal #Review #Reviews

After Taste – Hungry For Life Review

By Grymm

I’ll be the first to admit, right now, that I miss Type O Negative. Chances are that you do, too. When bassist/vocalist Peter Steele died in 2010, he and his merry cohorts of doom and lust left a massive, gaping hole in the world of metal that no one to this day could replace or replicate. That hasn’t stopped others from trying, however. After Taste, hailing from the Netherlands and featuring Dave Meester of God Dethroned on guitar and vocals, are the latest in a line of those who worship at the altar of Black and Neon Green. With their second album, Hungry for Life, these Dutch doom-peddlers are hoping you will give in to your carnal cravings.

On a couple of songs, they do the trick. “Morning XTC” gives off a Host-era Paradise Lost vibe, with its somewhat upbeat, danceable rhythms and simple-yet-catchy riffs. Elsewhere, “Mind Over Body” could slot itself alongside Katatonia’s Night is the New Day in both atmosphere and performance, but with Meester aiming for Peter Steele instead of Jonas Renkse vocally. Their influences are sound, and their passions are in the right places when it comes to capturing a particular snapshot of a lifestyle of non-stop partying, and the grotesque, inevitable come-down afterwards.

So why doesn’t this land as well as it should? In their one-sheet, they’re aiming for a sound that’s equal parts Type O Negative, Rammstein, and Alice in Chains with electronic and synthwave vibes. Instead, what this reminds me of are the Century Media bands of the late 90s and early 2000s that decided they weren’t metal anymore: Morgoth, Moonspell, and Tiamat. Not necessarily a bad thing in and of itself, but Hungry for Life sounds exactly like those aforementioned bands that were once inspirational, but had gone pedestrian with their sound, and this album captures that complacency a bit too well.


For example, opener “Sustain Me” crawls along at a snail’s pace and doesn’t move the needle much in terms of melody or memorability. “Lost at Sea” could have been a strong single, but it drags out for too long, all while being a scant four-and-a-half minutes, due to its repetitive nature. “Methmouth” and “Liquid Courage” both aim for lyrical grossness, especially in the former (“You’re lips are locked/’Round my member/Yet your breath still fills the air”), yet don’t really go anywhere of note musically to back it up. Granted, the last band to impress me going this direction lyrically and stylistically was Voices, but London was released a long time ago at this point, and that band backed it up with chilling performances, compelling songwriting, and tight musicianship, all things that Hungry for Life lacks.

I wanted to like Hungry for Life more than I did. It had all the ingredients in place to make for a fantastic album. Sadly, other than a scant few moments, it did little to quell my thirst for music in the vein of New York’s sorely missed goth overlords. I can only recommend this album for those that really, really miss Type of Negative, and even then, it’s not going to hit the same way as the originals did, and the end result yields an aggressively okay album. It’s a shame, because it feels like it could be a whole lot more.

Rating: 2.0/5.0
DR: 8 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Independent/Unsigned
Websites: Facebook1
Releases Worldwide: June 6th, 2025

#20 #2025 #AfterTaste #AliceInChains #DoomMetal #DutchMetal #GodDethroned #HardRock #HungryForLife #IndependentUnsigned #Jun25 #Katatonia #Moonspell #Morgoth #MyDyingBride #ParadiseLost #Rammstein #Review #Reviews #Tiamat #TypeONegative #Voices

Lvciferaeon by Behemoth

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@Palletack what was your first black metal album? I think mine was "The Grand Grimoire" by #GodDethroned

I can totally relate with this review. They have lost some of their touch over the years. The last couple of albums could be labeled as mediocre based on their own standards. So yeah, i am a tad disappointed. #GodDethroned #RandomMusickMayhem #DeathMetal #NewAlbum2024

https://www.angrymetalguy.com/god-dethroned-the-judas-paradox-review/

God Dethroned - The Judas Paradox Review | Angry Metal Guy

A review of The Judas Paradox by God Dethroned, available September 6th worldwide via Reigning Phoenix Music.

Angry Metal Guy

God Dethroned – The Judas Paradox Review

By Dear Hollow

I got saddled with God Dethroned even though I’m not entirely sure what my qualifications are. I really liked Under the Sign of the Iron Cross, which I didn’t even realize was part of a war-themed trilogy, so I had to race through a crash course in the Dutch death metallers. While they peaked in the late ’90s with The Grand Grimoire and Bloody Blasphemy and encountered a resurgence with the World War I trilogy, the act has truly never made a bad album. As such, the lesser in quality maintain a better simmer than the high heat of much of death metal’s legions. However, the inimitable and illustrious Ferrous Beuller expressed pleasant despondence about 2020’s Illuminati, reasserting its quality while pointing out its relatively monotone dynamics. Is The Judas Paradox a new peak or a pleasant simmer?

God Dethroned continues its melodeath and blackened influence in its pummeling breed of riffy death metal. Expect the usual: blazing riffs and wild solos courtesy of Henri Sattler and Dave Meester, weighty bass of Jeroen Pomper and rock-solid percussion of Frank Schilperoort, guided by Sattler’s nasty snarls. Continuing the theme of Illuminati with anti-Christian sentiment through the lens of Vatican obfuscation, The Judas Paradox balances its attack with ecclesiastical moods and melodic motifs with an album as intense as it is haunting. Contrary to its predecessor, however, in which the whole was prioritized over the parts, God Dethroned deals in several different sounds that strike differently. As a result, while still bulletproof and undeniably trademark, The Judas Paradox is an improvement over Illuminati but little else.

While God Dethroned maintains a solid foundation of riffy, black-influenced, and melodic death metal, there are several dimensions to The Judas Paradox: the darker, the heavy metal-influenced, and the riffy. The opening title track introduces the darker, haunting plucking motif offering a ghostly and mysterious aura atop its more chugging riff, a palette honed and weaponized in “Hubris Anorexia” and “Asmodeus,” adding to the darker liturgical theme that the album proffers. Meanwhile, the full-out riff assaults of “The Hanged Man,” “The Eye of Providence,” and “War Machine” are sure to get your head bobbing with bruising rhythms and searing leads. Finally, tracks that feature an older heavy metal melodic template like “Rat Kingdom,” “Kashmir Princess,” and “Hailing Death,” feel like a throwback to Slayer’s best eras, complete with wailing solos and tastefully dramatic progressions. Although its elements are far more distinct than its predecessor, The Judas Paradox is held together by God Dethroned’s trademark foundation, and Meester’s solos are always a welcome element.

The problem with The Judas Paradox is that there are weaker tracks aboard, particularly in the back half, and the album’s holistic inability to hold a candle to God Dethroned’s classic albums is also prominent. The vapid repetition of “Kashmir Princess” and its passage of random electronic warbles, the indecisive chord progressions of “Hubris Anorexia,” the awkward rhythms of “Broken Bloodlines,” and the strange melodic chanting of closer “War Machine” make them questionable songwriting choices for a band so devoted to consistency. Ultimately, “The Judas Paradox” is the best track here, the ultimate audio representation of its blasphemous themes and Vatican interpretation – leaving every subsequent track in its shadow. As such, although Illuminati and The Judas Paradox are returns to God Dethroned’s more heretical foundations, they are different beasts entirely than the likes of Bloody Blasphemy. While the strong arm of death metal still flexes and flashes of melodic death adds a humanity, they focus more on black metal elements than in previous incarnations – making this duo more scathing than devastating.

I stand by what has been said again and again: God Dethroned does not make bad albums, and The Judas Paradox is no exception. It’s a step up from Illuminati in that it focuses on distinctness between tracks rather than a death metal blanket statement of solidarity, but that lends itself to inconsistencies and jarring placements. The second half of The Judas Paradox is a tad weaker in some questionable experimental tendencies, but beneath the pomp and circumstance, it’s still a God Dethroned album, and the Dutch quartet maintains its legendary status through its twelfth full-length – nothing more, nothing less.

Rating: 3.0/5.0
DR: 5 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Reigning Phoenix Music
Websites: goddethroned.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/goddethronedofficial
Releases Worldwide: February 7th, 2020

#2024 #30 #BlackenedDeathMetal #DeathMetal #DutchMetal #GodDethroned #MelodicBlackenedDeathMetal #MelodicDeathMetal #ReigningPhoenixMusic #Review #Reviews #Sep24 #Slayer #TheJudasParadox

God Dethroned - The Judas Paradox Review | Angry Metal Guy

A review of The Judas Paradox by God Dethroned, available September 6th worldwide via Reigning Phoenix Music.

Angry Metal Guy
Sh*t That Comes Out Today: September 6, 2024

Featuring new releases from God Dethroned, Jordan Rudess, and Many Eyes.

MetalSucks
The Weekly Injection: New Releases From JORDAN RUDESS, MANY EYES & More Out This Week 9/6

Plus releases from Castle, God Dethroned, God Is An Astronaut, and Pure Reason Revolution

Metal Injection