Und heute das erste Mal #HeldMaschine als Main Act Live gesehen. Sehr geiles Konzert đ€
Und heute das erste Mal #HeldMaschine als Main Act Live gesehen. Sehr geiles Konzert đ€
Masterâs Hammer â Maldorör Disco Review
By Grin Reaper
Besides a stout back catalog, experimental black metal weirdos Masterâs Hammer vaunts an intermittent history both in band activity and AMG coverage. After releasing two largely unsung platters of black metal in the early 90s,1 the band unleashed the terminally forgettable Ć lĂĄgry and hung up the hammer. In the same year our estimable blog was spawned, Masterâs Hammer returned with Mantras, further augmenting their core sound with synth layers and an expanded songwriting tool belt. Before shuttering the project again in 2020, Masterâs Hammer earned a glowing review and a similarly positive TYMHM at AMG, while another three albums went untested in our halls. The fires of creation never quelled completely, though, and now the Czech outfit reemerges with Maldorör Disco. Can this hammer still pummel, or should it have remained in Masterâs toolbox?
Maldorör Disco marks a departure from Masterâs Hammerâs earlier eras, dropping black metal vestiges in favor of a sound more in line with Neue Deutsche HĂ€rte and electro-industrial. On the likes of Vracejte Konve Na MĂsto and FormulĂŠ, synths bolster atmosphere and texture. Here, Masterâs Hammer adopts the keyboard as the primary driver of melody, and though Root and Mortuary Drape served as apt reference points on earlier albums, Maldorör Disco merits a new set of comparisons. Hints of Turmion KĂ€tilöt, KMFDM, and Heldmaschine permeate Masterâs Hammerâs landscape, but more than any other act, I find Maldorör Disco evokes Kraftwerk. âAndÄl Slizuâ and âBicycle Dayâ exemplify the electro-pomp that Germanyâs finest man-machines defined decades ago. With the hooks predominantly occupying synth-driven territory, other instruments are relegated to supporting roles across Maldorör Discoâs ten concise and lively tunes.
Despite Maldorör Discoâs pivot in musical direction, Masterâs Hammer retains much of the talent that supported the success of their second era. The only raw recruit is full-time keyboard player Kamil Princ, a sensible addition given the albumâs dedication to synth. Princ crafts tenacious melodies that sink their teeth in and donât let go, a testament to the memorability of Discoâs schtick. Meanwhile, bandleader, vocalist, and multi-instrumentalist Franta Ć torm asserts his uniquely gruff croon and mixes its deployment with other effective stylings ranging between soft cleans (âAndÄl Slizuâ), backing falsetto injections (âBicycle Dayâ), and vocal effects (âEl Teide,â âSlatinaâ). Melded together, these elements fashion a diverse and engaging listen against the synth-laden backdrop. Necrocock (guitars) and Honza KapĂĄk (drums) round out the rest of the band, ably bracing Maldorör Discoâs grooves.2
The revamped, key-centric concept on Maldorör Disco pumps a breath of fresh air from Masterâs bellows, although a flaw or two hold the forge fire back from a full-on blaze. The focus on electronic influences adds a new dimension to Masterâs Hammerâs sound, and while it works, I lust for more of the oddball shit that made past albums such a blast. The shift in musical approach grabs the limelight, but at the expense of what makes Masterâs Hammer so lovably eccentric. Maldorör Disco also stumbles in its adherence to mid-paced tempos. Slower songs donât pose an inherent problem,3 but restricting song speeds places a heavier burden on songwriting dynamics. Though not a fatal flaw, I wonder what Maldorör Disco might have sounded like with a couple tracks oozing the fury and venom of âPsychoparasitâ or the varied velocity on âZvĂĆecĂ Zvuky.â Aiding Maldorör Disco are the restrained runtime and improved production, both of which have detracted from previous albums. Forty-two minutes are enough to explore what Masterâs Hammer crafts here, and though synths donât require the dynamic range that denser compositions do, the production is rich enough to highlight when the other instruments break out of the pocket.
After seven dormant years, Maldorör Disco proves Masterâs Hammer still strikes with potency. Ć torm and the gang might be longer in the tooth, but time hasnât stripped their ability to pen tunes that stick with you long after Masterâs forge has cooled. Nearly forty years since forming, Masterâs Hammer bangs out another set of craftsmanlike ditties thatâll keep you whistling while you work. Though I wish Masterâs Hammer would have incorporated more of their inimitably kooky antics, I enjoyed my time at the Disco, and assuming electronics arenât anathema to your metal intake, I recommend giving it a spin or three.
Rating: Good!
DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Darkness Shall Rise Productions
Websites: Bandcamp | Facebook
Releases Worldwide: November 26th, 20254
#2025 #30 #blackMetal #czechMetal #darknessShallRiseProductions #experimentalBlackMetal #heldmaschine #kmfdm #kraftwerk #maldororDisco #mastersHammer #mortuaryDrape #nov25 #review #reviews #root #turmionKatilot
Carpenter Brut
19.03.2026 Stuttgart / Im Wizemann
Heldmaschine
04.10.2025 Stuttgart / Im Wizemann
Powerwolf
04.03.2026 Neu-Ulm / Ratiopharm-Arena
The Dear Hunter
03.10.2025 Stuttgart / Club Zentral
#CarpenterBrut #ClubZentral #Heldmaschine #ImWizemann #NeuUlm #Powerwolf #RatiopharmArena #Stuttgart #TheDearHunter #SteelFeed
Carpenter Brut
19.03.2026 Stuttgart / Im Wizemann
Heldmaschine
04.10.2025 Stuttgart / Im Wizemann
The Dear Hunter
03.10.2025 Stuttgart / Club Zentral
#CarpenterBrut #ClubZentral #Heldmaschine #ImWizemann #Stuttgart #TheDearHunter #SteelFeed
Wattn heute los? Erst Premiere von #HELDMASCHINE und jetzt haut #HeavenShallBurn n neues* Video raus? >_> #metal
* OK, technically alt, ist ja gut