Damn good album btw!!!
#Hath #deathmetal
Insidius â Vulgus Illustrata Review
By Lavender Larcenist
A Polish, blackened death metal record a day keeps the doctor away, or so I have heard. If so, Insidius (so tired of mispelled band names that make things impossible to search for) is your latest shot of hyper technical, searingly fast loud noises from the Poles. Quietly chugging along in the background, this Olsztyn-based fivesome has been producing solid blackened death since their debut, Shadows of Humanity, in 2016. While the album cover for Vulgus Illustrata may look like it contains some atmospheric depressive black metal, the eight tracks inside are nonstop meat grinders of chainsaw riffing with thick bass, otherworldly drumming, and pure rage. While Insidius plays with the familiar and the foundational, does Vulgus Illustrata survive comparison to its heavyweight counterparts like Dormant Ordeal and Behemoth, or is it dragged to the bottom, each unoriginal idea weighing it down like cinderblocks tied to a corpse?
For starters, Insidius knows what they are doing. Theyâve toured for years alongside bands like Vader, Grave, and Nervosa, and Vulgus Illustrata is full of dizzying instrumentation throughout. Tomasz ChoiĆski and Jakub Janowicz wield their guitars like two buzzsaw-toting murderous surgeons, hacking and slicing at every turn with savage tremolo riffs and tilting dissonance. âOrgiasticâ leads with a stop-start staccato riff, morphing with the introduction of Ćukasz Usydusâs pirouetting bass. Of course, a blackened death metal album would be nowhere without some absurdly technical drumming, and MichaĆ Andrzejczyk is no slouch. Inhuman fills, insane blasts, and rolling rhythms bring cohesion to Vulgus Illustrata, making for an album more akin to a face pummeling than a headbangers ball. Lastly, RafaĆ Tasak offers a competent if unflashy performance with his barking ferocity and pitched screaming. While the register remains generally on the low end, he has that pushing force that hurts your diaphragm to listen to. Think Cannibal Corpse, Vader, and Immolation, and you have the right idea.
Insidius has all the individual elements, but each track canât help but bleed into the next, and even at a tight thirty-eight minutes, Vulgus Illustrata can feel long. Where bands like Dormant Ordeal mastered atmosphere, lead-ups, and the ebb and flow of a great blackened death song, Insidius feels too focused on in-your-face brutality. There are much-needed breaks here and there, with some genuinely great atmosphere, such as on the intro to âA Darkness That Dividesâ or âCensureâ, and the entirety of the album closer âForge of Our Hatredâ. Unfortunately, these are few and far between, like ballasts in a storm that leave you hanging on for dear life. I like a good pummeling as much as the next fool, but only when it is consensual.
Maybe it is my undying love of blackened, Polish death metal, but I feel like I have seen everything Insidius has to offer done better elsewhere. Behemoth has a lock on hating god and the bombastic, theatrical edgelord side of things. Dormant Ordeal has technicality in spades alongside great songwriting, incredible atmosphere, and hidden hooks for days. Bands like Hath and Olkoth show that you donât need to be from Poland to make good blackened death, either, so competition is fierce. Insidius feels late to the party, all dressed up, but nobody is there. They are doing everything right, but it isnât quite clicking.
To be fair, some of you sick freaks will like getting absolutely brutalized and love every minute of Vulgus Illustrata, singing along as Tasak screams âShit, cum and blood paint the wall of your prisonâ. I am not here to rain on your parade, and I donât want to undersell Insidius. Vulgus Illustrata is heavy, consistent, competent, and genuinely engaging at times, but it feels tired. Insidius has the talent and the energy, but someone needs to point their ballistic missile of blackened death in the right direction for a direct hit. If you are a superfan of the genre, you may get some choice cuts from this slab of beef, but even still, you are better off eating with the bands that brought you here. Another victim to hang from the 3.0 tree, letâs tie the noose and be done with it.
Rating: 3.0/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Black Lion Records
Websites: insidiusblacklion.bandcamp.com/album/vulgus-illustrata
Releases Worldwide: November 7th, 2025
#2025 #30 #behemoth #blackLionRecords #blackenedDeathMetal #dormantOrdeal #grave #hath #insidius #nervosa #nov25 #olkoth #poland #polishMetal #review #reviews #vader #vulgusIllustrata
No Shelter. â Remission/Resolve Review
By Angry Metal Guy
Written By Nameless_n00b_605
These days, it seems everywhere I turn, I canât help but run into a great band from Germany. I donât know whatâs in the water over there, but with groups like Kanonenfieber, Unhallowed Deliverance, and classic acts like Sodom releasing great records, itâs no surprise that yet another talented group hails from Deutschland. No Shelter. is a five-piece from MĂŒnster that peddles in D-beat brutalization with a heaping helping of Boss HM-2 pedal worship. Its latest, Remission/Resolve, is a bass-driven freight train of Swedish-coded blackened death metal, crust punk, and hardcore, conjuring direct comparisons to genre stalwarts like Nails, Rotten Sound, and Trap Them. Can No Shelter. stand in the spotlight with some of the most vicious rippers around, or is it flying too close to the sun, wax wings ready to send it to hell with the rest of the copycats?
No Shelter. is relatively new to the scene (forming in 2017), but it sounds like a veteran unit. Every element of the band feels honed for their specific brand of violence. Thick, earth-shaking bass drives the album, while HM-2-infused riffage switches between blackened death blasts and Pantera-esque grooves. Bolstered by intricate drum fills and classic hardcore 2-step energy, the vocals are equally caustic, calling to mind a truly evil combo of Ringwormâs James Bulloch and Nailsâ Todd Jones. No Shelter. plays with no holds barred throughout the entire album, and each band member takes to their role with a reckless abandon more than fitting for their genre inspirations.
The brutally sludgy bass is the adrenaline-juiced heart that keeps Remission/Resolve pumping. Where bands like Job for a Cowboy and Horrendous use bass to shore up their technicality and the spaciness of their sound, No Shelter. uses it as a sledgehammer. Bass is integral to metal, making riffs deeper, heavier, and more impactful overall, and No Shelter. just gets it. Every riff is complemented by slapping destruction, and the bass gets to fly free or drive breakdowns such as on tracks âRotten,â âDoomed,â and âUltimate Disgustâ. No Shelter. suplexes the trend of bass-less metal right into the dumpster with And Justice for All.
Another element where No Shelter. pulls its sound from the Swedish death metal sewer is the production. The band wears its Entombed inspiration on its sleeve proudly (if the âWolverine Bluesâ cover didnât already give it away), and the HM-2 pedal is all over Remission/Resolve. Production was something No Shelter. wanted to nail, and Remission/Resolve is borderline perfect in this area. The bass is suitably nasty without sounding like a punchline (sorry Primus, I still love you), the snare drum hits hard without becoming tinny, and the vocals are discernible while still retaining the rawness and emotionality required for D-beat destruction. To cap it all off, the guitar brings cohesion to Remission/Resolve with that classic chainsaw tone that would make bands like Hath, Dismember, and Dormant Ordeal proud.
Remission/Resolve isnât perfect, although where it stumbles isnât in songwriting or musicianship. This LP lasts a blistering 32 minutes, but the collection of twelve tracks starts with an intro, features two interludes, and a cover as the final track. While I appreciate the interludes as breaks from the aural onslaught on Remission/Resolve, they vary in quality. The unoriginally titled âIntroâ (at least it knows what it is) is suitably sinister and builds up anticipation, but the two interludes are almost too simple musically and seem to only exist to let the listener breathe. An admirable idea, and one that is necessary for a lot of albums in this genre, but these moments would be better served attached to the end of already existing tracks. On top of that, I wish they would loop back in on the musical themes established across the album and in the intro, as it stands, the two interludes âIâ and âIIâ feel like they come from a different album.
No Shelter. ends up with a very good record that stands nearly toe-to-toe with its genre inspirations and rightfully lives up to the bands it references so heavily. Therefore, it is fitting that Remission/Resolve closes things with a rip-roaring cover of Entombedâs âWolverine Blues,â a song that slides so well into the bandâs sound, it took me a minute to realize it was a cover in the first place. âWolverine Bluesâ ends up feeling perfectly placed right alongside the best tracks on the album and works as a self-referential closer to an album chock-full of Swedish buzzsaw worship. No Shelter. doesnât so much rock the boat with its brand of blackened hardcore as it does slap a fuckinâ motor on it and violently rocket across the lake.
Rating: 3.5/5.0
DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: This Charming Man Records
Websites: noshelter.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/NoShelterBand
Releases Worldwide: July 25th, 2025
#2025 #35 #BlackenedDeathMetal #Crust #DBeat #Dismember #DormantOrdeal #Entombed #GermanMetal #Hardcore #Hath #Jul25 #Kanonenfieber #Nails #NoShelter_ #Primus #RemissionResolve #Review #Reviews #RottenSound #Sodom #SwedishDeathMetal #TrapThem #UnhallowedDeliverance
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
For @Kitty's #MittwochMetalMix:
1. #Horndal: Head Hammer Man
https://album.link/hxqjp4z02kvgg
#DeathMetal #DoomMetal #Sludge
FFO #CouchSlut #Hath #Worm
Hopefully these three will help you to overcome your hangover.
Blighted Eye â Agonyâs Bespoke Review
By Thus Spoke
In crafting their debut LP, Agonyâs Bespoke, Blighted Eye claims to draw heavy inspiration from Jennifer Kentâs 2018 film The Nightingale. The film follows an Irish ex-convict seeking revenge on the British settlers who raped her and murdered her husband and infant child.1 Its honest portrayal of the hollowness of vengeance and the psychological impact of trauma are aspects Blighted Eye aims to transfer to its own interpretation of transformative tragedy. In the appropriately epic span of an hour, Agonyâs Bespoke weaves a tapestry of hauntingly familiar progressive death and black metal that hides a few gut-wrenching punches in its deceptively cerebral folds.
The unlikely convergence of technical death metal and funeral doom gives rise to Blighted Eyeâs stirring character. With members from Aethereus on guitars, vocals, and bass respectively, and a drummer from acts Mesmur and Pantheist, Blighted Eyeâs pedigree is steeped in two very different interpretations of grandiosity and heady emotionality. Not that thereâs more than a hint of doominess about Agonyâs Bespoke, but the influence is noteworthy, as it helps produce an unusually affective strain of progressive extreme metal. Iâm reminded of a hybrid of Hath and Alustrium, and even some Wake-isms rear their head, not purely in terms of literal sound, but in the intense feeling expressed in an otherwise niche, inaccessible musical style. From the many vibrant charges of frenetic, key-changing guitarwork and rhythmic complexity, to the swooping soloing and occasional moments of stillness, a strong thread of pathos runs unbroken through the album.
The use of intricate, extreme instrumentality to compel rather than alienate the listener is where Blighted Eye shows its mettle. Acrobatic solos donât just dazzle with technicality, they impress in their development of the predominantly mournful themes (âIn Enmity,â âA Feast for Wormsâ). Undulating, punctuating percussion isnât just exhilarating and groovy, its tempo changes and crescendos sway the listener to the rhythm of Agonyâs Bespokeâs tragedy, telling us when to breathe and when to release the tension wrought in clashing dissonance and torrential blastbeats (âThe Wounding,â âHowls from Beyond the Mist,â âA Reverent Stillnessâ). And the key to it all is some of the most beautiful refrains technical death metal has to offer. With a shivery lick of excitement comes the tumbling main melody of opener âTragoedia,â almost out of nowhere, yet inevitable from the restless anticipation of cymbal shuffling, and gradually intensifying riffs. With plaintive urgency, wailing lines (âIn Emnity,â âPallid,â and âA Reverent Stillnessâ) and blackened tirades (âThe Woundingâ) work together with vicious roars to smash open your ribcage and wrench your heart out of your chest, as the tempos batter you about in this tempest of emotion to the bounce of a fluttering riff (âTragoedia,â âA Reverent Stillnessâ).
The only thing holding Blighted Eye back is ambition. As stirring as Agonyâs Bespoke is, its strength is diluted by the runtime that overextends the reach of even the strongest tracks beyond their grasp. No song, save the short interlude, âNightingale,â2 is less than six minutes long, and most could stand to lose a minute or so. There is the sense that the band had so many great ideas, they wanted to include them all. Take, for instance, the decisively dissonant death metal that characterizes âPallid,â and the haunting, bleating cleans that arise here and there (âHowls from Beyond the Mist,â and the title track). The former is brilliantly executed, and leads to one of the best cuts on the album, though tonally it sticks out and is a little underdeveloped. The latter fits more naturally into the stylistic template but is a tad less strong. The music would also have benefitted from a more spacious mix that would allow its layered intricacies to allow the room to breathe and deliver the impact it is capable of. Itâs nothing that canât be improved upon and tightened up in the next release, though.
Agonyâs Bespoke is, despite its flaws, a powerful record, and one for whom even the sin of an overlong runtime canât truly detract from the impact it leaves on its audience. As it draws to a close, you do feel as though youâve been on a journey, one whose peaks are worth its valleys. If this is what Blighted Eye can do in their debut, the scene had better be ready when they return to tell their next tale.
Rating: Very Good
DR: 5 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s CBR mp3
Label: Beyond the Top
Websites: Bandcamp | Facebook
Releases Worldwide: September 20th, 2024
#2024 #35 #Aethereus #AgonySBespoke #Alustrium #AmericanMetal #BeyondTheTopRecords #BlackMetal #BlackenedDeathMetal #BlightedEye #DeathMetal #Hath #ProgressiveBlackMetal #ProgressiveDeathMetal #Review #Reviews #Sep24 #Wake
Be aware: if the red star calls you, it might set you aflame!
đ” Kenosis by #Hath
đż All That Was Promised, 2022
â¶ïž https://song.link/y/Wibf4s597Uc
#FFO Rivers Of Nihil, Slugdge, Omnivortex
For #ThursDeath:
#AssembleTheChariots: Evermurk
https://song.link/gcmfjh98vxwtv
#Deathcore #SymphonicDeathcore
FFO DevenialVerdict #Hath #Veilburner
In today's episode of #MyEverIncreasingRespectForDrummers: a drummer pulling vocal duties as well as kicking the shit out of his gear:
#Omnivortex: Harbingers of Cosmic Death
https://song.link/07dzwdpg7g3f4
FFO #AnAbstractIllusion #Carnosus #Hath
By the way, this is also for #ThursDeath