Goreworm – Miasmic Solitude Review By Grin Reaper

After releasing debut LP Prodigy of the Grotesque in 2020, Canada’s Goreworm re-emerges from their burrow with follow-up full-length Miasmic Solitude. Prodigy of the Grotesque enchanted me when I ran across it a few years ago—sweeping guitars, slick bass grooves, and a deliciously vigorous percussive cannonade made for a tasty tech death treat. Now six years later, Goreworm has metamorphosed from the band that dropped Prodigy. Vocalist Jesse Suess and founding members drummer Sean Bruce and bassist Derek Gibbs bid adieu, leaving guitarists Jordan Estrela and Brent Moerschfelder to carry the torch. For Miasmic Solitude, Goreworm rounds out the ensemble with session drummer Robin Stone (Ashen Horde, Chestcrush), who flayed the skins on 2021 EP Plague of Shadows, and vocalist Robert Miller (Antheraea). With a revitalized crew and a fresh batch of jams in hand, can Miasmic Solitude worm its way into your heart?

Technical death metal can be a tough genre to craft thoughtful songs within. The most immediate hurdle is technical chops—if you can’t muster the dexterity to pull off instrumental mayhem, you’re sunk. Yet the ability to play at blistering speeds with robotic fidelity isn’t enough on its own; it’s merely the price of admission. To transcend in the genre as the best from Necrophagist, Obscura, and Archspire have, you need crystalline mechanics embedded within engrossing and memorable compositions. Goreworm’s brand of death metal lands amidst the likes of The Black Dahlia Murder, Vale of Pnath and Abysmal Dawn, sporting burly riffs played at head-spinning velocity with occasional splashes of neoclassical color. This, at least, ensures the price of admission has been paid in full.

Goreworm members old and new unleash the razzle-dazzle on Miasmic Solitude as they pump gallons of adrenalized ear candy into its compositions. Estrela and Moerschfelder beget a sinewy string section, uncorking spidery leads that dash along fretboards with muscle and venom (“Monuments to Murdering,” “Miasmic Solitude”). Moerschfelder pulls double duty on the low-end, too, clanging and banging with satisfying heft. I only wish he broke away more from playing under the guitars and locking into root notes. To be clear, this is a nitpick on style and not a comment on his ability to bring the thunder. It’s just that compared to Gibbs’ bass on Prodigy of the Grotesque, Miasmic Solitude loses a dimension that helped set Goreworm’s debut apart. Meanwhile, Stone supplies a magnificent performance behind the kit, unfettering smooth rolls à la Chris Adler (“Amor Vincit Omnia”) and hammer-smashing cavalcades that recall the ferocity of Cannibal Corpse’s Paul Marzurkiewicz fused with the grace of Dirk Verbeuren (“No Reprieve”). Robert Miller proves a capable vocalist, and though his performance isn’t particularly dynamic, he supports the music well and sounds credibly savage throughout.

Goreworm crackles with vitality throughout Miasmic Solitude, yet the entirety falls short of the promise of its performances. The production proves a mixed bag, allowing the guitars and vocals to shine at the expense of the drums, which sometimes cut through but often become muddled during furious blasts, obscuring the pop of robust drum tones I loved on the debut. Perhaps the intent was to thematically embrace what a cloudy, claustrophobic atmosphere achieves, shining the spotlight on a single focus at a time. If so, I can appreciate the attempt, but it fails to properly incorporate all the ingredients into what Goreworm is cooking. Besides the mix, the songwriting highlights Goreworm’s technical acumen without sharpening their hooks enough to reel me back in once the music fades. To be fair, Miasmic Solitude rips throughout its runtime and is a qualified neck-wrecker—I just don’t feel compelled to revisit it afterwards.

Ultimately, Goreworm exhibits a myriad of traits I love to hear in technical death metal. With a more well-rounded production and carefully honed compositions that transcend being platforms for flexing technical mastery, Goreworm bears all the potential to annihilate expectations. As it stands, after several listens through Miasmic Solitude, there’s no doubt that Goreworm possesses the prowess necessary to deliver on the technical front. I’m just unconvinced of the magnetism their material yields to keep me coming back past the pyrotechnics.

Rating: Mixed
DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Transcending Obscurity Records
Websites: Bandcamp | Facebook
Releases Worldwide: June 12th, 2026

#25 #2026 #AbysmalDawn #Archspire #CanadianMetal #CannibalCorpse #DeathMetal #Goreworm #Jun26 #MiasmicSolitude #Necrophagist #Obscura #Review #Reviews #TechnicalDeathMetal #TheBlackDahliaMurder #TranscendingObscurityRecords #ValeOfPnath

Francesco & Vesper.

官方提到Francesco比起抱主角(Vesper),他似乎更想要被抱。

那有什麼問題呢  

#二次創作 #obscura

#OBSCURA
#遊戲紀錄

https://rottenraccoons.itch.io/obscura

黑暗奇幻風格的R18乙女遊戲,Steam上的試玩版可以體驗完整的第一章。遊戲還在開發中,完整版到第二章,第三章應該是今年會出。剛解完第二個攻略角色的好結局,劇本滿有趣的,官方說是R18但也不是走黃色暴力路線,遊戲美術也好看,才玩到第二個角色就覺得「這是不用三百塊就可以體驗到的遊戲嗎QQ」

最近的遊玩時間應該都會花在這款遊戲上,來開個感想討論串 

OBSCURA by Rotten Raccoons

No one goes under the mountain without a reason.

itch.io

Christian Münzner just posted two rough mixes from the early stages of the recent ish #Obscura album. He and Alex Weber ended up leaving the band during the making of it, as they felt it was getting too rushed. They were given written guarantees that material they contributed would not be used. But clearly it was used without credit. Alex Weber had also posted a while ago parts of a song he had written which were used verbatim.

This is why Obscura is dead to me. It was a great band, but the talented musicians were the ones that were repeatedly fucked over.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jUpFo-wfISk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0LinVoR0RGA

#TechDeath #TechnicalDeathMetal

CHRISTIAN MUENZNER IN THE EMBRACE OF EVIL DEMO 2024

YouTube

Obscura VPN arriva su Android: privacy avanzata e sconto del 25 %

Obscura VPN arriva su Android con download su Google Play e GitHub, offre uno sconto del 25 % con il codice ANDROID26 e prevede versioni per Windows e Linux.

https://yoota.it/obscura-vpn-arriva-su-android-privacy-avanzata-e-sconto-del-25/

Cognizance – In Light, No Shape Review By Owlswald

A “faster is better” philosophy has long defined technical death metal, with bands regularly operating at breakneck speeds. While that approach requires undeniable virtuosity, I’ve always gravitated toward the genre’s more restrained, focused, and groove-oriented side. Cognizance initially walked the well-trodden path of bands like The Faceless and The Zenith Passage on their debut, Malignant Dominion, displaying speed and technicality in equal measure, but doing little to distinguish themselves from a crowded field. However, to their credit, the international quintet-turned-quartet has spent the past three albums gradually cementing their identity, culminating with 2024’s Phantazein. Though it got Stuck in the Filter, the record was packed with punishing grooves, strong songwriting, and phenomenal performances, containing all the qualities that keep me returning to the genre regularly. Two short years later, Cognizance returns with In Light, No Shape.

Much of Cognizance’s growth over the years stems from its stable lineup, though the recent departure of longtime vocalist Henry “Big Mac” Pryce disrupted that continuity. Guitarist Alex Baillie has since assumed vocal duties, marking a shift in the group’s sound. Baillie fills the role admirably, trading Pryce’s deathcore-leaning growls for a style closer to David Davidson (Revocation). In fact, In Light, No Shape—particularly tracks like “Vertical Illusion,” “Witness Marks,” “Chasm,” and “The Zone”—leans heavily into Revocation’s progressive stylings to its benefit. Drummers and longtime fans should already know the name David Diepold (ex-Obscura), but for anyone who doesn’t, consider this your required introduction. The dude absolutely cooks on this record. Whether through artful fills or splashy accents, he commands the material like a conductor leading an orchestra, sitting front and center in the record’s solid mix. Not to be outdone, guitarists Apostolis Karydis and Baillie, along with bassist Chris Binns, lock with Diepold effortlessly, never once sounding strained as they ebb between calibrated riffing, evocative solos, and ornate passages across the record’s 37 minutes.

Rather than following the Archspire school of extravagance, In Light, No Shape shows Karydis and Baillie easing off the accelerator, leaning more into atmosphere than velocity, with Diepold shouldering most of the speed. The duo utilizes more spacey arpeggiated passages (“A Reconfiguration,” “Witness Marks,” “A Game of Proliferation”) than on Phantazein, giving In Light, No Shape a feeling of dynamism and expansiveness. Accordingly, the songwriting strikes a keen balance between technical, immersive, and hooky, while leaving room for each element to breathe. Opener “Transient Fixations” wastes no time launching into hyperdrive, blasting and chugging through its sub‑three‑minute runtime, essentially functioning as an intro track that reaffirms that this is still the Cognizance fans will know. And while it feels a bit short, it flows seamlessly into “Inflection Chants'” groovy opening, making it work. Later, the surges of melodic tremolos and blasts that fuel “Chasm” give way to a haunting, aura-rich soundscape, where cymbal accents melt into jaunty tom fills before everything cascades back into overdrive. Similar structures drive tracks like “The Zone” and Song o’ the Year candidate “A Game of Proliferation,” while others (“Induced Contortions,” “Subterranean Incantation”) stick closer to standard tech death.

To state the obvious, tech death production usually sucks. Thankfully, In Light, No Shape isn’t totally brickwalled to hell, clocking in at a DR of 6. While that number looks average on paper,1 the mix retains a surprisingly natural edge while still delivering the punch and low-end presence needed to let the intricacies of the performances shine. Yes, it’s still compressed, but it never totally collapses on itself either. The guitars carry plenty of bite, avoiding the trap of sounding overly synthetic or overproduced, though the solos sit too far back in the mix for my liking. Likewise, the use of robotic spoken word interludes on tracks like “Inflection Chants” and “Transient Fixations” is conceptually fine, but they get lost behind the loud drums and end up feeling pointless. It’s a trade-off I can ultimately live with, though.

After multiple spins, In Light, No Shape stands toe-to-toe with Phantazein. Overcoming a key member’s departure isn’t easy, and while the album’s stylistic changes may feel reactive or too familiar, most come across as deliberate, pointing to a group resettling their identity. Cognizance continues to emerge as one of tech death’s most compelling acts and In Light, No Shape highlights what the genre can achieve when done right.

Rating: Very Good
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Willowtip Records
Websites: cognizance.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/cognizanceband
Releases Worldwide: May 1st, 2026

#2026 #35 #Archspire #BritishMetal #Cognizance #DeathMetal #InLight #May26 #NoShape #Obscura #ProgressiveDeathMetal #Review #Reviews #Revocation #TechnicalDeathMetal #TheFaceless #TheZenithPassage #WillowtipRecords
Metal En Route (03/23-03/29): Obscura, Testament, and more

Metal En Route is the new concert calendar, the week of (03/23-03/29) will see events in NY and its surrounding area with Obscura, Testament, & more.

Metal Insider | Get Inside the Industry

Every project gets its first breaking change eventually. Most wait until they're mature, battle-tested, widely adopted. #Obscura? We couldn't even make it to version 1.0 before rearranging the furniture. In our defence, the furniture was in the wrong rooms.

https://obscura.md/blog/the-great-reshuffling/

The Great Reshuffling

Obscura's first breaking change — and it's a directory rename. We moved your content into site/, and we're not sorry.

#Obscura update day: Refreshed docs, a configurable menu navigation, and a gnarly old dependency chain killed. The project site got some love too, including the blog section with some new posts.

https://obscura.md

Obscura - A Static Site Generator for Photographers only

Less webpack, more f-stop!

Mein Lieblingsbrowser @Vivaldi hat nun einen Auto-Hide-Modus für sämtliche UI-Elemente, der natürlich auch bei fotofokussierten Seiten gut aussieht und mich daran erinnert, die Projekt-Homepage für #Obscura endlich mal auf Vordermann zu bringen…