Thorgrim – Puca Review By Spicie Forrest

It shouldn’t be surprising, but we don’t get a ton of punk or hardcore submissions here at Angry Metal Guy. We’re not Angsty Punk Bois, after all. I, however, particularly enjoy the intersections between punk and metal—sludge, grind, crust, crossover, powerviolence, etc. Metal’s straightforward aggression and punk’s vitriolic outrage complement each other well and scratch a specific itch. So when I saw Thorgrim’s debut LP, Puca, floating in the promo pit, I was sold on the Wisconsin trio’s promise of a heady mix of doom, punk, and a dash of black metal. Something like sludge but a skosh less acerbic? And maybe a little cold? Hopes were high, but did Thorgrim deliver?

No. Unequivocally, no. You see, Thorgrim boasts a live, one-take-only recording and production, laeving all mistakes and scrapes and buises on the record as some rebelilous statenemt against the overprodction of moder n musi.c Opener “Children of Doom” starts with a symbol hit that I can onl assume was am istake, and a massive skip around the 3:30 mark undersores how unedited and haphazard this albu is. “Voyage to Saturn” strats in the midle of a note ,and “Death Angel” starts with off-beat dums and just cuts out at the ennd with no warning or considreation for flwo. nearly every tiem Thorgrimshifts from on eriff to another, the band dissembles, taking a couple meaesure to get back in time with ehachother (“Darkest Days,” “Bride of Frankenstein”1). Now, do you see how this paragraph is littered with typos? Do you see how shitty it looks? Like I put no effort into it? That’s exactly what listening to this album is like.2

Even ignoring the insultingly lazy recording style Thorgrim opted for, Puca is still impressively bad. Thorgrim seem to be diehard fans of repetition, as there are precious few riffs to discuss (much less remember) here. Album long player “Voyage to Saturn” features exactly two (2) riffs over its ten-minute runtime, and I couldn’t decide which was more boring. “Darkest Days” is brutally repetitive as well, and ultimately sounds like a parody of heavy metal music you might hear on a TV sitcom. The vocals on “Let’s Go” are so buried in the mix that I’m not entirely convinced they’re there, but this may be a boon for Thorgrim, as they sound more like gargling spit or choking on vomit than singing or screaming. The acoustic “Dark Cabin” apes Nirvana’s “About a Girl” so blatantly it might only be “legally distinct” by one note, while sporting some of the worst lyrical syncopation I have ever heard. Penultimate track “Bride of Frankenstein” reminds me of the Fire Temple in The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, but bad. It’s ambient junk and random drums that don’t adhere to any kind of time signature or rhythm. When Puca mercifully ends, it’s with an inexplicable folk track that I’m fairly certain would be offensive to any actual neo/folk band.3

What’s most frustrating is that Puca could have been decent. “The Movies” is a punky upbeat track that smells like The Dogs, and I hear potential. With literally any amount of effort or care or refinement or fucks given, Thorgrim could have delivered at least one good track. Instead, it’s one of nine dumpster fires. Even outside of concept albums, there’s normally a unifying concept woven through a release, but I can’t find any such thing here, unless it’s the uniformly atrocious production value, which, coincidentally, is the only dash of black metal I found on Puca. It’s like they recorded in a concrete basement on a Fisher Price karaoke machine from 30 years ago.

Our internal scoring guide describes the score below as suggesting the band should look for another line of work. Puca is that bad. I’m honestly not sure what Thorgrim wanted to accomplish here. This album feels like a bad joke. Even if the music was good—which it’s not—and the production wasn’t worse than the first recording ever from 1860—which it is—the one-take-only presentation is not only lazy, it’s insulting. I get the intent that music today is overproduced and too shiny and clean and sterile, yeah, sure, whatever, but there are ways to fight that without leaving fucking mistakes on your album. A studio release should be a practiced, ideal version of each track, not whatever your hungover ass manages to puke out on recording day.

Rating: 0.5/5.0
DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Octopus Rising4 | Argonauta Records
Websites: Bandcamp | Facebook | Instagram
Releases Worldwide: April 24th, 2026

#05 #2026 #AmericanMetal #Apr26 #ArgonautaRecords #BlackMetal #DoomMetal #Nirvana #OctopusRising #Puca #Punk #Review #Reviews #TheDOGS #Thorgrim
PÚCA (Estats Units) presenta nou Split: "Nocturnal Ascendencies" #Púca #BlackMetal #Punk #Ambient #Abril2026 #EstatsUnits #NouSplit #Metall #Metal #MúsicaMetal #MetalMusic
#Artfight attack no.17 for @greybriar.art of their Púca OC Gris I'm surprised that I actually managed to fit one more attack in before the end of ArtFight! 🎨 #art #darkart #horrorart #horror #creepy #Púca #rabbit #hare #artfight25 #teamcrystals
Chandigarh: PUCA Launches Anti-Drug Awareness Campaign in Presence of Punjab Governor.

Taking a landmark step towards eradicating substance abuse among the youth, the Punjab Unaided Colleges Association (PUCA) today launched its special Anti-Drug Awareness Campaign.

Aliyesha
Chandigarh: PUCA to Launch Statewide Anti-Drug Awareness Campaign on the 11th of July.

In a significant step towards combating substance abuse among youth, the Punjab Unaided Colleges Association (PUCA) is set to launch a dedicated Anti-Drug Awareness Campaign.

Aliyesha
#FolkloreThursday: One account from the 19th century tells of an encounter with the #Puca during the Kildare Hunt: `The #Pooka easily leaped across a gorge, disappearing into woodlands, but the pack of hounds hard on scent of the fox went headlong into the turbulent waters below.`
“Looking down, Grennan saw fox and hounds trying desperately to swim to safety through swirling swell; other hounds dashed against rocks were yelping in pain and dying. He wept as most of pack went under. Suddenly his sorrow give way to terror, he heard a diabolical neighing, like an animal laughing – from woods opposite. Grennan knew then it was Pooka." #Celtic
Source: The Pooka | Emerald Isle Irish and Celtic myths, fairy tales and legends
The Unreal: Irish Mythology Meets Modern Mischief

The Unreal, masterfully combines Irish folklore and modern day storytelling, bringing the mischievous púca to life in a family friendly, spooky comedic adventure.

Unexplained.ie

Siobhan Ball introduces TWH’s readers to the folklore of the blackberry – including why you need to eat them before the Faerie Folk claim them for their own – and also offers a delicious recipe for a blackberry and apple crumble.

https://wildhunt.org/2024/09/get-the-blackberries-before-something-else-does.html

#kitchenwitch #blackberry #puca #folklore #pagan #blackberryandapplecrubble #michaelmas #recipe

Get your blackberries before the Púca does!

Siobhan Ball introduces TWH's readers to the folklore of the blackberry - including why you need to eat them before the Faerie Folk claim them for their own - and also offers a delicious recipe for a blackberry and apple crumble.

The Wild Hunt