In case somebody is looking for tickets to #ArchEnemy tomorrow in #Frankfurt / #FrankfurtAmMain , I am looking to sell 2 tickets to the #BloodDynasty tour. I got sick on vacation, so pickup will be tomorrow in 64646 Heppenheim. The tickets cost me about 145€ and I'd like to get that back.

Wenn jemand Interesse an 2 Stehplatz Karten fĂŒr Arch Enemy's Blood Dynasty Tour Morgen in Frankfurt am Main hat, bitte melden. Ich bin krank geworden und kann nicht hin. Ich habe 145€ bezahlt und hĂ€tte die auch gerne wieder. Nur Abholung in 64646 Heppenheim .

https://www.kleinanzeigen.de/s-anzeige/2-x-arch-enemy-european-blood-dynasty-samstag-11-10-frankfurt/3212312458-255-4776

2 x Arch Enemy - European Blood Dynasty, Samstag 11.10. Frankfurt

Da ich leider krank geworden bin, möchte ich meine 2 Papier Stehplatz Tickets fĂŒr Arch Enemy morgen...,2 x Arch Enemy - European Blood Dynasty, Samstag 11.10. Frankfurt in Hessen - Heppenheim (Bergstraße)

Kleinanzeigen

ARCH ENEMY – Blood Dynasty
https://eternal-terror.com/?p=67720

RELEASE YEAR: 2025

BAND URL: https://www.archenemy.net/en/

Whenever you consider the band’s name, Arch Enemy (AE) (pronounced “arkenemy” like in “archangel”?), you’re bound to have questions. Who is that arch enemy? Is he or she real, symbolic or both, or, perhaps, the Amott brothers purposely keep it ambiguous so that everyone interprets it how they please? If so, then I propose my own [
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#AlysaWhiteGluz #ArchEnemy #BloodDynasty #CenturyMediaRecords #deathMetal #heavyMetal #melodicDeathMetal #MichaelAmott #Sweden #ToySFactory #TrooperEntertainment

ARCH ENEMY – Blood Dynasty – Eternal Terror Live

ÂĄNueva descarga de adrenalina de ARCH ENEMY! đŸ”„ Acaban de lanzar el videoclip de 'A Million Suns', un temazo de su nuevo ĂĄlbum 'Blood Dynasty'
#ArchEnemy #AMillionSuns #BloodDynasty #MetalExtremo #NuevoVideo #CenturyMedia

https://rockandblog.net/arch-enemy-a-million-suns-nuevo-video-oficial-album-blood-dynasty/?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=jetpack_social

ARCH ENEMY – ‘A Million Suns’ (Nuevo Video Oficial) – Álbum ‘Blood Dynasty’

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Arch Enemy – Blood Dynasty Review

By Dolphin Whisperer

Incepted as an offshoot of Carcassian lineage, early breakout albums Wages of Sin (2001) and Doomsday Machine (2005) spread like wildfire in the emerging world of digital accessibility. In particular, clips from the 2006 DVD Live Apocalypse, popped around early YouTube further quenching the thirst for the powerful live performances that the once ravenous act possessed—at least that’s my memory of how the melodeath-leaning Swedes came to be a global powerhouse. Arch Enemy’s current incarnation does not lack stage-ready talent, of course—professionals thrive on the tour. The still vicious Alissa White-Gluz (ex-The Agonist) and youthful shredder Joey Concepcion (ex-Armageddon,1 ex-The Absence) round out the strength of time-tested veterans. But with the hunger of success so satiated, what left does Arch Enemy have to fuel their 12th album, Blood Dynasty?

Succeeding primarily on the flash of sticky songs and not engrossing albums, Arch Enemy has little reason to play anything more than a bit of what their fans want and a bit of what they want. In this sense, founding guitarist and primary songwriting contributor Michael Amott feeds off of his second guitarist for energy. While Nevermore shredder Jeff Loomis2 is far from a slouch on the fretboard, his histrionic contributions seemed to follow Arch Enemy down a path of slower builds, chunkier riff platforms, and moodier atmospheres that didn’t always gel with the typically brighter appeal that cemented their lofty status. Particularly on 2022’s preceding Deceivers, the pace had grown so slow that getting to any of blistering guitar heroism—whether from Amott or Loomis—felt like a chore.

In fresh character Concepcion’s ’80s tinged trades with Amott bring a lot to the Blood Dynasty table, with Arch Enemy breezing through certain tracks with the fanciful flair of guitar pyrotechnics. Early cut “Dream Stealer” brings with it a Judas Priest-indebted whammy-to-meltdown solo tirade that highlights the axeslingers’ chemistry well. And later cuts “Don’t Look Down” and “Blood Dynasty” lead with the synth-boosted, mid-paced power/melodeath fist-pump that you’d hear in a galloping Kalmah or late era Dark Tranquillity piece. Truthfully, though, Blood Dynasty’s biggest hit, in its soulful and faithful cover of olde French heavy metal act Blaspheme’s “Vivre Libre,” comes when Arch Enemy, quite literally, is not trying to be Arch Enemy at all, White-Gluz eschewing any harsh vocal stylings for a gruff and joyful croon. But this kind of fun feels right in a late career album—quick hitters loaded with light-hearted riffage and falsetto wails (“A Million Suns,” “Paper Tiger,” respectively)—and a full load of it could have spelled well for Arch Enemy decriers.

However, true to the typical Arch Enemy experience, a number of songs still exist in the too familiar or too uneventful realm that weigh down the whole of Blood Dynasty. There’s an irony to the theme of “March of the Miscreants,” a festival-ready machination—complete with a bridge ready for “Hey! Hey! Hey! Hey” call and response—about how the underdog can’t be sold and can’t be bought, an ethos that doesn’t sit well while listening to one of the largest metal bands in the world. And between that conundrum, the alternative rock anthemics of “Illuminate the Path,” and the only slightly deathened power metal romps that close the journey (“The Pendulum,” “Liars & Thieves”), Blood Dynasty trips over its most cohesive and swaggering elements to pump out tunes that feel rollicking enough to appeal to fans of modern acts like Unleash the Archers or Frozen Crown without letting harsh vocal moments steer them too far astray. White-Gluz has a diverse and practiced voice that ensures that none of these detours ever sound unpleasant, but the frequent urge to skip these painted-with-broad-strokes cuts persists.

Arch Enemy has nothing to prove at this stage. Blood Dynasty holds a higher than expected percentage of fun-inducing tracks that should serve plenty for long-time fans—high bombast, easy-to-digest, chorus-loaded, melodic death(ish) metal. At its most offensive, Arch Enemy simply delivers repeatable words and over horns-up riffs that act as heavy metal placeholders, recognizable as aggressive noise but built to blend in. For those just dipping their toes into the world of amplified abandon, this less extreme endeavor may even be preferable, a shareable, attainable badge of honor. But if your coworker recommends you Blood Dynasty, you can likely blow their mind with something better.3

Rating: 2.5/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Century Media | Bandcamp
Websites: archenemy.band | archenemyofficial.bandcamp.com
Releases Worldwide: March 28th, 2025

#25 #2025 #ArchEnemy #Blaspheme #BloodDynasty #CenturyMediaRecords #DarkTranquillity #HeavyMetal #JudasPriest #Kalmah #Mar25 #MelodicDeathMetal #Review #Reviews #SwedishMetal

Arch Enemy - Blood Dynasty Review | Angry Metal Guy

A review of Blood Dynasty by Arch Enemy, available via Century Media Records worldwide on March 28th.

Angry Metal Guy
Hooked On Music

Arch Enemy drop video for new single “Blood Dynasty”

The track is the title track from their upcoming album, Blood Dynasty. The band's twelfth studio effort is set to release on March 28 via Century Media Records.

Metal Insider | Get Inside the Industry
Arch Enemy unleash “Liars & Thieves” video

The track is taken from their forthcoming album, Blood Dynasty, scheduled to arrive on March 28th via Century Media Records.

Metal Insider | Get Inside the Industry