By now you have all grown sick of #aoty #aoty2025 lists, right? Bear with us, we have one more for you to suffer through! 😁 Here are the 10 #metal releases that hit us the hardest, in alphabetical order. This wasn’t exactly easy as 2025 was full of new high quality material.

#DeathKommander
Never To Grow Old

#gaahlswyrd
Braiding The Stories

#gorekaust
Fleshcross

#gravehex
Vermian Death

#gruesome
Silent Echoes

#inhumancondition
Mind Trap

#Malthusian
The Summoning Bell

#proscription
Desolate Divine

#sijjin
Helljjin Combat

#teitanblood
From the Visceral Abyss

Neue Konzertreview online: Der US-Death-Metal-Act BLOOD INCANTATION macht auf seiner „Absolute Elsetour“ mit den Gästen ORANSSI PAZUZU aus Finnland und #SIJJIN Station in der Frankfurter #Batschkapp. https://bit.ly/3WRBML8 #BloodIncantation #OranssiPazuzu #Metal

https://www.rockstage-riot-rheinmain.de/blood-incantation.html

BLOOD INCANTATION, ORANSSI PAZUZU, SIJJIN | rockstage-riot-rheinmain.de

#soulcrusher was great. Whether you are into #doommetal #deathmetal or #blackmetal the festival had that covered. We attended day two, have some footage that includes #forn #sijjin #oranssipazuzu and #bloodincantation Check it out here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GaFs6TFrLoM&list=PLmn2ED1LqEvAXNJttz9xBuC5wtef6PPjP&index=2
Fórn - Dolor (Part I) (Live, October 2025)

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2/4 To be honest, the deciding factor for us to get tickets for #soulcrusher this year was the addition of #sijjin We saw them in 2022, they killed it. If you aren’t familiar with them, just know the band originates from the demise of the mighty #NecrosChristos Same intensity, same technicality. It’s #deathmetal too but with a twist of Thrash. Their set was tight and so headbanging-ly enjoyable.
This #thursdeath we can't help but think about this coming weekend's festival: #soulcrusher ! Lots of great metal bands will play, including #sijjin which we had the pleasure to see back in 2022 with #sadisticintent This footage gives a taste of things to come! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ANlnkmypR4&list=PLmn2ED1LqEvDm9gQke0WXv51xN5erPEYJ
Sijjin - Remnants Of Cambrian Evil (Live, July 2022)

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Tonite ! #Sijjin (DE) + #Mayhemic (CL) + #Invunche (NL)
#BlackMetal / #ThrashMetal / #DeathMetal @ Magasin 4 ( #Bruxelles)

It’s #BandcampFriday and therefore the perfect time to support artists. We’ll be listening to the new #sijjin album

https://sijjin.bandcamp.com/album/helljjin-combat

Helljjin Combat, by Sijjin

8 track album

Sijjin

Sijjin – Helljjin Combat Review

By Mark Z.

I’ve heard people say that today’s music has nothing new to offer, but I actually think it has the opposite problem. To me, there are too many fucking bands out there playing technical blackened dissodeath with a tuba or some shit and not enough who simply take a tried-and-true style and execute it well. Such was what initially drew me to Sijjin. Right around the time their infamous doom-death band Necros Christos dissolved in 2021, bassist/vocalist Malte Gericke and drummer Iván Hernández joined forces with guitarist Ekaitz Garmendia (Legen Beltza) to pay homage to the earliest years of death metal with Sijjin’s full-length debut, Sumerian Promises. With its twisted tremolos and thrashy undercurrents, Sumerian Promises was a fun throwback that reeked with the archaic death stench of bands like Sadistic Intent, Mortem, Atomic Aggressor, and early Morbid Angel. Almost four years later, the group have now finally delivered their second album, Helljjin Combat. But is this a triumphant victory or yet another casualty of the heavy metal battlefield?

One thing is clear: Helljjin Combat is quite a bit different than its predecessor. The change in approach is apparent right from the opener, “Fear Not the Tormentor,” which begins with an extended instrumental opening that uses technical riffing and lively bass guitar in a way that almost sounds like Voivod. The tech-thrash vibe continues throughout the songs’s eight-and-a-half minute runtime, with dexterous fretwork trading off with quick, chunky chords and twirling tremolos, all anchored by a refrain that consists of a staccato shout of the track title. While it’s not the primitive death-thrash I was looking for, it’s a fine song in its own right.

Unfortunately, the rest of the album isn’t quite as successful in executing the band’s new style. It soon becomes apparent that many of these eight tracks spend less time delivering sharp hooks and memorable riffs and more time simply lurching forward on mid-paced pseudo-grooves that only occasionally get the head bobbing. Sometimes, interesting ideas will crop up, like when “Religious Insanity Denies Slavery” evokes old Metallica with a dusty, cleanly-picked midsection that builds into Old West-style lead guitars. Yet moments like this only make it more apparent how so much of the surrounding material fails to stand out. It doesn’t help that none of these songs are under five minutes, and it’s also unfortunate how many of them open with similar-sounding semi-technical riffs that make me contemplate hitting the stop button well before the album’s 49 minutes are over. Malte’s vocals also sound throatier and less raspy than on Sumerian Promises, which is fitting for the band’s new approach but still isn’t the most welcome change.

Fortunately, there’s some stuff to enjoy here. The two pre-release songs, “Dakhma Curse” and “Five Blades,” probably won’t make anyone’s Song ‘O the Year List, but at least their nimble riffing and quicker rhythms offer the album a nice shot of energy. “The Southern Temple” serves as a decent closer with the more powerful riffing in its second half, and the band’s instrumental prowess is more impressive than ever (especially Ekaitz’s adept riffing and solos). Ekaitz recorded the album in his own studio in the Basque Country, and the result is fantastic. The sound is clear and powerful, with the guitars roaring confidently and the bass guitar maintaining an active and distinct presence below the riffing. And while the atmosphere isn’t as strong as the debut, there’s still a whiff of ancient evil here that I find most welcome.

Yet ultimately, Helljjin Combat is the epitome of a Mixed bag. While the production and the instrumental performances are great, the songwriting is less compelling. With a few sharper hooks, tighter track lengths, and a couple of faster songs, Helljjin Combat could have easily been better than Sumerian Promises. As it is, I can’t help but be a bit disappointed that not only did Sijjin choose to move away from death metal and into a more technical thrash metal sound, but also that they didn’t do the best job executing this new style. While there are a couple of decent songs and some impressive things here, I don’t see Helljjin Combat as an album I’ll be returning to often.

Rating: 2.5/5.0
DR: 9 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Sepulchral Voice Records
Websites: sijjin.bandcamp.com | Facebook | instagram.com/sijjin_official
Releases Worldwide: April 25th, 2025

#25 #2025 #Apr25 #AtomicAggressor #DeathMetal #HelljjinCombat #InternationalMetal #LegenBeltza #Metallica #MorbidAngel #Mortem #NecrosChristos #Review #Reviews #SadisticIntent #SepulchralVoiceRecords #Sijjin #ThrashMetal #Voivod

Sijjin - Helljjin Combat Review | Angry Metal Guy

A review of Helljjin Combat by Sijjin, available April 25th worldwide via Sepulchral Voice Records.

Angry Metal Guy