DJ Adam - Merciless Metal
#DormantOrdeal #DJAdam #MercilessMetal #Radio1190 #KVCU
Finally, the new year is upon us! A fresh start for some, same shit different year for others; mainly, my minions who toil in the mines ducts of the Filter. Since they donât get any holidays, they probably donât even fucking know itâs 2026 yet, but thatâs okay. As long as they come back to HQ with a substantial haul, their ability to know when it is is immaterial.
These are the sacrifices we (not me, though), make to ensure you get the goods relatively on time-ish. So say thank you!
Kenstrosityâs Freaky Foursome
UpiĂłr // Forefathersâ Eve (Redemption) [January 2nd, 2026 â Self Released]
Featuring members of Gorod (Benoit Claus) and Xaoc (KĂ©vin Paradis), UpiĂłr pinged my radar after a certain cosmic Discordian pinged me. A blistering combination of Fleshgod Apocalypse opulence and Wachenfeldt aggression, sophomore release Forefathersâ Eve (Redemption) impressed me immediately as âThe Black Paintings ripped my face right off. âA Blessing or a Curseâ doubled down on speed, blasting rhythms, and eerie melodies to propel itself straight into my Song oâ the Year long-list. Even with three instrumental interludes, all of which are quite fluffy, Forefathersâ Eve (Redemption) crams pummeling riffs, exuberant percussion, and dramatic lushness into its 51-minute runtime. âForefathersâ Eve (Part I),â a fantastic companion to Fleshgod Apocalypseâs âCold As Perfectionâ without aping its features, conjures a similarly affecting character that draws me in completely. Forefathersâ Eve (Redemption)âs middle section continues to build personality and develop greater dynamics from that point, represented most clearly in melodic riffs and expressive leads/soloing (âThe Woman that Weepsâ). Leading into its conclusion, a tonal shift towards the dire at this junction foreshadows the imminent release of UpiĂłrâs second act, Forefathersâ Eve (Damnation) (due in early April), charring songs like âForefatherâs Eve (Part II)â and âBetween the Living and Deadâ with blackened rabidity and dissonant flourishes. All of this to say, UpiĂłr launched this latest arc with a striking blow, and I can only imagine whatâs in store for Damnation.
ï»żForefathersâ Eve (Redemption) by UpiĂłr
KadavriK // Erde666 [January 9th, 2026 â Self Released]
Germanyâs melodic death metal quintet KadavriK have been cranking out records since 2007, but I only heard about them this year, once again, thanks to Discord. Erde666, their fifth outing, takes an unorthodox and progressive approach to melodic death metal, which makes comparisons difficult to draw. Stripped down and raw in some moments, mystical and lush in others, Erde666 is all about textures. Its opening title track explores that spectrum of sounds and philosophies to its fullest, even drawing heavy influence from blues, psychedelia, and sludge at times (âGetrĂŒmmerfreundâ), but it all coalesces seamlessly. Following up an opener as strong as that would be a tall order for anyone, but KadavriK are clever songwriters, and the long form served them well even compared to the more straightforward tracklists of previous installments (âNihilist,â âDas Ende Des AnthropozĂ€nsâ). Off-kilter guitar melodies countered against twinkling Kalmah synths and sweeping strings do a lot of work to elevate and liven the crushing chords of their high-impact riffs as well, which adds a ton of interest into an already unconventional melodic death record (âWiderhallâ). All of this makes for a record that might not be as immediate or fast-paced as most aim for in this space, but, counterintuitively, significantly more memorable. Donât sleep on this one, folks!
Luminesce // Like Crushed Violets and Linen [November 20th, 2026 â Self Released]
Prolific at a scale I havenât witnessed since DĂ©hĂ , Luminesce mastermind Alice Simard, based in QuĂ©bec, piqued my curiosity for the first time with Like Crushed Violets and Linen, her sophomore effort under the Luminesce moniker. Boasting machine-gun rapidity (âExploited Monochromaticismâ), off-kilter rhythms (âSilverâ), and a downright romantic sense of melody (âLike Crushed Violets and Linen,â âLamp of Fulgurationâ)âcountered by lyrical themes ranging from guilt complexes to gender identity (âTo Restoreâ)âLike Crushed Violets and Linen is a deeply personal record forged in a melodic technical death metal mold. And as such a record, it recalls the vicarious guitar pyrotechnics of Inferi and Obscura while securing a melodic sensibility more in line with neoclassical composition (âThe Covenant of Counterfeit Starsâ). Unlike many of her contemporaries, however, Alice is a master of editing. Filled with killer ideas and instrumental wizardry without involving a drop of bloat, each of these seven songs coalesce into a buttery-smooth 30-minute excursion that punches far above its feathery mass. The addition of delightful chiptune dalliances helps distinguish Luminesce further from the pack (âTo Restoreâ), though Iâm torn about how far forward they are in the mix. In fact, the mix is my main gripe, as Like Crushed Violets and Linen is muffled and a bit flat, despite boasting a much-appreciated meaty bass presence. Nonetheless, if youâre looking for an unlikely tech-death contender, Luminesce might be just what you need.
ï»żLike Crushed Violets and Linen by Luminesce
Bone Storm // Daemon Breed [January 30th, 2026 â Self Released]
As the CEO of this Filter company, I withhold the right to break the rules and include a very cool bonus fourth option, Bone Stormâs cavebrained Daemon Breed. Do you like Bolt Thrower? Yes, you do. Do you like Bear Mace? Yes, you do. By proxy, then, you already like Connecticutâs Bone Storm as they draw from the same chunky, groove-laden school of death metal. At a somewhat overachieving 50 minutes, Daemon Breed pummels the listener beneath a veritable smorgasbord of neck-breaking riffs built upon a framework of triplet grooves, swaggering syncopations, and galloping double bass assaults. Their approach is simple and unburdened by blistering speed, fiddly technicality, or atmospheric deviation, and in that way recalls the undeniable immediacy and brutal effectiveness of records like Black Royalâs Firebride. With highlights âHeavenâs End (Burn Them All),â âPlaguerider,â âSanctimonious Morality,â and above all âRitual Supremacy,â Bone Storm use that approach with aplomb, proving that the spirit of classic, no-frills death metal is vital and vicarious. Delightfully cogent roars and gutturals allow the most difficult deliveries (see âDaemon Breedâ) to feel vicious and purposeful, while a subtle thread of melody (see âCursed Bornâ) affords the record a small measure of songwriting variety to break things up just when Daemon Breed needs it most. Heavy reliance on triplets and perhaps a zealous desire to put down every idea that seems good even if itâs placed immediately adjacent to much better one (âHalo of Diseaseâ and âHammer of Judasâ bookending âRitual Supremacyâ are tough positions to defend, as is âWrist Slitterâ next to the fun Frozen Soul-esque âBlood Priestâ), hold it back from higher praise only mildly. Moral of the story? Enter the bone zone, with haste!
Creeping Ivyâs Riffy Remainder
Lord Elephant // Ultra Soul [January 30th, 2026 â Heavy Psych Sounds]
Sometimes, you donât need dynamic songwriting, harmonic density, or even a vocalist. Sometimes, all you need are riffs. Okay, and maybe some psychedelic leads to go over those riffs. Ultra Soul, the sophomore album from Italian instrumental trio Lord Elephant, delivers 48 minutes of pure, mostly unadulterated stoner-doom. In the feudal jungle of heavy riff rock, Lord Elephant pays scutage to King Buffalo, similarly forming longish compositions where simple, bluesy figures reign supreme, stretching their limbs in grassy patches. Occasionally, guitarist Leandro Gaccione, bassist Edoardo De Nardi, and drummer Tommaso Urzino lock into some lively, head-bobbing grooves (âGigantiaâ). But mostly, Lord Elephant keeps things meditative, hypnotizing listeners with Earthless drones and lurches (âSmoke Tower,â âBlack River Bluesâ). De Nardiâs bass often leads the way (âElectric Dunesâ), the underwater tone of which reminds me of falling for Isis.1 Lord Elephant arenât reinventing any wheels here; the familiarity of their bluesy riffing simply wonât interest those for whom such bluesiness is a staid marker of old-man rock. The absence of vocals, however, makes Ultra Soul work as pseudo-ambient music that can set the mood, or accompany tasks, or gateway a normie. Closer listening will reveal, though, a tight trio reveling in the rudiments of rock musicâa drummer, bassist, and guitarist vibing on a riff.
Andy-War-Hallâs Salvaged Windfall
Juodvarnis // TĂ©kmĂ©s [January 23rd, 2026 â Self Released]
Lithuaniaâs Juodvarnis cooked for a long six years between albums for their fourth record TĂ©kmĂ©s. With the confidence and sharpness displayed on all levels by Juodvarnis here, that was clearly time well spent in the kitchen. Sporting a brand of progressive black metal that blends the Enslaved framework of prog-black with the epic heft and melody of Iotunn and the crushing rhythms and harsh vocals of Gojira, TĂ©kmĂ©s is tight, lively and achieves a remarkable level of melancholic thoughtfulness without neglecting the average listenerâs chronic need for riffs. Translated to âflowâ from Hungarian,2 TĂ©kmĂ©s navigates inter-song and album-wide progressions of pummeling rhythms (âDvasios Ligosâ) and slow marches (âTamsiausias NuĆĄvitimasâ), impassioned clean vocals (âPlatybÄsâ) and razor-throated screams (âJuodos Akysâ) to achieve a gradual, natural sense of advancement across its 42-minute journey. If progressive black metal that knows how to riff and can turn the reverb off 11 sounds like a good time to you, give Juodvarnisâ TĂ©kmĂ©s a shot sometime.
Thus Spokeâs Obscure Offerings
Ectovoid // In Unrealityâs Coffin [January 9th, 2026 â Everlasting Spew Records]
Normally, it takes copious amounts of reverb, wonkiness, melody, or turbo-dissonance for death metal to be palatable to me. Every once in a while, however, an album like Ectovoidâs In Unrealityâs Coffin comes along and shows me that there is another way. The musicâs stickiness has a lot to do with its boundary-straddling take on OSDM. Ostensibly, the battering, percussion, sawblade riffing, and gruff gurgling growls mark it as your everyday modern no-nonsense death metal, somewhere between Cryptopsy and Immolation. But In Unrealityâs Coffin is more like tech-death, disso-death, and brutal-death in a trench coat than it is any one of them, or another subgenre.3 Its arpeggios can be rhythmically snappy, sometimes combined with equally sharp vocal delivery (âIntrusive Illusions (Echoes from a Distant Plane)â), but more often than not channel a churning chaos that resists punchiness for a darker unease I find addictive (âCollapsing Spiritual Nebula,â âErroneous Birthâ). The music is constantly speeding up or slowing down, churning guitars collapsing with slides (âDissonance Corporeumâ) or pitching upwards in squeals (âIn Anguished Levitationâ), or evolving into mania as screams and growls fragment and layer (âFormless Seeking Formâ). Rather than being exhausting, itâs exhilarating, with expertly-timed releases of diabolically echoing melody (âCollapsing Spiritual Nebulaâ) or a new groove to latch onto (âIn Unrealityâs Coffinâ) coming to keep you afloat. Ectovoid keep you guessing without actually really pushing the boundaries, making In Unrealityâs Coffin both a lot of fun and straightforwardly br00tal enough to sustain a savage workout; or just a really intense 45 minutes.
In Unrealityâs Coffin by Ectovoid
ExxĂ»l // Sealed into None [January 15th, 2026 â Productions TSO]
Phil Tougas has had an impressive start to the year. Before Wormâs Necropalace this February, came Sealed into None, the debut by ExxĂ»lâa genre-blending, kinda blackened epic-power-doom-heavy-metal group also comprising several of Philâs Atramentus band-mates. Several people brought up this album in the comments on my Worm review, often to the tune of âExxĂ»l better,â and while I respectfully disagree on the quality ranking of the two, I canât deny how fabulous Sealed into None is. Here again are genres of music Iâm usually unable to connect withâin this instance, power and classical heavy metalâbut shaped in a way that opens my eyes and ears. Yes, the high-pitched wail style of singing first took me a little off-guard when they first arose on âBlighted Deity,â and they offend my usual tastes. But they are impressive, and work in a way I thought only harsh vocals could when following the trajectory of distorted keys and guitar (âWalls of Endless Darknessâ), or shouting into an atmospheric abyss (âThe Screaming Towerâ). Oh, and of course, the overall vibe of magnificent, melodramatic blackened doom that sets the scene, capped off withâpredictablyâphenomenal guitarwork, is just magic and enough for me to get past my knee-jerk vocal ick and love it not in spite of that, but because of what it can bring to the whole. I love the slow builds to dazzling solos (âBells of the ExxĂ»l through to âBlighted Deity,â âThe Screaming Towerâ) and the way the camper, heavy-metal sides blur into something darker (âLabyrinthine Fateâ). I just love this album, to be honest.
ClarkKentâs Canadian Catch
Turpitude // MordorĂ© [January 1, 2026 â Self Released]
Since 2019, Alice Simard has been a prolific presence in Quebecâs underground metal scene. She consistently releases albums for several different projects, from the ambient atmoblack of Coffret de Bijoux to the tech death of Luminesce (also uncovered in this monthâs Filter by our Sponge Fren). MordorĂ©, the fourth full-length for Turpitude, thrives on its riffs and carries a cheerful energy reminiscent of the carefree raw black metal of Grime Stone Records stalwarts Wizard Keep and Old Nick. Yet Simard opts for traditional instruments, no synths, though production choices make the drumsticks sound as if theyâre banging against blocks of wood, give the guitars a lofi reverb, and cause Simardâs voice to fade into the background in a cavernous growl. The riffs are the real star, with some terrifically catchy melodic leads and trems throughout (âLa Traverse MordorĂ©e,â âAller de Lâavantâ). This combination of riffs, a raw sound, and often upbeat tunes draws comparison to TrhĂ€ and To Escape. While MordorĂ© keeps a mostly cheery tone, Turpitudeâs no one-trick pony. Thereâs a tinge of the melancholic on the moody, atmospheric âPeintra,â as well as a successful stab at covering a non-metal song a lĂĄ Spider God on âWashing Machine Heart.â4 This is a worthwhile endeavor for those who like their black metal raw and energetic.
Grin Reaperâs Heavy Haul
Valiant Sentinel // Neverealm [January 16th, 2026 â Theogonia Records]
Greek heavy metal heroes Valiant Sentinel dropped their sophomore platter Neverealm back in mid-January, unleashing forty-six minutes that reek of high fantasy. Galloping riffs, driving drums, and vocal harmonies aplenty supply a cinematic adventure that basks in fun. While the pacing of Neverealm mainly operates in high-energy bombast, Valiant Sentinel smartly weaves in mid-paced might, evidenced by how the controlled assault of âMirkwood Forestâ provides a breather after opening chest-thumpers âWar in Heavenâ and âNeverealm.â Acoustic pieces âTo Mend the Ringâ and âCome What Mayâ further diversify Neverealmâs heavy metal holdings, and while Iâm usually keener on more aggressive numbers, these two tracks comprise some of my favorite moments on the album.5 Mostly, Valiant Sentinel summons comparisons to Germanyâs heavy/power sceneâchief among them Blind Guardianâgoing so far as to bring in BG drummer extraordinaire Frederik Ehmke. I also catch fleeting glimpses of Brainstorm and Mystic Prophecy in Valiant Sentinelâs DNA, though guitarist and composer Dimitris Skodras does a commendable job carving out a distinct identity for the band. Featuring skilled performances across the board and guest spots from Burning Witchesâ Laura Guldemond (âNeverealmâ) and Savatageâs Zak Stevens (âArch Nemesisâ), Valiant Sentinel packs loads of drama into a streamlined package. So what are you waiting for? Go grab your polyhedrals and a Spelljammer, and set sail for Neverealm.
Fili Bibianoâs Fortress // Death Is Your Master [January 30th, 2026 â High Roller Records]
Does Shredphobia keep you away from metal? Does the sultry siren call of licks, riffs, and chugs make you break into a cold sweat? If so, I strongly urge you to stay away from Fortressâ sophomore album, Death Is Your Master. Channeling Tony Martin-era Black Sabbath and 80s Judas Priest, Fortress drops six-string shenanigans thatâll get your booty shaking and the floor quaking, offering a romping retro slab that goes down slow ânâ easy. The overt classic 80s heavy metal worship on tracks âFlesh and Daggerâ and âNight Cityâ delivers riff after riff recalling the glory days, giving Fortress an authenticity that expands what could have otherwise been a one-dimensional LP. Guitarist Fili Bibiano sizzles with axe-slinging abandon, occasionally conjuring the neoclassical debauchery of Yngwie (âSavage Sword,â âMazeâ). Still, itâs not all about the guitar, and drummer Joey Mancaruso and vocalist Juan Aguila nail their contributions as Fortress wends their way through a trim thirty-four minutes. On a guitar-forward album featuring slick songwriting and singalong jams, Death Is Your Master bumps, dives, and wails in a slow-burn frenzy of classic heavy goodness. Dig in!
Death Is Your Master by Fili Bibianoâs Fortress
Baguetteâs Brutal Burglary
Skulld // Abyss Calls to Abyss [January 23rd, 2026 â Time to Kill Records]
While last year was alright for death metal and notably starred Dormant Ordeal, I felt it was lacking in quantity of impressive releases for said cornerstone of the metal underground. Fortunately, Italian group Skulld is here to start off the year with a bang! Abyss Calls to Abyss takes Bolt Throwerâs tank-rolling grooves (âMother Deathâ) and Dismemberâs melodic buzzsaw action (âWear the Night as a Velvet Cloakâ) and adds in some crust punk influence as extra seasoning (âLe Diable and the Snakeâ). It feels like theyâve taken some influence from both Finnish and Swedish varieties of death metal as well, and Iâm here for it! The band is fluent in switching things up at the drop of a hat without sacrificing energy or cohesion. âMother Deathâ and âDrops of Sorrowâ go from heavy, dissonant chords to big lead guitar melodies, which in turn lead to a chunky and punky death metal groove thatâs bound to get your head moving. Teoâs drumming controls the mood in excellent fashion, adding fast blast beats or slow-pummelling stomps when called for. The vicious, varied growls of Pam further cement the violence contained within and add to the albumâs attitude. At a brief 34 minutes spread over eight songs, it wastes no time going for your throat in a multitude of ways. Get this album into your skull or get Skulld!
Total Annihilation // Mountains of Madness [January 16th, 2026 â Testimony Records]
What would happen if you took Vader, Slayer and Sodom and threw them in a big olâ manic death/thrash blender? The answer is Mountains of Madness! While Swiss Total Annihilationâs earliest works were more in line with classic â80s thrash metal, they have increasingly moved towards more aggressive and relentless pastures, and their songwriting is all the better for it. Fourth album Mountains of Madness channels records like Vaderâs Litany and Sodomâs Tapping the Vein in particular (âThe Art of Torture,â âAge of Mental Suicideâ), taking advantage of a relentless, drum-forward groove and a furious vocal performance. The albumâs dual guitar attack weaves together thrashier tunes with parts that reach straight up Swedeath territory, be it melodic or not. In addition, tracks like âMountains of Madnessâ and âChoose the Dayâ throw some melodic thrash akin to Sodomâs self-titled album into the mix for that extra bit of variety and replay value. Mountains of Madness isnât afraid to slow things down with a satisfying lead riff, but most of Mountains of Madness is at a respectful lightning-fast pace, as thrash should. Another brief but powerful addition to the January pile ov skulls!
Mountains Of Madness by Total Annihilation
Polaris Experience // Drifting Through Voids [January 2nd, 2026 â Distant Comet Entertainment]
On the earliest days of the year, Japan delivered an awesome surprise drop of death metal-influenced progressive thrash! Polaris Experience features various Cynical riffs (âInterplanetary Funambulist,â âBathyscapesâ) while sporting a similarly old-school guitar tone throughout. Being progressive thrash, the main focus is naturally on the oh-so-sweet instrumentation that balances melody and groove seamlessly. The instrumental âParvatiâ alone highlights how tight everything is, from the snappy drumming to the bouncy bass work. Most importantly, the music is catchy and memorable despite its relative complexity and lack of brevity. Additionally, Drifting Through Voids uses vocals sparingly but in all the right ways, complementing its technicalities with a traditional thrashy, harsh bark. The fact that itâs a two-man project and a debut makes it all the more impressive. Fans of similar recent progressive and technical shenanigans like Species should take notes post-haste. Considering weâve already had this and Cryptic Shift this early in the year, and how prog/tech thrash is usually only allowed one or two notable albums per year, we could be in for a banner year for the subgenre. It also marks the first time in ages that a Japanese album has genuinely good production. Welcome to the new millennium!
Drifting Through Voids by Polaris Experience
#2026 #AbyssCallsToAbyss #AmericanMetal #Atramentus #BearMace #BlackMetal #BlackRoyal #BlackSabbath #BlackenedDeathMetal #BlindGuardian #BoltThrower #BoneStorm #Brainstorm #BurningWitches #CalliopeCarnage #CanadianMetal #CoffretDeBijoux #CrypticShift #Cryptopsy #Cynic #DaemonBreed #DeathMetal #Dismember #DistantCometEntertainment #Doom #DoomMetal #DormantOrdeal #DriftingThroughVoids #Earthless #Ectovoid #Enslaved #EpicMetal #Erde666 #EverlastingSpewRecords #ExxĂ»l #FiliBibianoSFortress #FleshgodApocalypse #ForefatherSEveRedemption #Fortress #GallowglassGalas #GermanMetal #Gojira #Gorod #GreekMetal #Hardcore #HeavyMetal #HeavyPsychSounds #HighRollerRecords #Immolation #InUnrealitySCoffin #Inferi #InternationalMetal #Iotunn #ItalianMetal #Jan26 #JapaneseMetal #JudasPriest #Judovarnis #KadavriK #Kalmah #KingBuffalo #LikeCrushedVioletsAndLinen #LithuanianMetal #LordElephant #Luminesce #MelodicDeathMetal #Mitski #MordorĂ© #MountainsOfMadness #Neverealm #Obscura #OldNick #PolarisExperience #PowerMetal #ProductionsTSO #ProgressiuveMetal #ProgressiveBlackMetal #ProgressiveDeathMetal #Punk #Review #Reviews #Savatage #SealedIntoNone #SelfRelase #SelfReleased #Skulld #Slayer #Sodom #Species #SpiderGod #StonerDoom #StonerMetal #StuckInTheFilter #StuckInTheFilter2026 #SwissMetal #SymphonicDeathMetal #TechnicalDeathMetal #TĂ©kmĂ©s #TestimonyRecords #TheogoniaRecords #Therion #ThrashMetal #TimeToKillRecords #ToEscape #TotalAnnihilation #TrhĂ€ #Turpitude #UltraSoul #UpiĂłr #Vader #ValiantSentinel #Wachenfeldt #WizardKeep #Worm #XaocFollowing the regrettable and entirely non-suspicious sabbatical of the great El Cuervo, the baton of the heroic effort of assembling the Aggregated List has been passed. This yearâs list is a joint effort. The data collection and analysis have been handled by yours truly. The finely-crafted blurbs below were produced by newcomer Andy-War-Hall, who has not yet learnt to say no when volunteers are requested.
Of course, with new personnel comes new methods. Ranked choice group decision making is a famously knotty problem; indeed, one can show mathematically that a perfect mechanism simply doesnât exist. And we are armed with partial information: did one of our writers not put a particular album on their list because they were lukewarm to it, or absolutely hated it (or would have, had they listened to it)? How do we even define the overall best album? Is it better for an album to be liked by many or loved by a few?
These questions led entirely too far down a rabbit hole on voting algorithms. I spent quite a while testing different approaches on last yearâs list season.1 In the end, I have gone with an approach which is similar to the one El C used previously, but which more heavily weights the upper end of a list. A #1 placing gets 1 point, a #2 gets 1/2 a point, and so on.2 This, I hoped, would produce a list more representative of the records that were loved and passionately debated at AMG HQ, and less vulnerable to âlowest common denominatorâ criticisms levelled at previous aggregation endeavors.
This year, we had 28 lists, spanning 235 unique albums. This yearâs tastemakers and/or crowd followers are Creeping Ivy, GardensTale, Kenstrosity, and Thus Spoke, each of whom had 7 records from their lists make it onto this one.3 Meanwhile, this yearâs contrarians are Alekhines Gun and Dr. A.N. Grier, with exactly one each.
In practice, the new selection algorithm has done about what I expected. 14/20 of the records overlap between the two methods, with mostly minor changes in position. Records like Grima, Flummox, and Maud the Moth made the list with one passionate advocate and a handful of supporters. Records like Imperial Triumphant and Igorrr, with 7 and 6 relatively low placements, respectively, did not. Is this better? I think so, and if you donât, youâre wrong, or a big fan of a record that didnât make it onto the list in the new system.4, 5
âSentynel
#20. Dax Riggs // 7 Songs for Spiders â [#2, #3, #4, #ish] â âDaxâs comeback album marks a triumphant and warm, comforting return from an underground icon. 7 Songs for Spiders delivered the goods, as Dax and friends dropped an album with a familiar, nostalgic feel that refuses to rest on its laurels. Riggsâ defining vocals sound as vital and deliciously smoky as ever, weaving signature morbid tales, deadly hooks, and earworm melodies through subdued yet deceptively hefty and bluesy folk-doom ditties.â (Saunders).
#19. Qrixkuor // The Womb Of The World â [#2, #3, #4, #8] â âYet I still donât think anything could have adequately prepared me for how massive and mad The Womb of the World actually is. With the strings, horns, and piano swooping and crashing about in great surges and falls, Qrixkuorâs already grandiose style fully feels like some tormented classical opus, and itâs utterly magnificentâ (Thus Spoke).
#18. Grima // Nightside â [#1, #7, #10] â âOn Nightside, [Grima] struck the perfect balance between the traditional influences of 2019âs Will of the Primordial and the propulsive, frozen atmosphere of Frostbitten (2022). The combination gives Nightside an almost hypnotic, and weirdly tranquil, flow, offset by Vilhelmâs rasping vocals, which remain among the best in the BM gameâ (Carcharodon).
#17. Flummox // Southern Progress â [#1, #9, #9, #HM] â
âSteeped in messaging that spotlights systematic and social prejudices that plague the queer[âŠ] Flummoxâs fifth LP greatly affected me on a personal level. More so than any other record released this year, Southern Progress feels important, not just to me, and not just to Flummox. I strongly believe everyone could learn something from this bizarre, wild, and untamable barnstormer, and have a blast doing itâ (Kenstrosity).
#16. An Abstract Illusion // The Sleeping City â [#2, #7, #7, #9, #10, #HM, #HM, #HM, #HM] â âIâve somehow grown to love The Sleeping City even more in the months since I awarded it a 4.0. Sure, the production leaves much to be desired, but there arenât any other notable qualities that I would consider faults. It wonât appeal to the exact same audience as the legendary Woe, but I have plenty of room in my heart for both (and likely whatever An Abstract Illusion devises next)â (Killjoy).
#14. Buried Realm // The Dormant Darkness â [#1, #3] â âBuried Realm[âŠ]gave me everything I like about metal in one dense package: blazing speeds, soaring guitars, majestic vocals, and relentless fury. Itâs also inexplicably well-produced for how many layers there are to deal with. While 2025 was not a particularly star-studded release yearâespecially compared to most of the 2020s so farâit threw plenty of fun curveballs at me, and The Dormant Darkness exemplifies this with its Xothian fusion of metal subgenres in one big Ophidian I blender ov shredâ (Baguette of Bodom).
#14. Maud The Moth // The Distaff â [#1, #3] â âAnd like the artists we valueâor rather, like the artists I valueâAmaya presents her vision of this struggle with focused and expanding melodic lines, crushing and crying crescendos, and an earnestness that compels its audience to surrender for a moment to a world created by these musical ideas. When your sadness comes, it wonât weep in blacks and ivories the way that The Distaff doesâ (Dolphin Whisperer).
#13. Yellow Eyes // Confusion Gate â [#1, #3, #HM] â âYellow Eyes are one of the best black metal bands in the game and Confusion Gate is their most impressive work to date. It sees the band return to a more traditional atmospheric sound, but with the lessons learned from their explorations of dissonance and ambience. The result is a kaleidoscopic blend of gorgeous melodies, haunting riffs and a pervasive sense of pathos that only the best art can achieveâ (Samguineous Maximus).
#12. Cave Sermon // Fragile Wings â [#1, #3, #6, #7] â âWords like âwistful,â âexuberant,â and âplayfulâ were tossed about in Thusâs excellent write-up and really homed in on what made listening to Fragile Wings such a connective experience for me. Imbued as Fragile Wings is with upbeat sadness, Cave Sermon proved that I can get on board with post metal, and to be honest, any metal that sounds this good is worth the time spentâ (Tyme).
#11. Primitive Man // Observance â [#1, #2, #10, #HM] â âPrimitive Man is the heaviest band on the planet. While Iâve appreciated the Denver trioâs pitch-black approach to death metal laced with noise, doom, and sludge â from afar â Observance booked me in with upbeat tempos and a surprising melody. It swallows you whole like any good Primitive Man album ought to, but the devotion to deteriorating songwriting and weaponized noiseâ (Dear Hollow).
#10. Paradise Lost // Ascension â [#1, #3, #4, #7] â Paradise Lostâs latest entry into their historically varied and long-running discography, Ascension earned its flowers this Listurnalia through a heated handful of endorsements, all but one seated in the top halves of their respective lists. Whether impressing longtime fans like Steel Druhm through âmaturity and sophistication even the classics lackâ or grabbing off-and-on listeners like Thus Spoke by way of âgrungy aggression and sadboi introspection in perfect equilibrium,â Ascension exudes not only oodles of gothic atmosphere but also vitality, something a band as old as Paradise Lost could be forgiven for lacking. As Grymm put it while crowning Ascension with his #1 spot, âWith Black Sabbath now officially put to rest, Anathema long gone, and whatever the fuck is happening within My Dying Bride these days, somebody has to fly the British Doom flag high and proud, and Paradise Lost have done a bang-up job of doing so.â Simply, find Paradise in Ascension or get Lost.
#9. Calva Louise // Edge Of The Abyss â [#1, #5, #5, #9, #9, #10, #HM] â Every year this list has to have at least one real oddball pick, and 2025 has Calva Louise and their prog-groove-electronica-metalcore-whatever record Edge of the Abyss. Our Overlord, Angry Metal Guy Himself, declared, âCalva Louise sports a swagger unique to bands who are just doing exactly what they want to be doing. Since July, Iâve kept coming back to Edge of the Abyss and forgetting I had even enjoyed other records this year. Thereâs a real sense of becoming here; of a band pulling its influences together into something that feels unique.â Six other valued writers tolerated peons heaped their fair share of praise as well. Our server-savior Sentynel asserted, âCalva Louise is what you get if you take the Diablo Swing Orchestra and remove their classical instruments and sense of restraint. Something this absurd could only ever have been terrific or terrible.â Edge of the Abyss certainly wonât resonate for everybody as it did for much of the AMG crew, but with how much creativity and vision Calva Louise exude maybe thatâs your fault if it doesnât for you.
#8. Crippling Alcoholism // Camgirl â [#1, #3, #3, #5] â When Tyme first reviewed the âmurderpopâ synthwave group Crippling Alcoholismâs Camgirl back in September, he âcould not have anticipated the absolute fathomless darkness lurking within Camgirlâs saccharine sweetness.â Neither, it seems, could the three freshly-raised N00bs who included Crippling Alcoholism on their lists, including a top spot on Lavender Larcenistâs list, describing Camgirl as âdripping with the atmosphere of neon-lit back rooms, seedy interactions, and terrible decision-making. It feels like a lens into the lives of those society has left behind, and I canât help but feel a connection.â Though perhaps not the most typically metal record on the aggregate list, given Camgirlâs deeply unsettling atmosphere and sticky hooks, itâs not hard to see how it can grab a listener and not let go. In a world and music scene so deeply desensitized to depravity, Crippling Alcoholism tapped into something truly profane.6
#7. Havukruunu // Tavastland â [#1, #1, #3] â Havukruunu may not have placed on many lists, but Tavastland clawed smote mightily onto the aggregate list by right of being our first entry of two top-billing spots. Creeping Ivy was taken in by Tavastlandâs âadventurous prog sensibilitiesâ while claiming âHavukruunu stands as a model of Viking black metal consistency.â Dr. A. N. Grier similarly heaped highest praise onto Havukruunu over their ability to scratch âthat itch for old-school Bathory-core that is almost as good as the real fucking thingâ and onto Tavastland for its âbludgeoning Bathory-meets-Immortal riffs, feel-good Viking plods, melodic passages, and seamless transitions that make repeat listens oh-so soothing.â The verdict is out: Havukruunu may not draw from fresh or cutting-edge sounds, but Tavastland is nonetheless a sword-swinging, barrel-chested victory cry that will take you straight to Valhalla if you let it.
#6. Structure // Heritage â [#1, #2, #5, #5, #6, #7, #8, #ish] â If the world were just a little bit better, we might not have had the depressive conditions for funeral doom duo Structure to produce Heritage, so just be glad it kinda stinks here. Earning eight list placements, not to mention boss-man Steel Druhmâs #1, Heritage rocked this blog hard in 2025. Dear Hollow made no bones in stating âHeritage is Structure paying homage to doom metalâs contemplation while paying its dues in death metalâs viciousness â pure devastation,â while Steely D. made clear that âover the 50 minutes of Heritage, the duo drag you to the heart of sadness, loss, and despair as only thoughtful, well-executed doom can. Yet there are faint rays of light and hope in the inky blackâŠâ If you have any taste for doom or death (and perhaps a touch of masochism), you should already have given Heritage a spin. If funeral doom isnât your thing, listen to âWill I Deserve Itâ and make it your thing.7
#5. In Mourning // The Immortal â [#1, #2, #2, #4, #8, #9, #10, #HM] â In Mourning may be a sad bunch of melodeathers, but it canât be from a lack of appreciation for their record The Immortal âround these parts. The word âperfectâ appeared twice in relation to The Immortal this Listurnalia, with Clark Kent claiming âFrom the beautiful guitar tones to the excellent combo of clean and harsh vox to the memorable melodies, The Immortal is an emotional tour-de-force that grows more majestic with each spinâ and Owlswald opining âthese Swedes have found the perfect combination of their patented Opethian death metal chuggery, sadboi melodies and creative dynamism, resulting in a sound rich in emotional depth with more digestible hooks than one can handle.â A grower for some, an instant hit for others, The Immortal is a smart, emotional journey andâif the well-deserved tongue-bathing it received on this blog is anything to go byâmay just have set In Mourning as the flag bearers of melodic death metal for the remainder of the 2020s.
#4. TĂłmarĂșm // Beyond Obsidian Euphoria â [#1, #1, #2, #5, #HM] â Very nearly taking three #1 spots this Listurnalia, progressive death-heads TĂłmarĂșm hit it big in 2025 with their sophomore record Beyond Obsidian Euphoria. Layered like lasagna and dense as deep dish, Beyond Obsidian Euphoria left Saunders with no shortage of things to say in his list: âBeyond Obsidian Euphoria smacked me upside the cranium with an explosion of creativity and ambitious songcraftâŠthe whole experience is so consistently gripping and superbly written and performed that minor quibbles are squashed well below the surface.â Similarly, Clark Kent maintained that âTomĂĄrĂșmâs epic, sprawling constructs demand so many of my spoons; emotionally, physically, spiritually. But it gives just as many back, plus just enough extra to compel me to spin it again.â Sharp, ambitious, and impactful, TĂłmarĂșm are the real deal, and if you have the silverware to spare, you should dig in to Beyond Obsidian Euphoria today.
#3. Dormant Ordeal // Tooth And Nail â [#1, #2, #2, #2, #4, #4, #6, #7, #8, #HM, #HM, #HM, #HM] â With just one list placement short of Archspireâs historical 2021 showing, Dormant Ordeal was the belle of the Listurnalia ball with their beefy blackened death opus Tooth and Nail. âHeavy, groovy, and eminently-listenableâ (Thus Spoke), Tooth and Nail won over the unsettled minds of the AMG staff via achieving âthe ideal form so far of what Dormant Ordeal can achieve with their gut-wrenching take on the Polish death metal soundâ (Dolphin Whisperer). Crowning Tooth and Nail his #1 album of 2025, Tyme attested that, âFrom the brutally effective âHalo of Bonesâ to the excellent, Dylan Thomas-inspired âAgainst the Dying of the Light,â there wasnât an album I returned to more this year than Tooth and Nail, its visceral riffs and razor-sharp edges leaving long-lasting scars.â Youâre just not getting death metal this heavy, this mean, and this delightfully re-listenable in 2025 if itâs not Dormant Ordealâs Tooth and Nail. Simple as.
#2. Messa // The Spin â [#1, #2, #2, #2, #3, #4, #5, #5, #ish, #HM, #HM, #HM] â The way the twelve writers who included Messaâs latest record The Spin on their lists describe it, youâd think they had no choice in the matter. Describing Messaâs blend of prog, doom, and post-rock, Dolphin Whisperer confessed, âI canât rid myself of the power that a soaring bluesy lick and a smoky siren voice hold, no matter how I try,â while Kenstrosity described The Spin as âEmotive, sultry, and nuanced doom metal, compelling enough to seduce even the coldest heart.â Topping a list of self-professed comfort picks, El Cuervo said of his #1 pick, âThe Spin doesnât trouble to make itself easily approachable. Doom, prog, and post influences circle velvety melodies that sometimes sound like deliberate songs, and sometimes sound like jazz improvisation. But itâs these very qualities that belie its subtle allure; only with repetition and attention does The Spin shine.â Clearly, if youâre not ready to be taken in wholly by Messa and their intoxicating, multifaceted, and rewarding take on doom metal, then please avoid The Spin for your own sake.8
#1. 1914 // Viribus Unitis â [#1, #1, #1, #4, #4, #8, #HM, #HM, #HM] â âI have not listened to every item of music released in 2025, but I still think I can say that none could be more powerful than 1914âs Viribus Unitis. I listened to nothing heavier, nothing more memorable, and nothing so relevant as 1914âs story of a Ukrainian soldier caught up in the mania of the First World War.â Thus spake Twelve, one of three writers to set Ukrainian blackened death doom dogs-of-war 1914 and their latest musical AAR Viribus Unitis atop their lists in 2025, setting it atop this aggregate list as a result. Though Iâm perhaps a bit biased in saying this, itâs not hard to see why Viribus Unitis takes the cake because, as Grin Reaper put it, â1914 paints war-torn life with savage grace, supplying devastating melody and grueling crawls that elevate the album to such heights that Iâm genuinely moved each time I get to the end.â Elsewhere, yours truly gushed pathetically collectedly stated, âImmersion defines great music and art for me. It is almost unfortunate how good 1914 are in this facet of their musicâŠ1914 donât play âhistory metal.â Viribus Unitis is as present and relevant as you can get.â Rattling minds in its violence, breaking hearts in its tragedy, Viribus Unitis is a singularly enthralling record and is (by aggregate decision) 2025âs best album.
#1914 #AnAbstractIllusion #BuriedRealm #CalvaLouise #CaveSermon #CripplingAlcoholism #DormantOrdeal #Flummox #Grima #Havukruunu #InMourning #MaudTheMoth #Messa #ParadiseLost #PhantomSpell #PrimitiveMan #Qrixkuor #Structure #TĂłmarĂșm #YellowEyesEvery year has been shitty for a while, and in some ways, 2025 was the shittiest of them all. The widespread sense that the End Is Nigh is what I would charitably call our zeitgeist.1 And I feel comfortable saying, itâs a shitty zeitgeist. But in defiance of the shit burger weâre all eating every day while we wait for the AI drone war to start, 2025 was my best year in a while. It did, in fact, see me more involved on the front and back ends of AngryMetalGuy.com than Iâd been in a long time. And like those lists weâve already published, AMG, both as a persona and community, has been a refuge for me during difficult times. The joy of discovery and the eclecticism inherent in what we do here have been a major part of why I love this blog. So, honestly, thatâs been nice.
In terms of the blogâs health, AngryMetalGuy.com is holding steady. Weâve got a growing team of n00bs covering some of the holes weâve had in the schedule.2 I worked very hard on training them in combination with Druhm, and itâs fair to say we were both happy with the result. We had some of our best candidates to date, and that made me proud and happy. Thereâs still room for a few more, so we might dig into the pool in the early part of 2026. So if you applied, all hope is not lost. We continue to attract around 1.25 million views a month, and thatâs held steady for three years running. Obviously, we would like to continue to grow. But I have a sneaking suspicion that weâre actually seeing a slight downturn in visitors because of Generative AI. There are, of course, a lot of people who go to Google and write âMy Favorite Band â New Album Review,â and they will be greeted by an AngryMetalGuy.com link that tends to place pretty highly on the Google Machine and awaits their complaints with open arms. But I suspect there are other kinds of views weâve accrued â those which end up in people grabbing album art or looking for release dates â that disappear when people are requesting that ChatGPT do that for them. And while LLMs will link you after plagiarizing you, theyâll only do it if you let them, and we do not. And so any conversions of people checking linked resources are probably lost.3 There have been some weird months here and there with seemingly anomalously low numbers, so who even knows.
The active n00bs have allowed us to revive the three-posts-a-day pace,4 and we only went dark for five days during 2025. As a collective, we posted 699 postsâdown from the very peak of 2019âs nearly 1,000 posts!âbut in line with where weâve been since Covid. And, our posts continue to be longer than they were in 2019, averaging 901 words for a total of 629,905 words that we produced for free in 2025. Thatâs a 2600-page term paperâTimes New Roman, 12 point font, double-spaced on A4 paper.5 This dedication to quantity derives from the whip of an analytics-driven Steel Druhm, but wouldnât be possible without our amazing staff putting their shoulders to the Eternal Boulder ov Metalâą and rolling it uphill every day, saying âOne must imagine Sisyphus happy. One must imagine Sisyphus happy. One must imagine Sisyphus happy.â
We continue to have international appeal, as well, though the country rankings havenât changed much from 2024. Like last year, our top five is made up of the English-speaking world (US, UK, CAN, AUS at five) + Germany (at four).6 Weirdly, we are getting a sizable amount of traffic from China, which clocks in at six for the first time. There are almost certainly shenanigans at play with those numbers, as I am not aware of any influx of Chinese fans here recently. Maybe thatâs AI traffic. Maybe thatâs VPN traffic. Maybe weâve been infiltrated and are now a communist honey pot. Maybe Druhm is buying traffic. Or, maybe, Winnie the Pooh has finally discovered how excellent the realm of heavy metal really is, and China is going through a different kind of cultural revolution! Regardless, 7-10 is made up of the Netherlands, Sweden, Poland, and France, with Spain and Finland dropping out of the top ten. The biggest news, however, when it comes to our international readership, is that signs point strongly to Pope Francis having been our solitary reader in the Holy See. The venerable Franciscan passed away in April of 2025, and I donât believe itâs a coincidence that no one appears to have made the pilgrimage from the Vatican to Angry Metal Guy this year.
Itâs worth noting that we lost more than a few stalwarts along the way in 2025,7 largely due to the #Cursed-Boomer-Posting chat on Slack, which has torn us apart. There may also have been some other influences, such as marriages, having high-paying jobs, running TV shows, having actual lives, or resenting me.8 Regardless, for all those who have worked hard to make AngryMetalGuy.com go, but who are not here with us anymore, I just want to say thank you. Despite my autistic isolation and standoffishness, I do love you all and miss you. The door is, of course, always open. And I am happy to see some special little guys whoâve been in deep freeze popping their heads out of the sand and grabbing promo. Itâs a wonderful sight to behold, and maybe weâll see some newfound productivity from old friends in 2026.
To close, I want to thank everyone â readers and writers alike â for your enthusiasm, your dedication to AngryMetalGuy.com as an institution, and your undying fealty to me, Angry Metal Guy.9 I know I can come off as harsh. And I know that some people grumble that Iâm too hard on them when I read their texts or when they have divergent opinions in the comments, but thatâs only true if youâve never met a passive construction you didnât love or if youâre wrong about metal. And, as I tell my students, weâre a team. Our goal is to make sure that AMG produces the very highest quality writing, while covering as much of the scene as possible.10 And given the loyalty of our readers, your comments, and âthe eye test,â as it were, we are achieving that goal consistently. Iâm still very proud of that and, if I stop to think about it, humbled by it, too.
While it feels like thereâs a lot to dread after the 2025 that was, we still have a lot to be excited about here. So letâs hope that 2026 isnât all like itâs felt in the first five days or so. Anyway, I have gone on far too long, have a wordy, overwrought list.
#(ish) 3: Helms Deep // Chasing the Dragon [June 20th, 2025 | Nameless Grave Records | Bandcamp] â Chasing the Dragon is super fun. Itâs fun, itâs loud, and itâs a little stupid in a way that I find endearing. And, as I remarked in June, while US Power Metal has been getting a lot of love around these parts, Helms Deep has not been on the receiving end of nearly enough of that love. While other bands showed up to a back alley knife fight, these Florida men showed up with a bejet-packed dragon and a collection of songs that burned hotter than dragonsfire, melting the competition down and shaming their lineages for decades to come. And joking hyperbole aside, Helms Deep doesnât feel like a novelty act. They arenât just good âcause I find them funny. Chasing the Dragon features playing thatâs sharp and vital across the board, with guitars that never stand still, a singer who sells every chorus with the right balance of chops, cheese, and buckets of swagger. Said differently, Helms Deep is just dudes playing good, honest heavy metal while having a great time. What more do you need?
#(ish) 2: Vittra // Intense Indifference [September 19th, 2025 | Self-release | Bandcamp] â Vittraâs Intense Indifference shows up hungry, plays fast, hits hard, and gets out before you have time to get bored. Thirty-three minutes of riff-first, bethrashened melodeath go by in a blur; the hooks are sticky, the harmonies are sharp, and the energy is manic and adventurous. While the At the Gates lineage is obvious,11 Vittra pulls in enough Soilwork polish and Mors Principium Est flash to songwriting thatâs focused on momentum rather than atmosphere, and the result is addictive. And what really pushes this record from really good to great are the flashes of the unexpected: honkytonk piano, bluesy acoustic passages, and classic rock phrasing that shouldnât work, but does. Itâs great listening to an album this full of piss and vinegar. I get excited when bands pop up that make the kind of thrashy, intense melodic death that never begs for an Insomnium comp. And sure, these guys have room to grow, but Intense Indifference caused me to feel anything but.
#(ish) 1: Arjen Anthony Lucassen // Songs No One Will Hear [September 12th, 2025 | InsideOut Music | Bandcamp] â Arjen Lucassen has been a favorite of mine during the time that AngryMetalGuy.com has been up and running. The âpoofy-haired cheeseheadâ12 behind many of my favorite albums during AMGâs time is still a gem even in 2025. Crazily, Arjenâs first âsolo recordâ Lost in the New Real was released in 2012,13 and Songs No One Will Hear is its direct successor. A true concept recordâwith Toehiderâs god-tier singer, Michael Mills, voicing a radio DJ talking to listeners about impending doomâit reflects both our End Is Nigh Zeitgeist and Arjenâs particular⊠idiom. Thoroughly enjoyable from start to finish, Songs No One Will Hear is both tongue-in-cheek and yet deeply aware of the nature of information, grifting, and societal collapse, while still displaying the kind of referential goofiness that made Lost in the New Real such a charming record.14 The thing that dinged Songs No One Will Hear a little for me is the sense of uncanny familiarity. At times, it sounds like Arjen was working specifically to emulate the structure of Lost in the New Real. That created a bit of cognitive dissonance that I have never quite gotten over. It also drove a lot of replays of its under-the-radar predecessor rather than the album I should have been reviewing. But is Songs one of the best 11 records oâ 2025? I certainly think so.
#10: An Abstract Illusion // The Sleeping City [October 17th, 2025 | Willowtip | Bandcamp] â The Sleeping City had two strikes against it. First, it had the unenviable task of following Woe, a record that could easily have been the template on which they built their sound. Itâs hard to break away from an overwhelmingly popular sound, yet these Ore Islanders took a left turn, exhibiting a level of daring I admire. The shift in aesthetic is the story of The Sleeping City in a lot of ways; the synths, the vibe, and the mood lean into dystopian sci-fi, and itâs a choice that works. What I love about The Sleeping City is that itâs detailed and detail-oriented without distracting from the expansiveness of the songwriting, which remains evocative and carefully structured. And while they sound comfortable letting songs breathe, they never get lost in the quest for âatmosphereâ that undermines many modern releases. Second,15 the real gripe about The Sleeping City was the mastering job. But even a mastering job that clips peaks and fills valleys shows just how strong the raw material is. And so, finally, The Sleeping City feels like the product of a band choosing growth over safety while being true to themselves. And thatâs an admirable trait that I hope they never lose.
#9: Fallujah // Xenotaph [June 13th, 2025 | Nuclear Blast Records | Bandcamp] â Fallujah landing on my list came as a genuine surprise to me, mostly because I really had quietly written them off. I used to like them, but they never carried that In Flames-style of eternal hope for me. Xenotaph pulled me back in by doing a deceptively simple thing: reintroducing attack. Everything about this record feels more immediate; guitars cut, compositions move with purpose, and songs are taut and sharp. The atmospheric elements remain, but theyâre now integrated into something heavier and more immediate. I love the balance Fallujah finds, combining that late-Cynic energy with the aggression of brutal and technical death. And the deeper I got, the more Xenotaph rewarded me. Repetition revealed interlinked ideas and layered guitar work that shoots like a web throughout, creating a sinuous structure on which everything rests. As I wrote in my Record oâ the Month blurb, âFallujah has achieved a conceptual evolution on Xenotaph that feels true to their origins and yet develops their sound in ways that make it accessible, and yet, truly unique.â It isnât exactly br00tal death metal, but itâs not so drenched in âatmosphereâ that it lacks tension. Most importantly, it worked.
#8: Scardust // Souls [July 18th, 2025 | Frontiers Records | Stream or Buy at Qobuz] â Scardust landing at number eight sans review is another casualty of my 2025 Stack oâ Shame, though this was less neglect than simple overextension in a year where too many heavy hitters landed at once. July, yo, what a month. Unfortunately, I missed the review window, then I missed the window to pawn it off responsibly, and by the time I circled back, it was late. However, Scardustâs third full-length is a sharp, confident 42 minutes of symphonic power/prog that feels fully aware and unique. While it doesnât quite lock together as tightly as Strangers did at a conceptual and compositional level, Souls more than compensates for that with sheer craft. The orchestral and choral arrangements are some of the strongest I heard all year, and Scardustâs chemistry is ridonkulous. The rhythm section especially deserves accolades, with basswork that should be forcing its way into âbest ofâ conversations. As a band, Scardust exists in the interstices of genre, where comparisons kind of work but canât capture their unique voice. And while the band is impressive, the compositions feel so coherent because of Noa Gruman, who carries the album with control, range, and an incomparable soprano. Her extreme register (that is, growls) stays mostly holstered here, but her presenceâand sheer talentâis on constant display, balancing different styles, moods, and feels. And her vocal performance isnât the only standout vocal performance on Souls. The closing âTouch of Lifeâ trilogy finds Ross Jennings (Haken) popping up in full âweird Rossâ mode, which ends up as the cherry on top. The result is smart, muscular, and memorable; an album Iâm ashamed to have missed.
#7: Aephanemer // Utopie [October 31st, 2025 | Napalm Records | Bandcamp] â Aephanemerâs Utopie landed, as I mentioned in my Record oâ the Month blurb, squarely at the top of my Stack oâ Shame. I was honored to be able to get access to this and start listening early, and I was immediately impressed. Yet, I got sick. Darkness took me, and I strayed out of thought and time, and stars wheeled overhead, and every day was as long as the life age of the earth. Meanwhile, Utopie sat there reminding me of my failures until Grin Reaper saved my ass and gave Aephanemerâs newest opus the unhinged tongue bath it so rightfully deserved. Utopie takes everything these French melodic death metallers have been doing over the past couple of albums and tightens the screws until the whole machine purrs with confidence. The neoclassical elements have become a perfect blend that helps everything work perfectly. Utopie flows; songs connect, ideas develop, momentum carries everything forward, and yet Aephanemer does not sacrifice the immediacy and energy that makes melodic death metal such a fine dopamine mine. While I havenât sat down and learned the parts, I feel like the guitars are more fluid and more expressive, resulting in special melodies propelled by a buoyancy reflected in the theme. And you know me, what I want from great records is a holistic sense of greatness. Happily, Aephanemer accomplishes just that on Utopie. Had I been operating at full capacity when it dropped, I would have written a review that kids would call âextra.â16
#6: Insania // The Great Apocalypse [June 13th, 2025 | Frontiers Music | Stream or Buy on Qobuz] â The Great Apocalypse, contrary to its name, is sneaky. It doesnât gallop in and smack you in the face with shock or novelty, but instead, it reveals its strength through confidence, craft, and an almost unfair level of replay value. What initially feels likeâand has been so often written off asâa solid, familiar Europower record gradually opens up to be something richer and more rewarding. And itâs kept paying dividends the longer Iâve been sitting with it. Insania sounds, as I noted when I wrote the review, like a band fully aware of their lineage and completely at ease with it. But the truly confident understand themselves enough to think differently. The resulting record is full of massive, sticky hooks, choruses that hit with power metal optimism and momentum, and electrifying guitars throughout. In fact, while investigating their discography, I was struck by how much Insania upped their game on The Great Apocalypse. And key to that is the guitar, which elevates the record by resisting predictability and yet coexisting on a meta-level with the genre that they know so well. Songs evolve instead of looping, melodies get reshaped rather than repeated, and familiar ideas or tropes are nudged just enough off-center to stay engaging but familiar. The Great Apocalypse approaches with intention, and Insania performs like a band thatâs rediscovering why they love playing this kind of music in the first place. This record is exhilarating, memorable, and deeply satisfying, which is why it belongs among these other great releases.
#5: Kalaveraztekah // Nikan Axkan [May 2nd, 2025 | Self-release | Bandcamp] â In what Iâm pretty sure is a first for me, an ĂnsĂŻgnĂ«d BĂ€nd Rödëö contestant has made my Top Ten(ish) list. Iâve had plenty of unsigned bands on my lists, but I walked into Kalaveraztekahâs masterful Nikan Axkan utterly unprepared for what I would find. Like a kid buying music in the â90s, I just looked at that amazing cover art and decided that I was going to join the team reviewing this record instead of the other one. And that twist of fate has earned Mexicoâs finest Aztec-themed death metal band a spot on the End oâ Year Metal List oâ Recordâą.17 As I cleverly wrote in my Record oâ the Month blurb: âThereâs no sense that these HidrocĂĄlidos are some kind of novelty act. They arenât a Mexican Eluveitie, just playing Dark Tranquillity riffs while putting a Ritual Death Flute over it for 40 seconds in every song.â18 Rather, Nikan Axkan is chock full of muscular riffing and the kind of grindy death metal that Iâve always associated with the Mexican scene. Combined with a high-concept connecting to Mexican pre-history and the judicious use of a fucking death flute, I just never quit listening to Nikan Axkan.19 And so here they are, in the Top 5 of my Top 10(ish) of 2025,20 and it couldnât be more deserved.
#4: Impureza // AlcĂĄzares [July 11th, 2025 | Season of Mist | Bandcamp] â I admit, I have tried to lead by example. I have attempted to become a servant leader. Rather than eating up a ton of oxygen and making everything actually about me (instead of just in jest) and what I want as Angry Metal Guy, I have, with time and wisdom, tried to allow others a chance to spread their wings. One of the things that means is that I canât just bogart other writersâ âdiscoveries,â and I try not to block them if they grab something before I do.21 So, in that context, youâll understand that I got pretty excited when I realized that I could review the newest Impureza without poaching it. The bandâs approach to metalâinfused with flamenco and semi-fantastical alternate-historical high concepts about colonial historyâhad entranced me previously, but I always felt like they were leaving a lot on the table. Their sound had not quite blended the flamenco and the metal, but rather, the genres sat side by side. AlcĂĄzares changes that. From start to finish, AlcĂĄzares is addictive, creative, musically impressive, and just a lot of fun. The artful ability of these OrlĂ©anais-via-España to marry such disparate styles with genuinely unique approaches to music that run as deeply as the very notion of meter is one of the most impressive feats accomplished in metal in 2025. But itâs not just a meta-concern of the artistic feat that excites me. AlcĂĄzares is a fucking banger that can stimulate your intellect, or that can leave your neck sore. Take your pick!22
#3: Phantom Spell // Heather & Hearth [July 18th, 2025 | Cruz del Sur Music | Bandcamp] â Phantom Spell has the benefit of being a genuine surprise. My happy place, when I can afford to be there, is digging through the promo bin and listening to everything I can get my hands on. I have made so many fantastic discoveries there, just immersed in my own little world, listening to samples to get a feel of what weâre being sent. Heather & Hearth looked like classic Steel Druhmcore: Cruz del Sur Records, retro metal, D&D Basic Set art. I popped it in, got dragged in, and totally distracted from the rest of what I was doing. I know that this might seem incongruent, but Heather & Hearth sounds fresh. In a world of hypercompressed, hyper-reamped, extremer-than-thou metal, the act of writing good songs with tons of vocal harmonies, instruments that sit in their sonic corridors, andâdespite being recorded by one single dudeâa convincingly live vibe feels âlike a radical act.â23 I quickly grew to love Heather & Hearth, shared it with all the normies I know who love Ghost (âIsnât this so much better?â), and began singing its praises. And Iâve been happy to see it popping up on lists throughout list season. It means a lot to me that people can hear just how good Phantom Spell is. And Phantom Spell also proved to be quite generative, in that I wrote the Spotify post as a response to a discussion about why Heather & Hearth wasnât available there. Easily one of the best records I heard in 2025, and Iâm looking forward to hearing so much more.
#2: In Mourning // The Immortal [August 29th, 2025 | Supreme Chaos Records | Bandcamp] â When a record is truly exceptional, the hardest part is often articulating why it has transcended other things without reducing it to a checklist. In Mourningâs fantastic The Immortal resists that kind of accounting in the best possible way. Its melodies are lush and emotionally evocative, capable of landing with equal force whether theyâre carried by aching vocals or unfurled through long, expansive, yet intimate, trem-picked guitar passages. The riffing is punishing but disciplined, balancing weighty chug with sharper, blackened melodies, creating a constant tension between death metal heft and sadboi atmosphere without fully committing to drowning the production in reverb. And yet, none of this marks a radical departure from what In Mourning has done beforeâhas been doing since 2008. The crucial difference here is in execution: every compositional choice seems to land exactly where it should be. In a sense, this calls attention to the role of probability, as much as inspiration or songcraft, in composition. Some records feel blessed from the outset, where one can go through the same process again and never produce the same results. The hooks here stick without feeling forced, climaxes are perfectly placed, and the pacing across the record gives each track room to breathe while contributing to the kind of flow reserved for only the best albums. Even moments that might feel familiar hit differently on The Immortal, like everything snaps into place. The Immortal succeeds, then, not just on craft but on feel: it feels heavier, sadder, and more resonant than its predecessors; and it stands comfortably among the strongest melodic death metal releases in years.
#1: Calva Louise // Edge of the Abyss [July 11th, 2025 | Mascot Records | Bandcamp] â Edge of the Abyss ran away with my listening this year in a way I genuinely donât remember happening before, and that probably tells you most of what you need to know. The record is frantic, restless, and overloaded with ideas, moving between genres and feels with the speed of fast-cut editing; shifting at the drop of a dime. That both makes the record fun to listen to and keeps it surprising and fresh even after dozens of listens. The pace and density line up uncannily well with where my own brain tends to live, and I suspect thatâs a part of why it lodged itself so firmly in my rotation. Calva Louise writes songs that feel driven by impulse and curiosity rather than caution or genre boundaries, and that creative energy and freedom are contagious. Jess Allanicâs pop instincts and melodic sense anchor the chaos, lending the lighter passages real emotional weight and memorability, rather than merely serving as connective tissue. Edge of the Abyssâs incorporation of Latin rhythmic elements and melodic sensibilities ended up also being a personal bonus; Latin music has been a refuge for me from musical monotony for years, and hearing them integrated naturally into Edge of the Abyss was exciting, and it generated affection for this wayward Venezuelan and her French and English bandmates. What really sealed the deal for me, though, was how committed the band sounds to its vision. The songwriting is ambitious and fun, but it doesnât feel scattered. The album has a cinematic feel â complemented by literally cinematic music videos â but doesnât feel bloated or melodramatic. And Calva Louise sports a swagger unique to bands who are just doing exactly what they want to be doing. Since July, Iâve kept coming back to Edge of the Abyss and forgetting I had even enjoyed other records this year. Thereâs a real sense of becoming here; of a band pulling its influences together into something that feels unique. And I also feel invested in Calva Louise in a way I havenât been with many bands. I really am so happy to see them growing and succeeding. I love seeing them landing on peopleâs lists here and elsewhere. They have so much potential, and I am so eager to see what they do next. But should the worst befall them, Iâll always have Edge of the Abyss, and it already feels like an all-timer.
Honorable Mentions
Sarastus // Agony Eternal [July 1st, 2025 | Dominance of Darkness Records | Bandcamp] â Stolen from me by one Kenstrosity, Sarastus was a joyous discovery by me in the depths of the promo bin. One part black metal with a touch of death nâ roll for vibes, Agony Eternal strikes hard at modern conventions of black metal and sounds fresh by playing fast, unapologetic, engaging music with razor-sharp riffs. Melodic, without being sickly sweet or cheesy, with a ton of attack and great songwriting chops, Sarastus really threads the needle on Agony Eternal, making something that is driven and addictive, but undeniably black metal.
Wytch Hazel // V: Lamentations [July 4th, 2025 | Bad Omen | Bandcamp] â Iâve been back and forth with Wytch Hazel in the past. I have enjoyed what they do, but in the past Iâve been more skeptical of specifically nostalgiacore records that donât feel like theyâre adding much ânew.â First, I think Iâm just getting past that problem, as the ânewâ in metal is emphasizing things I donât love about the scene. But second, I think V: Lamentations is just a more engaging record. From the word âgo,â Wytch Hazel writes with a kind of urgency that gives their brand of â70s-tinged metal an extra kick, and the energy sits so well with me. Maybe the songwriting is just a bit tighter, maybe itâs faster, I donât knowâI didnât write the proper review. All I know is that I keep circling back to Lamentations in a way that I havenât done as much with their earlier albums. And that made it easy to put in the running for Listurnalia and to give my personal Angry Stamp oâ Approvalâą.
Mors Principium Est // Darkness Invisible [September 26th, 2025 | Perception/Reigning Phoenix Music | Stream or Buy on Qobuz] â Probably the grower of the year, Darkness Invisible surprised me by sticking around. When I started reviewing it, I expected not to like it much. I had been a big fan of the bandâs previous output and of their former guitaristâs solo record from last year. But with familiarityâand time spent dissecting itâI became increasingly impressed with the album. While the production is busy and pulls it down, the writing forges a new path that better represents the vision of MPEâs founding member, Ville Viljanen. And that vision is bleak, blackened, and surprisingly sticky. No matter your opinion on the end of the previous incarnation, Darkness Invisible at least demonstrates that there is still a vital future for Finlandâs most underrated melodic death metal powerhouse. And thatâs a future to which I look forward.
Blackbraid // Blackbraid III [August 8th, 2025 | Self-release | Bandcamp] â I have a Gollumesque distaste for modern black metal. I am physically incapable of starting a review or blurb of a black metal band without reminding readers how much I hate âatmosphereâ in the post-Cascadian black metal era. âGive it to us raw and wriggling!â I growl at all the fat hobbitses who try to feed me empty, overcooked âatmosphere.â Blackbraid doesnât want to feed me atmosphere. Instead, Blackbraidâs III trembles with a vibe that brings me back to discovering black metal; at times blistering, at times introspective, but rarely overstaying its welcome and never feeling like its primary goal is to be the band that defanged black metal for good to make it okay to listen to for kids in the suburbs. Iâll be listening to III for a long time.
TĂłmarĂșm // Beyond Obsidian Euphoria â This record is too long. Itâs got too much hype among the staff. And also, itâs too damned good to be an honorable mention. And yet, there are only so many #(ish)es, and I got to Beyond Obsidian Eurphoria too late to really give it the kind of sustained love that it needs to properly list. Still, once I started listening, Iâve been swinging past it every day. Sometimes twice. The songwriting is a bit wandering, the album is a bit overwhelming, and yet there is an undeniable vibe that TĂłmarĂșm traffics in, and thatâs sneakily sticky. Combine that techy Death with something akin to Disillusion, and maybe youâve got your comp. The only complaint I have is that some of the melodies end up intentionally arch in a way that makes me think that they are actively trying not to give the ear something to latch onto. Thatâs dumb, but itâs also very 2025. And hey, at least thereâs a really easy trick for them to sell out with.
âŠand Oceans // The Regeneration Itinerary [May 23rd, 2025 | Season of Mist | Bandcamp] âThe Regeneration Itinerary was a lot more controversial among fans than I expected, but I really enjoyed it. As I wrote in May, âItâs always fun to watch bands defy Angry Metal Guyâs Law of Diminishing Recordingsâą, and while The Regeneration Itinerary isnât their best record yet, 30 years after their debut, âŠand Oceans is still releasing vital music thatâs impossible to overlook.â And thatâs just true facts as stated by a metal-knower. While not quite the tour de force of its predecessors, this record is a solid bit of weirdo black metal with some of the best art in the biz. I recommend it highly.
Haxprocess24 // Beyond What Eyes Can See [July 25th, 2025 | Transcending Obscurity Records | Bandcamp] â Four songs, three of which are over 10 minutes long, and a combo of what Iâd call post-Opeth songwriting with OSDM aesthetics, Beyond What Eyes Can See deserved more attention this year and ended up, instead, on my Stack oâ Shameâą. This isnât a reflection on them; they play vital death metal and deserve accolades for their expansive vision and the way everything flows. They just got eaten up by the July where everything got released. Sorry, boys, but hereâs your fig leaf!
Majestica // Power Train [February 7th, 2025 | Nuclear Blast Records | Stream or Buy at Qobuz] â Back in like 2008, I saw a band called ReinXeed play a whole bunch of covers of Swedish dance/electronica âgroupâ E-Type at a Culture Night in UmeĂ„. I remember hearing from people in the local scene that they were âbig in Japan,â and I listened to some stuff, but wasnât super moved by it at the time. In 2019, ReinXeed changed their name to Majestica and got signed to Nuclear Blast. And damnit if they arenât just a lot better than they were in 2008. Power Train, which is on our collective Stack oâ Shameâą, is the bandâs third full-length under the moniker, and it rocks the same kind of sickly sweet melodies, guitar gymnastics, and general sense of fun that makes power metal my go-to genre a lot of days. While not quite as sticky and addictive as some other things higher up the list, Power Train was a solid addition to the bandâs discography and one of the better power records I heard this year. Youâve come a long way, baby!
Dormant Ordeal // Tooth and Nail [April 18th, 2025 | Willowtip Records | Bandcamp] â While not as high on this record as others on the staff, Dormant Ordeal is undeniably vital. And Iâm just never going to write a better blurb than I did when they got Record oâ the Month for April: âThis record hits a sweet spot inside of me, best described as the âoh yeah, thatâs how death metal is doneâ spot. The riffs flow, and my brain just opens up the spigots, releasing a veritable tsunami of dopamine. Every riff that cuts, every transition that seethes, and every recognition of the slick, skilled ways that these guys construct songs, I get a nice big kick of that Happy Chemical. Tooth and Nail is dynamic, punishing, aggressive, and better yet, itâs smart.â Man, that guy can write!
Aversed // Erasure of Color [March 25th, 2025 | M-Theory Audio | Bandcamp] â Last, and I guess technically least â but that isnât taking into account that there were like 10,000 albums released in 2025 and there are only like 25 on this list â is Aversedâs Erasure of Color. Part of the reason for its late arrival is that, despite being our Record oâ the Month for March, Erasure of Color didnât actually make it onto my personal playlist until quite a bit later. And damn, that was kind of a big miss on my part. Great melodeath with a unique flavor and great intensity; thereâs something thoughtful and sharp about this record. Combine that with excellent album art and the Dolphin Whisperer seal of approval, and Erasure of Color has everything fans of melodeath need to carry them through this wasteland. I will need to keep my eyes on Aversed going forward.
#AndOceans #2025 #Aephanemer #AnAbstractIllusion #AngryMetalGuy #AngryMetalGuySTop10Ish #ArjenLucassen #Aversed #Blackbraid #CalvaLouise #ChasingTheDragon #DormantOrdeal #EdgeOfTheAbyss #Fallujah #Haxprocess #HelmsDeep #Impureza #InMourning #Insania #IntenseIndifference #Kalaveraztekah #Majestica #MorsPrincipiumEst #PhantomSpell #Sarastus #Scardust #TĂłmarĂșm #Vittra #WytchHazel
Before I was press-ganged into the Skull Pit, I, Ferox, began curating an exercise playlist named Heavy Moves Heavy. For a decade, I alone reaped the benefits of this creationâmany were the hours spent preening aboard my Squat Yacht, mixing oils so that I could marvel at the glistening gainz unlocked by the List. My indentured servitude is your good fortune, because a new and improved version of the Heavy Moves Heavy playlist is now available to all readers of AMG in good standing.1 The lifters among us have spent countless hours in the Exercise Oubliette testing these songs for tensile strength and ideological purity. Enjoyâbut donât listen if you are being screened for PEDs in the near future. This music will cause your free testosterone levels to skyrocket even as it adds length and sheen to your back pelt. ~ Ferox
A year has passed, and now the barbell of honour has been placed on my (regrettably smaller) shoulders as Ferox steps back from the AMG side-quest to focus on his main story. Our leader may be absent, but our search for gains continues with an otherwise full house and new recruits to boot. The songs that guided and shaped our workouts are compiled here in a playlist guaranteed to boost yours, whether you listen on shuffle or straight the way through.1 So what are you waiting for? Down your pre-workout, grab your straps and your knee-sleeves, and get ready to get massive. ~ Thus Spoke
Thus Spoke Enters Muscle Mommy Mode:
âSilence like the Graveâ // Paradise Lost (Ascension) â Straightforwardly solid, catchy, sharp, with a killer atmosphere. Insta-playlist save when the single dropped. Paradise Lost back on top-form and just time to give you the energy for moving heavy things.
âMagnoliaâ // Deafheaven (Lonely People with Power) â Oh yeah, Iâm dead serious. Sorry not sorry to any haters out there. This is four minutes and change of unqualified emotion and racing thoughts and it gets my blood running hot every damn time.
âAgainst the Dying of the Lightâ // Dormant Ordeal (Tooth and Nail) â Unironically motivating in a way presumably not intended. Just when you want to quit, that roar of âraaage, RAAAAAAGGGE,â and the impeccable drum and guitar work come in to see you through.
âCondemnesiaâ // Cytotoxin (Biographyte) â The devastation of a currently-occurring nuclear disasterâcomplete with a frantically clicking geiger counter and a witnessâ agonised moansâportrayed through slick, punchy tech-death. Do I need to explain?
âPerfida Contracçao do Açoâ // Filii Nigrantium Infernalium (Perfida Contracçao do Aço) â I wouldnât normally go for something like this; the vocals are kind of horrible. But the energetic ridiculousness is so fucking feral it takes you beyond pumped and into crazed maniac territory; which is obviously ideal for the gym.
âDNA (Do Not Amputate)â // To the Grave (Still) â Mean, melodic, and with a message, thereâs nothing about this that doesnât work while lifting. If Iâm going to include any deathcore in the playlist at all, then it has to be To the Grave.
âEunuch Makerâ // Depravity (Bestial Possession) â If your resting-murder-face, hoodie, and headphones arenât enough to keep people from having the audacity to speak to you, then listening to this could help. Itâs massive, and fun as hell, and will make you look extra mean through osmosis, I guarantee.
âArchitects of Extinctionâ // Psycroptic (Architects of Extinction) â Banger alert. The change in vocals makes this a smidge less strong than it otherwise would be, but câmon; a riff that good has got to be anabolic.
âAmaranthâ // Nephylim (Circuition) â My dopamine-fixation song for the best part of a month. Itâs uplifting, itâs catchy, itâs infinitely replayable. What more do you want?
âNatural Lawâ // Primitive Man (Observance) â Itâs not too long, itâs a very important, massive chunk of overwhelming heaviness that makes me feel ten times the size and heft I actually am. You can get through all three (or however many) sets with spare time to admire the pump.
âDeathlessâ // Phobocosm (Gateway) â Monstrous, massive, intense. Fast and furious isnât always it; more and more, I crave slow, oppressive, and malevolent. Itâs just what I crave to dig deeper.
â1918 Pt 3: ADE (A duty to escape)â // 1914 (Viribus Unitis) â It took less than a single complete playthrough for this to end up on this list. Itâs heavy enough for leg day, and itâs atmospheric and moving in that perfect way that helps you dissociate from how much your body hurts. Iâve had it on repeat through many a tough session since.
Kenstrosity Bursts Through His Own Workout Gear:
âRot in the Pitâ // Depravity (Bestial Possession) â If there was ever a song that eradicated mental blocks to that next rep, that next PR, that next push, itâs âRot in the Pit.â Boasting mountain-moving swagger and a center riff that risks greater injury to my body than any ego lift could ever approach, Depravity penned a bona fide gymstormer with âRot in the Pit.â
âSummoning Sicknessâ // Pedestal for Leviathan (Enter: Vampyric Manifestation) â Imagine getting legs so powerful and swole they force your gait to changeâbut youâre doing it in the basement of your Transylvanian vampire castle with Igor loading up weights on the bar for your next PR. Thatâs what âSummoning Sicknessâ feels like when Iâm pushing
âNachthexeâ // Bianca (Bianca) â You wouldnât expect something that dabbles so heavily in atmosphere to possess such meaty muscle as this, but Biancaâs âNachthexeâ proves the might of the sleeper build. Once they take of the airy, soft pump cover, a devastating topology of deadly power ripples just under the skin.
âThe Insufferable Weightâ // Barren Path (Grieving) â Donât let the lighter weights Iâm lugging around fool you. Volume days are fucking brutal, and a challenge for both my mind and my body. Barren Pathâs âThe Insufferable Weightâ adrenalizes me with itâs speed and brutal rhythms just enough to survive those endless reps.
âGranfalloonâ // Unbirth (Asomatous Besmirchment) â Unbirth is the pool from which some the nastiest, grooviest, and most deceptively complex riffs spawn. This is great fodder for those compound movements that build strength and density. You could pick anything off of Asomatous Besmirchment for such gains, but my preference is âGranfalloon.â
âKollapsâ // Jordsjuk (Naglet til livet) â Black metal? For the gym? You fucking bet. Guaranteed to pull you back from the brink of absolute failure, Jordsjukâs âKollapsâ thrashes and shimmers with enough vibrancy and verve to make whatever load Iâm pushing feel like light weight.
âInfestisâ // Igorrr (Amen) â You wouldnât expect something as weird and wacky as Igorrr to fit in the land of iron and steel, but here we are. With stomping riffs and vicious roars, âInfestisâ is top tier workout gear. Great for keeping pace and supporting breath control, youâll find much progress with Igorrr by your side.
âFlashback (ft. Strawberry Hospital)â // Blind Equation (A Funeral in Purgatory) â Every year I open up one slot for those high intensity workouts where cardio and strength meet. This year, my spotter cheering me on when Iâm doing sprints and weighted jumps is Blind Equationâs intense and lightning-fast âFlashback.â Gotta go fast!!!
âLeave the Flesh Behindâ // Ashen (Leave the Flesh Behind) â Probably the underdog in the litter, Ashenâs âLeave the Fleshâ behind is all muscle, and a mountain of it at that. These riffs represent both the immovable object and the unstoppable force. One day, I hope to be like them.
â12 Worm Woundsâ // Death Whore (Blood Washes Everything Away) â It was difficult to narrow down a selection from Death Whoreâs lean and mean debut, but I keep coming back to the swaggering riffs of â12 Worm Woundsâ went I need motivation for that next lift. It just makes everything Iâm doing seem like the most fun Iâll ever have.
âThe Fire in Which We Burnâ // âŠand Oceans (The Regeneration Itinerary) â Boasting what I consider to be the single best black metal riff of 2025, âŠand Oceans greatly surprised me with a swaggering barnstormer of a track ready made to stoke the fire in my chest for a second wind. Hand me another set of plates, itâs time to go up for one more set!
âNever Difiledâ // Serenity in Murder (Timeless Reverie) â Who needs to spell correctly when you have hundreds of pounds to push on the bar? This is the question I ask whenever the adrenaline-soaked âNever Difiledâ plays as I rack up the plates for my next set. Nobodyâs ever been able to give me an answer.
âThe Twisted Helixâ // Mutagenic Host (The Diseased Machine) â They say genetics play a huge role in what kind of gains you can expect to achieve naturally in the gym. Well, Iâm an ectomorph so itâs toughâand takes a lot more timeâto build and maintain muscle. The solution? Twist my helixes and instantly quadruple my gains. Mutagenic Hostâs âThe Twisted Helixâ is just the tool for the job!
â+++Engine Kill+++â // Ruinous Power (EXTREME DANGER: Prototype Weaponry) â Sometimes you just need something threatening to rip the rails right off the track to hype you up for a grueling session. Thatâs what songs like Ruinous Powerâs â+++Engine Kill+++â are for. Short, to the point, and vicious, it will get your blood surging and your body raring to go.
âFemtoâs Themeâ // Flummox (Southern Progress) â Something so theatrical doesnât sound like a natural fit when working out, but the sheer heft and chunky rhythms of Flummoxâs âFemtoâs Themeâ defies those expectations. Iâve been using it for leg days and the results are crazy town! Donât believe me? Try it for yourself!
Steel Druhm Trains His Ape Arms to Crush the Empire State Building:
âAbandoned Feretrumâ // Sepulchral (Beneath the Shroud) â Blending old school black and death noise, Sepulchral mainline pure badger adrenaline and rattlesnake venom into your major muscle groups. Handle those power chugs with care, Brah.
âNecrobotic Enslavementâ // Glorious Depravity (Death Never Sleeps) â Taking discarded Morbid Angel riffs and repurposing them to turn a peaceful man rabid is why we have science. Take 2 doses of âNecrobotic Enslavementâ 30 minutes before throwing 45 lb plates at people who sit on exercise machines and chat.
âA Scream in the Snowâ // Black Soul Horde (Symphony of Chaos) â Trve metal can embiggen the innate desire for strength and raw power like no other, and âA Scream in the Snowâ will have you swinging olympic bars to get that sword arm ready for bloody constraint and weightroom glory.
âEyes on Sixâ // Biohazard (Divided We Fall) â Loudmouthed tough guys from Brooklyn scream at you to watch your back as they try to snap it with angry riffs and bad attitudes. This is for the caveman living in your reptile brain.
âCarry Onâ // Nite (Cult of the Serpent Sun) â Badass riffs and Manowar-esque demands that you carry on despite hardships are the crucial things that separate a routine workout from a Herculean trial that transforms you. Carry on to bigness.
âCrusadersâ // Starlight Ritual (Rogue Angels) â A dirty, greasy 80s metal anthem that sounds like proto-Iron Maiden is what you need to evolve from tubby baby to a fucking WRATHCHILD. Join this crusade and tip your templar.
âIron Signâ // Ambush (Evil in All Dimensions) â Unraveling the Riddle of Steel requires a long, hard journey guided only by iron signs. This cut will set you on the right path toward your ferric destiny.
âBending the Steelâ // Ambush (Evil in All Dimensions) â If youâre out there bending the steel, why not get moral support from Ambush with this massive aggressive dose of testosterone and primal motivation? When the singer shouts, âLetâs go, boys!â youâll feel your strength grow 3 times (plus two!). With an iron will, you gotta keep bending the steel!
âGaruda (Eater of Snakes)â // Brainstorm (Plague of Rats) â Brainstorm write heavy metal for leg day, and Garuda is your feathery guardian iron eagle compelling you to crush that feeble PB. The strong can tell their eagle where to fly and what snakes to eat.
âBeyond Enemy Linesâ // Brainstorm (Plague of Rats) â Brainstorm ainât done with you by a damn sight! If the thundering drums and beefy riffs here donât get you chalked up and ready for iron warfare, you should take up underwater doily knitting.
Steel-Jacketed Olden Bonus:
âSpark to the Flameâ // Winterâs Bane (Redivivus) â One of the greatest gym/workout songs EVER. Lyrics that speak of creating a better version of yourself as you burn in the crucible of effort will help you rise high as those burly riffs hammer your inner coward into moist gum paste.
Grin Reaper Gets Down with the Fitness:
âNo Pain, No Gainâ // Majestica (Power Train) â Metals of Power and Heft are a must for my workouts, especially stretching and pre-lifting calisthenics. Majesticaâs cheesy anthem is perfect montage-fodder, and even though the track is rife with clichĂ©d chestnuts, it features kinetic hooks that gird my gears for whatâs to come.
âStorm the Gatesâ // Soulfly (Chama) â Once Iâm limbered up, itâs time to sweat. Max and the boysâ bouncy grooves peddle just the right combination of chest-thumping swagger and ferocity to make sure my next rep sets the tone for a simmering sesh of glorious gainz.
âSkullbatteringâ // Werewolves (The Ugliest of All) â Thereâs no better way to keep momentum hurtling forward than with a good olâ fashioned ode to smashing braincases. Setting the right tone for a workout is paramount, and here Werewolves does not fuck around. Thereâs nothing pretty or flowery about âSkullbattering,â but if swole is your goal, you need to exorcise the Ugly.
âAnodyne Rustâ // Blood Red Throne (Siltskin) â I hurt my shoulder a few years ago, and though stretching and (prescribed) drugs didnât help much, bulking up did. Exercise slipped out of my routine as work and family commitments grew (as did my waistline), but as Iâve recently knocked the Rust off my dumbbells, Iâm reminded of the palliative restoration that comes from pumping iron and death metal.
âRavenous Leechâ // Guts (Nightmare Fuel) â Scuzzy, groovy, and unapologetically fun, Nightmare Fuel is filled to the gills with mid-paced chugs that make a great soundtrack for AMRAP workouts. While most of Gutsâ bloody remnants will Fuel your workout, spinning âRavenous Leechâ is sure to leave you hungry for even more punishment.
âBy Lead or Steelâ // Barbarous (Initium Mors) â Does Cannibal Corpse feature heavily in your gym listening? If so, consider Barbarous, who channels similar vibes and vitriol with less viscera. Itâll make you want to drink motör oil and punch babies, and thatâs the kind of shove you need when youâre out on swole patrol.2
âKaltfrontâ // Eisbrecher (Kaltfront) â Something about heavy distortion, dance-adjacent electronics, and gravelly vocals makes âNew German Hardnessâ prime listening for calculated and efficient movements. With near imperceptible head bops and a commitment to perfect form, this âKaltfrontâ leaves me focused and hard as a block of ice.
âHope Terminatorâ // Cytotoxin (Biographyte) â Plenty of great death metal jams spurn gym-list inclusion with slow-build intros, not getting to proper stankinâ until theyâre well into the track. Cytotoxin knows better, immediately flaying you with technicality. âHope Terminatorâ is the perfect mid-playlist piece to curb fatigue and keep your spirit engorged.
âLet There Be Oblivionâ // Ade (Supplicium) â Romeâs Ade lays down a banger of a riff on âLet There Be Oblivion,â and itâs long and strong enough to push me through a set or two. If Iâm struggling during a workout, whether in motivation or physically, I need every ounce of energy I can muster, and songs like this one can be the tipping point.
âBlinding Oblivionâ // Depravity (Bestial Possession) â Like Gutsâ Nightmare Fuel, Bestial Possession boasts track after track of gym-ready scorchers. I chose âBlinding Oblivionâ 1. to maintain consistency with âLet There Be Oblivionâ and 2. because something about the subtle melody in the song gives it an air of refreshment that I need as the demands of my workout ramp to a frothing climax.
âElevator Operatorâ // Electric Callboy (Elevator Operator) â Itâs dumb, itâs trite, and itâs so devastatingly catchy that it sticks in my head for days on end. Most importantly, it makes me want to move things up and down, and I wonât apologize for that.
âSunlight Covenantâ // Spire of Lazarus (Those Who Live in Death) â I donât dabble in deathcore often, but when I do, itâs usually technical, symphonic, and anthemic. Spire of Lazarus crafts just the right blend of their core components to make âSunlight Covenantâ a certified HMH banger. As a bonus, try to time it so that the track hits on your last set of the dayâthe melody and backing swells make a triumphant send-off as you clinch the last rep and wipe down the bench. You wiped the bench, right?
âFossilizedâ // Ăltra Raptör (Fossilized) â This song has stayed close since I first laid ears on it, and not once has it failed to engage the hype machine. Whether warming up, working out, or cooling down, the classic retro riffs and sunglasses-at-night nonchalance define a cool I strive for, and motivation like that is the key to gainz.
Dolph Does Heavy This Time:3
âMortuary Ritesâ // Mörtual (Altar of Brutality) â Blood boils fastest with a roto-tom take off followed by a death-thrash pummel. As churning pit energy converts to flared nostrils, focused vision, and engorged fibers at the crack of a incessant stick, find a slow and steady breath as your body prepares for war.
âTlazolteotlâ // Kalaveraztekah (Nikan Axkan) â The beat of a clanging snare threatens whatever weighted structure exists in your path. âTlazolteotlâ marches ever forward through growling twists, hardwood clack, and flute-led guitar abandon. A brief respite of acoustics awaitsâbut so does the real bulk of this journey.
âBlack Scrawlâ // Pupil Slicer (Fleshwork) â Feedback, growling bass, pneumatic kicks, and an urgent snarlâPupil Slicer demands your full thrust. With this affixing hardcore anchor, âBlack Scrawlâ will carry you to your first peak push with a dragging breakdown coda.
âSwamp Mentalityâ // The Acacia Strain (You Are Safe from God Here) â Rest does not come to those who push only once, though. The burn of your resolve will light the path in the angst and mire and core-fluid whiplash of âSwamp Mentality.â And Vincent Bennettâs tattered and spit-riddled mic will provide an extra OUGH to your exhale.
âOrphansâ // Dormant Ordeal (Tooth and Nail) â If you could tether your pulse to the relentless kick assaults that Chason Westmoreland brings to âOrphansââall of Tooth and Nail reallyâyour spotter wouldnât be able to find dial emergency fast enough to save you. Instead, search for the heavier weighted tempo that exists between the pitter-patter as your guide. In this space, relentless and emotive riff runs and lead wails coalesce into one of the most threatening thrash-pit breaks of the year. Harness this power.
âThe Great Day of His Wrathâ // Blindfolded (What Seeps through Threads) â In vicious harmonized splendor, Blindfoldedâs neoclassical scale hopping riffage possesses a buoyancy that is vital to remaining invigored. And whipping around bleating and squealing mic energy with resplendent solo work, âThe Great Day of His Wrathâ both maintains your demanding schedule and restores a lightness to your being before the heaviest pulls come to play.
âRetinaâ // Pillars of Cacophony (Paralipomena) â Neoclassical drama, however, doesnât always seek to restore with its airy play. âRetinaâ arrives, rather, with a mechanical and and programmed structure that functions as a scaffold upon which ascending scale iterations match your own gradual and gravity-creating climb. As the pinch-happy shuffle sneers in precision stank-face deployment, resist the urge to discharge your steel load into the earth.
âLunar Tearâ // Barren Path (Grieving) â In any routine, no matter how structured, a moment of ferocious release can provide a benefit. Before this playlist enters its most grueling minutes, a lightning-speed romp in the grips of endless blasts and riffs exists to shake off the inertia that can result from testing your limits.
âHeaping Pile of Electrified Goreâ // Pissgrave (Malignant Worthlessness) â We are all filthâcorpses brought to life by the signals we create. Synapses creating chains from proximal to distal drive our movements from concept to power. Through squelching refrain and lockstep death metal assault, fibers at the edge of their load-bearing capacity persist and persevere in the midst of Pissgraveâs shifting and grimy rhythms.
âBursting with Lifeâs True Fruitâ // Umulamahri (Learning the Secrets of Acid) â Guttural expression unlocks the last inches of a tough pull. As we channel Doug Mooreâs garbage disposal tier phlegmanations into our own tidal vibrations, we visualize the final set. We are victorious. And in a celebratory expression of might, we slip into Umulamahriâs enlightened synth dissolution. Those who float cannot collapse.
#AndOceans #1914 #2025 #Ade #Ambush #Ashen #Barbarous #BarrenPath #Bianca #Biohazard #BlackSoulHorde #BlindEquation #Blindfolded #BloodRedThrone #Brainstorm #Cytotoxin #Deafheaven #DeathWhore #Depravity #DormantOrdeal #Eisbrecher #ElectricCallboy #FiliiNigrantiumInfernalium #Flummox #GloriousDepravity #Guts #HeavyMovesHeavy #Igorr #Jordsjuk #Kalaveraztekah #Majestica #Mortual #MutagenicHost #Nephylim #Nite #ParadiseLost #PedestalForLeviathan #Phobocosm #PillarsOfCacophony #Pissgrave #PrimitiveMan #Psycroptic #PupilSlicer #RuinousPower #Sepulchral #SerenityInMurder #Soulfly #SpireOfLazarus #StarlightRitual #TheAcaciaStrain #ToTheGrave #ĂltraRaptör #Umulamahri #Unbirth #Werewolves #WinterSBaneSaunders
Yes, folks and loyal AMG readers and devotees, another year is nearly done and dusted. As per tradition, the time has come to share reflections and recommendations from another eventful year. Personally, 2025 threw down some rough moments and life challenges, navigating a spike in anxiety-driven mental and physical health concerns. Previously, I have mentioned how much AMG has grounded me over the years, keeping my focus and motivation on track when other parts of life navigate turbulence, stress, or uncertainty. This has proven especially pivotal this year and highlights the importance of contributing in some small way to this amazing blog and how much it means to me.
Highlights⊠After a few lean years post-pandemic on the gig front, as an avid concertgoer, 2025 proved productive for getting my mojo back for live music. I caught Karnivool in action for the first time in over a decade, ripping through infectious prog metal anthems and impressive new jams from their highly anticipated album set to drop in early 2026. An unexpected gig was a solo show in my hometown from none other than former Fear Factory legend Burton C Bell, performing in a local dive venue. Ploughing through career classics and some solo material, the setlist offered up gems like âDrive Boy Shooting,â âScapegoat,â âScumgrief,â and âReplica.â It was a nostalgic joy.
Meanwhile, after years of stubbornly jaded neglect, I finally bit the bullet and witnessed Metallica live. Probably a couple of decades too late, however, as an impressionable youngâun raised on early Metallica, it was a cool experience to finally see the aging juggernaut in a stadium setting that will remain in the memory bank for years to come. A couple of days later, I once again caught the mighty Opeth at the iconic Sydney Opera House with quality support from Caligulaâs Horse, before rounding out the year by finally seeing Dying Fetus live in an extra beefy triple bill including Ashen and 200 Stab Wounds. Good times indeedâŠ.
Big thanks to everyone for keeping this mighty blog running and cogs turning. From the ever-growing readership and awesome AMG community, through the entire, recently beefed-up writing crew, inspiring colleagues and all-around awesome people, to the higher powers (Steel Druhm, Angry Metal Guy, Sentynel, Doc Grier, and all the other editors) for their extra behind-the-scenes work whipping us into line. Cheers all to a safe, happy, and healthy 2026.
#ish: Green Carnation // A Dark Poem Part I: The Shores of Melancholia â After being mesmerized by Green Carnationâs timeless opus Light of Day, Day of Darkness many years ago, I never really expanded my listening beyond that widely regarded masterpiece. Then comeback album Leaves of Yesteryear dropped in 2020 and turned me from a casual listener into an avid fan of their work. A Dark Poem Part I: The Shores of Melancholia signals a long-awaited return and the first part of a planned trilogy from the seasoned Norwegian veterans of classy, mood-driven progressive metal. Admittedly, this album didnât reach the dizzying heights or quite gain the traction of its predecessor. Nor does it disappoint, adding another finely crafted chapter in Green Carnationâs enduring career, while building excitement for the two albums to complete the trilogy. Meticulously crafted and chock full of emotive, silky, and delightfully catchy gems, A Dark Poem Part I: The Shores of Melancholia is another top-shelf prog metal jam.
#10. Caustic Wound // Grinding Mechanism of Torment â Back in 2020, Seattleâs Caustic Wound emerged from the muck and unleashed a gnarly ball of unvarnished deathgrind rage courtesy of debut, Death Posture. Due to the endearing old school charms and brawling, stomping attack, Death Posture left a lasting impression, amping anticipation for their long-awaited return on sophomore slab, Grinding Mechanism of Torment. Though a little less refined and losing a smidgen of the debutâs grimy charm, Caustic Wound otherwise pounded out wickedly crunchy, buzzsawing deathgrind with violent glee, infectiousness, and subtle variety to keep you coming back for more. The albumâs tight construction and propulsive performances deftly harness the controlled chaos and blasty, groove-laced fun, as the likes of âDrone Terror,â âAdvanced Killing Methods,â and âBlood Batteryâ attest.
#9. Phantom Spell // Heather & Hearth â One of the purest and nostalgia-driven prog releases of 2025, the sophomore album from Seven Sisters singer/guitarist Kyle McNeill was a progtastic delight, wielding old-timey, â70s prog feels with a transportive, fantastical flair. Phantom Spell crafted a timeless, epic yet remarkably fresh experience, despite the obvious devotion to progressive rock legends and eras of the past. Dueling guitar leads, rollicking organ, and tight, expressive rhythms shine across a superbly performed and produced opus. For all the musical smarts, clever progressive arrangements, and technical showmanship, McNeillâs songwriting and powerful vocals are spot on, resulting in a nuanced though hugely hooky and focused collection, infused with folk and classic heavy metal elements, complementing the classic progressive rock core. Bookended by two spectacular epics (âThe Autumn Citadelâ and stunning, heart-wrenching melodies of the closing title track), Heather & Hearth is equally compelling in its more compact, punchy forms (ââEvil Hand,â âSiren Songâ).
#8. Barren Path // Grieving â Grind delivered big time in 2025, with numerous high-quality releases to absorb. None quite delivered the hammer blow impact of the debut LP from Barren Path, featuring Gridlink alumni, including grind shredding extraordinaire Takafumi Matsubara. Itâs amazing what can be achieved in a manic thirteen minutes of calculated mayhem and precision deathgrind madness. Barren Path shares traits with Gridlinkâs razor-sharp precision and abrasive intensity; however, it refuses to be pigeonholed or cast into the shadows of the Gridlink legacy. Beefy production, coupled with a prominent death metal influence, riffs to burn, gripping performances, and techy edge, Grieving loudly announced Barren Path as the next innovative heavy hitter to take the grind scene by storm. All too brief if utterly compelling, Iâm excited to see what this elite line-up can cook up next as they set about creating their own unmatched legacy.
#7. Changeling // Changeling â For the second time in my 2025 top ten, an album surpasses the hour-length mark, often questionable territory as far as optimal album length. The prolific Tom GeldschlĂ€ger (aka Fountainhead) hired an army of high-profile musicians and contributors to bring his elaborate progressive death metal vision to vibrant life with an overstuffed and incredibly entertaining, wildly ambitious debut opus. Amongst the core lineup, Morean (Alkaloid, Dark Fortress) lends his unique vocals, Virvumâs Arran McSporran features on fretless bass, and powerhouse Mike Keller (ex-Fear Factory, Raven, Malignancy) mans the kit, while a stack of instruments, choirs, and guest musicians add further dimensions and intricacies to the color palette. Changeling is guilty of overreaching on occasions, and the whole thing is an overstimulating example of excess. And though far from perfect, Changeling is nevertheless an astonishingly complex, progressive, and technical marvel. Its bombastic, adventurous gallop, slick songcraft, earwormy hook,s and otherworldly melodies conjure up a hugely inventive and endlessly fun platter.
#6. Turian // Blood Quantum Blues â Generally, I tread carefully from anything core-related in the realms of hardcore, metalcore, and deathcore. I am not opposed to each style, but usually it takes a certain something to win me over. Another winning recommendation from the flippered one, Blood Quantum Blues, the third LP from Seattle metallic hardcore merchants Turian, found the band toying and upending their sound in wonderfully creative and ambitious fashion. Like other genre-busting albums, such as The Shape of Punk to Come and Miss Machine, Turian fuck with the conventions of their metallic hardcore. Shattering boundaries by lacing their signature sound with sharply integrated elements of rock, electronics, sludge, and grind, whipped into a grooving, raw smackdown and addictive delight, Turian pulls no punches and pushes their songwriting creativity to the limit. The line-up nails the newfound songwriting versatility through tight, explosive performances, topped by the raw intensity and charismatic vocals of Vern Metztli-Moon, who channels deeply personal, trauma-informed reflections of her Native American heritage, with vigor and rage.
#5. Retromorphosis // Psalmus Mortis â Carrying on the timeless legacy of legendary Swedish tech death wrecking crew Spawn of Possession, Retromorphosis emerged featuring the bulk of the SoP line-up and a rejuvenated sound, both familiar and energized enough to craft a new chapter of tech death excellence. Herein lies the key to the albumâs success. SoP was such a special and unique entity in the tech death field. Retromorphosis pulls the signature songwriting components and twists and contorts them into their own slick interpretation, without simply rehashing past glories. Psalmus Mortis proved to have significant staying power since dropping early in the year, even amidst a pretty stacked year for quality death and tech death albums. Retromorphosis decorate their knotty, fluid and aggressive compositions with tasteful synth work, symphonic flourishes and bedazzling solos, whether charting smartly progressive, labyrinthine terrain (âThe Tree,â âMachineâ), and thrashy, warped tech death (âAunt Christieâs Will,â âVanished,â âRetromorphosisâ).
#4. Terror Corpse // Ash Eclipses Flesh â After already delivering a killer grind opus earlier in the year, Terror Corpse got the creative juices flowing again in dropping a full-length debut of immense power and old school grit. Featuring a power-packed lineup featuring past and present members of acts including Malignant Altar, Oceans of Slumber, Necrofier, and Insect Warfare, Terror Corpse comes seasoned with death metal wisdom and experience. Despite a lack of innovation, Terror Corpse winds back the clock and transcends the typical old school death metal hordes. Injecting venomous strains of grind, death-doom, sinister atmospheres, and gut-churning brutality into beefy, riff-driven songs that fondly recall death metalâs glory days, Terror Corpse forge ahead into the here and now with their own character and inspired songwriting. Topped by a bevy of instantly gratifying, oozing riffs and Dobber Beverlyâs elite drumming, Ash Eclipses Flesh is a gripping old school death experience.
#3. Dax Riggs // 7 Songs For Spiders â The return of Dax Riggs, and by extension the most unexpected re-emergence of the legendary Acid Bath, were surely two of the most heartwarming music moments of 2025. As a longtime devotee of both Dax and Acid Bath, I had begun worrying that Daxâs music-making days had passed as he slunk into the background and essentially dropped off the radar for the best part of fifteen years. While holding out slim hope Acid Bath will decide to cross our shores, I am stoked Dax and crew are getting the long-overdue credit and exposure they deserve. Though not strictly metal, Daxâs comeback album, and first since 2010âs Say Goodnight to the World, marks a triumphant and warm, comforting return from an underground icon. 7 Songs for Spiders delivered the goods, as Dax and friends dropped an album with a familiar, nostalgic feel that refuses to rest on its laurels. Riggsâ defining vocals sound as vital and deliciously smoky as ever, weaving signature morbid tales, deadly hooks, and earworm melodies through subdued yet deceptively hefty and bluesy folk-doom ditties.
#2. Messa // The Spin â It would be an oversimplification to describe Messaâs fourth LP as a streamlined version of the enigmatic Italian bandâs doom-centric formula. Each album has impressed in its own unique way, adding intoxicating twists and charm to continually evolve and refresh their sound. The Spin carries over elements of their past works and character-defining idiosyncrasies, yet feels like Messaâs most laser-focused, accessible, and direct album to date, and also one of their best. While Iâve enjoyed each of the bandâs prior works, The Spin is the bandâs most efficient and instantly gratifying, and addictive album. Easily Messaâs shortest opus, The Spin, uncorks killer tune after tune. Sumptuous melodies and rich textures color blockbuster doom bangers (âAt Races,â âFire on the Roofâ), residing alongside atmospheric, jazz-dappled charmers (âThe Dressâ), bluesy, emotive slow burners (âImmolationâ), and brooding, psych-tinged doom (âThicker Bloodâ).
#1. TĂłmarĂșm // Beyond Obsidian Euphoria â Weirdly enough, my number one picks often donât materialize as obviously as one might expect. This has largely been a trend throughout my tenure here at Angry Metal Guy. In all honesty, any of the top three could have been interchangeable in the top spot, but I reserved top honors for the spectacular second LP from Atlanta band TĂłmarĂșm. All the more surprising due to sleeping on their well-received debut, Beyond Obsidian Euphoria smacked me upside the cranium with an explosion of creativity and ambitious songcraft, encompassing elements of progressive black, melodic death, and tech death bombast. Itâs an overly ambitious, sometimes slightly messy masterwork. Yet the eye-watering 68 minutes largely warrant its exhaustive length. Sure, shrewd editing here and there may have tightened things up. However, the whole experience is so consistently gripping and superbly written and performed that minor quibbles are squashed well below the surface. This fully loaded, immersive masterwork sparkles and scorches through tremendously crafted, multi-faceted compositions, including standout epics, âShallow Ecstasy,â âShed This Erroneous Skin,â and âSilver, Ashen Tears,â nestled harmoniously against the blunt force discordance of âBlood Mirage,â and compact progressive fireworks of closer âBecoming the Stone Icon (Obsidian Reprise).â
Honorable Mentions:
Disappointment oâ the Year:
Sadly, we lost a number of metal legends in 2025, headlined by three individual legends that had a profound impact on me over the years. There will never be a larger-than-life frontman/metal icon like Ozzy Osbourne. While his demise was not unexpected, it left a huge void and an incredible legacy never to be matched. At the Gates and all-around iconic Swedish vocalist Tomas Lindberg sadly passed away following a horrible illness, while former Mastodon guitarist/vocalist Brent Hinds tragically passed in a motor vehicle accident. Rest in Peace legendsâŠ.
Non-Heavy Picks (snapshot):
Song oâ the Year:
Messa â âFire on the Roofâ â Narrowing down a definitive song oâ the year candidate is often a futile task. Twenty-twenty-five was no exception. Rather than overthink or analyze the situation, I locked in one of the yearâs most addictive, replayable gems from Messaâs stunning fourth LP, The Spin.
ï»ż
Dear Hollow
Welcome to the end of 2025! We at AMG hope the year has been kind to youâthat your lives are filled with love, your hearts with joy, and our world with peace. I hope that you have found your people and have those you can lean on. If we have ever given you a voice, a platform, or just love and support when you need it, then we have done our jobs.
It feels redundant to say that this year has been a roller coaster, but 2025 pulled no punches. In May, the Hollow household welcomed a second kiddo, a boy, into the fold. He is a supremely easy, endlessly happy little guy, but the stresses of parenthoodâand especially of two kidsâare a daily lesson of âbend, donât break.â Our daughter is now four, and learns new things and says sassy things day in and day out, enjoying gymnastics and dancing, and singing around the house for fun.
My reviewing has remained steady this year, if not a little less than the usual. Between parenting two kids, working as a high school English teacher to increasingly apathetic kids, working on a noir crime novel that has paid dividends in complexity (and all the noir jazz my ears can handle),1 continuing to unpack my upbringing and trauma and how they all have affected my views on family, relationships, and self-love, you can imagine how wild each day has been. But Iâve somehow managed it, and the end of the year is here to celebrate it.
Special shout-outs to those who have been instrumental in my journey this year: the ineffable and tireless dream team of Steel Druhm and Angry Metal Guy, the genre-confusing Dolphin Whisperer, my fellow Whitechapel apologists Iceberg and Alekhines Gun, and those who have been supportive all year (Thus Spoke, Killjoy, and Mystikus Hugebeard). Couldnât have done it without yâall.
To the metal!
#ish. Kalaveraztekah // Nikan Axkan â Subject of a rollicking Rodeö, Mexicoâs Kalaveraztekahâs balance of cosmic Aztec atmosphere and cutthroat death metal is sublime. Riffs for days balanced by an experimental madness that conjures cosmic destruction and rebirth, Nikan Axkan recalls the antics of Hell:on, folk influence only sharpens its attack and injects an atmosphere of foreboding. Refusing both gimmick and total immersion, Nikan Axkan is riffy, fun, and evocative, made for a mosh-pit and a soundtrack for the destruction of the Five Suns.
#10. La Torture des TĂ©nĂšbres // Episode VIII â Revenge of Unfailing Valor â If youâre like MalteBrigge, youâll probably end up with tinnitus and a sprained shoulder once Episode VIII kicks in, but Ottawa one-woman raw black metal/noise outfit La Torture des TĂ©nĂšbres returns to the bleak space-faring atompunk of its 2016 debuts alongsdie the dystopic rage that pervades more recent efforts â moments of peace adding dimension and texture. La Torture des TĂ©nĂšbres is about as ambitious as raw black metal can get.
#9. Imperial Triumphant // Goldstar â Goldstar is Imperial Triumphantâs most accessible album, the NYC trioâs signature brand of death/black and jazz funneled into a straightforward art-deco-themed brutalizing. Itâs no less adventurous, always punishing, and will stay with you long after your ears stop ringing from the sound of New York City taxis and decadent skyscrapers displayed in extreme metal format: more straightforward, more melodic. While its recent predecessors are an affluent nightlife, Goldstar offers a sunbathed New York City.
#8. Howling Giant // Crucible & Ruin â Nashvilleâs stoner outfit Howling Giant reconciles the melodies and riffs, exploratory songwriting, and mammoth hooks gathering in each movement of Crucible & Ruin. Featuring hints of knuckleheaded sludge and proggy chord progressions, itâs an album that keeps your attention for forty-eight minutes. New member Adrian Zambrano offers more atmosphere and layers of guitar riffs and melodies to go with the surefire dichotomy of instrumental heft and vocal ethereality. Crucible & Ruin is an experience of fun, subtlety, and above all, riffs.
#7. Geese // Getting Killed â Perhaps the vocals of NYCâs Geese donât bother me because of Cameron Wintersâ similarity to singer/songwriter John Mark McMillan,2 so the albumâs sonic anxiety of noise rock, post-punk, country, and blues that creep in and out like lovers who never stay does not bother me. Getting Killed feels viciously aggressive, venomously satirical, and fluid and elastic in its humble movements. Geese are overrated Pitchfork-bait, sure, but an overrated hill to get killed upon regardless.
#6. Structure // Heritage â Steel Druhmâs the real masochist for low and slow, but the balance of sad death/doom and devastating funeral doom in Netherlandâs Structure is special. The guitar work in the mammoth riffs, melodic leads, and climactic solos has just a much of a voice to contribute as Pim Blankensteinâs formidable roarsâas if griever and grieved converse in both melancholy and rage. Heritage is Structure paying homage to doom metalâs contemplation while paying its dues in death metalâs viciousness â pure devastation.
#5. Patristic // Catechesis â Catechesis is born out of the âimpending shadow of the cross.â As tumultuous as the fall of the Roman Empire and the rise of the church and pagan rebellion, the black/death of Romeâs Patristic assaults the ears with tension, fury, and reverence. The first act is the holy war, a rationalization of steel and zealotry, while the second is the way the soldier tells it to his children, the lessons and cautions borne of blind faith and its devastation. Cathechesis is not only fiery sermons and unending blasphemy, but regret and meditation.
#4. In Mourning // The Immortal â Iâve loved Swedenâs In Mourning since their 2010 album Monolith: balancing chuggy guitars, progressive songwriting, and the slightest hints of doom (such as in 2008âs Shrouded Divine). The Immortal is an album that balances The Bleeding Veilâs darker elements, Garden of Stormsâ signature melody, and The Weight of Oceansâ iconic patience. The Immortal offers yearning melodies and chords alongside vicious riffs, and melodeath has never sounded so good.
#3. Yellow Eyes // Confusion Gate â New Yorkâs Yellow Eyesâ Confusion Gate conveys a black metal place better than most, an environment teeming with life. Like the Romantic Sublime, it maintains a crystalline beauty, like a light scattering through broken glass, and a madness born of terrorâat the source of the light. Here is the crux of it, from poet Rainer Maria Rilkeâs âThe First Elegyâ;
Who, if I cried out, would hear me among the Angelsâ
Orders? and even if one of them pressed me
suddenly to his heart: Iâd be consumed
in his more potent being. For beauty is nothing
but the beginning of terror, which we can still barely endure,
and while we stand in wonder it coolly disdains
to destroy us. Every Angel is terrifying.
#2. Igorrr // Amen â Gautier Serreâs work with Igorrr has rarely felt bad, but Amen evolves it from his typical standard. You get the typical apeshit antics in the midsection, but a full band fleshes out the jewel-encrusted skeleton for a fully, nearly spiritual experience. Minimalist compositions build upon a breakbeat before cracking into a full choir and death metal experience, while an overwhelming onslaught of insanity reminds us who exactly weâre listening to. Amen is hella fun, as expected, but also something we can take seriously.
#1. Primitive Man // Observance â Primitive Man is the heaviest band on the planet. While Iâve appreciated the Denver trioâs pitch-black approach to death metal laced with noise, doom, and sludgeâfrom afarâObservance booked me in with upbeat tempos and a surprising melody. It swallows you whole like any good Primitive Man album ought to, but the devotion to deteriorating songwriting and weaponized noise. The atmospheric death/sludge counterpart to the riffs of Warcrab, for instance, Primitive Man offers a sound like no otherâand itâs the best of the year.
Honorable Mentions:
Songs oâ the Year:
ï»ż
Surprises oâ the Year
Disappointments oâ the Year
Dolphin Whisperer
Thus Spoke and I go way back. In fact, after our successful graduation from the same n00b class and into our first list season as full article writers, we had imagined that us two as a listing pair would produce a lethal and novel whiplash.1 So welcome to the bottom (or top) half of this eclectic endeavor thatâs sure to leave you with thirty-some-odd unique albums to revisit or ignore or whatever it is you do with our strong and word-riddled opinions.
Now, the keen reader may notice Iâve had a bit of a productivity drop-off since about June. Well, thatâs cause my wife gave birth to The Dolphlet, first of his name, and thatâs kind of a lot of work, as Iâm finding out. Baby comes first, as it goes. But I squeaked out a few important things, including a Coroner review that the unwashed masses claimed didnât jerk Tommy Baron and co. as full of glee as it should have. I did miss other important things, like several of my list items.2. And I sincerely apologize to the following bands and offer them words of condolence or, something like that, based upon their individual situation: Bonginator, you should be glad I dropped the ball, stop it with the lame interludes; and count your blessings, Hell Ever After, thrash doesnât need to be a musical; Species, you did thrash right though and Iâm happy that others enjoyed you even more; Moths, and more specifically bassist Weslie Negron, Iâm sorry that I took on your interview when my son was one month old and my brain was friedâyour album rocks and you put in so much work to make Moths special. And lastly, to all the classics, I had grand plans to YMIO because I thought my brain could make that workâhaha.3
Angry Metal Guy, however, remains home for me. You, dear readers, are a part of that love and drive that keep me here. Sometimes, I may only be able to conjure a half-funny joke in the comments sectionâyou laugh (let me believe that) and give it two to five likes. Others, I may hype the heck out of a promising underground act until one of my trusted colleagues tells me âDolph, thatâs enough already, Iâll review it, sheesh.ââyou liked it probably more than I did anyway. You see, for every word of bleeding hyperbole that we scribble, two sets of eyes may walk away enraptured. When youâre dealing with artists who have anywhere from sub-100 to 30004 listeners on the popularity engine of Spotify, every set counts. Every purchase on Bandcamp or Ampwall counts. Every stream on Tidal or some other competitor counts. Even your damn scrobble on last.fm counts if youâre nerdy enough for that. So sappy as it may seem, along with the herding efforts of Steel and occasionally The Big Dr. AMG Man Himself, you all give life to the bands in this wonderful modern metal scene. Hails!!
#ish. Messa // The Spin â I canât rid myself of the power that a soaring bluesy lick and a smoky siren voice hold, no matter how I try. Burned into my head are The Spinâs glassy chorused-out chorus escalations. Drenched into the cones of my crackling car speakers are the synth throbs of certified shakers âFire on the Roofâ and âThicker Blood.â Turn up the volume and turn down the lights, Messa has come to steal attention with yet another platter of throwback creativity.
#10. Quadvium // TetradĆm â Steve DiGiorgio and Jeroen Paul Thesseling stand at the altar of supreme metal bassists in my own personal head canon. Theyâd helm yours too if you were familiar with the span of their collective talents across acts like Death, Sadus, Autopsy, (DiGiorgio), and Pestilence, Obscura, Sadist (Thesseling). Knowing all this, they decided to make an album together. And in their refinement as performers, they managed to make a supergroup two-bass project more than just a thumpy wankfest. Full of diverse and rich tones, modern and proggy jitteriness, and a rounded, jazz fusion-leaning taste for exploration, TetradĆm provides an exciting notch in the weathered belt of these legends. I donât know where Quadvium goes next after this, but I hope that itâs anything but dormant.
#9. Scardust // Souls â Every time I hear the introductory stumble of âLong Forgotten Song,â I fall immediately into the spastic and serenading world that Scardust crafts with their hypermelodic, histrionic, and confident progressive metal attitude. Central to this success remains the peerless Noa Gruman, whose every melody lands with honey-slathered tack and sing-a-long inspiration, despite my voice being a far, far cry away from the searing soprano wail that functions as a mic-drop crescendo as often as it needs to. Behind her, though, lies one of modern progâs most nimble rhythm sections, imbuing even ballads like âDazzling Darknessâ and âSearing Echoesâ with a bass-popping and hi-hat chattering clamor that places Souls in a league of its own. Also, Ross Jennings of Haken sounds better here than he has with Haken since The Mountain.
#8. Chiasma // Reaches â Chiasma possesses the unique ability to blend in with the modern paradigm of accessible melody prog in the lane of a band like Tesseract without conforming to its most djentrified tendencies. Rather, floating in its own swirl of Cynic-coded riffage and angelic, layered vocal excess, Reaches explodes with atmosphere and propulsive riff alike. In Katie Thompsonâs nimble serenades rests a voice imbued with both a fluttering prowess and an aching heart. And in this sorrowâwrapped in the brightness of bleeping electronic backings, flipping virtuosic guitar runs, and singular voiceâa yearning and healing takes place in fervent and fluorescent splendor.
#7. Dawnwalker // The Between â Just when I thought Dawnwalker didnât have any more surprises left in their bag of tricks that seem tailor-made for my enjoyment,5 these sneaky Brits went and pulled out the one-long-song album. Continuing to live in the space of esoteric philosophy set forth in The Unknowing last year, Dawnwalker collects moods from all their previous worksâthe melancholy of isolation from In Rooms, the vocal aggression from Human Ruins, a sonic palette even grander in scope than Agesâto explore thoughts surrounding death. In lush construction, plaintive discourse, and time-bending magic, The Between breathes as a meditation bookended by heavy chiming bellsâa journey that feels longer than its svelte 30-ish minute runtime but with none of the fatigue its gargantuan ask threatens. 6
#6. Gorycz // Zasypia â Itâs a shame that Gorycz isnât a household name, as their mystical, groovy approach to atmospheric and retching black metal sits among my favorites in the genre as a whole. Zasypia, as part three of a trilogy, tells a tale of despair through a warping pedalboard light on traditional distortion, shrieking throat on the edge of coherence,7 and dancing kit full of jazzy aplomb. In the space that lives between recursive and developing refrains, terror lurks. But in the Gorycz tattered exhale hangs a reverence for the beauty that can emerge from destruction and grieving. Feel every amplified string creak as you fall deeper into this devastating world.
#5. Lychgate // Precipice â You may be aware that this album was released on the 19th of December, a full two days after we were supposed to turn in these lists. Knowing that, I made sure I beat Precipice to the punch of garbage time list upheaval by listening to it, well, before that. In turn, Lychgate made sure that theyâd make this late-season blooming count. With the death-thrash spirit of an early Morbid Angel crashing through low-end organ harmony and colliding with Holdsworthian alien guitar bleating, Precipice holds back neither on its urge to wander in arcane atmosphere nor on its urge to churn bodies in kinetic wonder. As another writer (whose name I canât remember) said, Precipice ensnares by ââŠoscillating between Zappaâs Jazz from Hell and unearthly, pit-scorching acrobatics.â I couldnât have put it better myself.8
#4. Barren Path // Grieving â The best grindcore album of the decade so far would come from the manic attack of Gridlink sans Jon Chang. Absent his terrifying shriek, Matsubaraâs guitar scatter weighs heavier, Fajaradoâs lightning snare rolls clang sharper, all against song lengths that inhabit the true short-form tradition of extreme brevity. The truth is, Iâve spent longer than the albumâs length trying to convey its intensity and prowess, so just go and listen to it already. Iâll wait here. No, seriously, do it.
#3. Turian // Blood Quantum Blues â So very rare is the album that aligns like a key to a lock of a heart torn by generational angst. An eloquence exists in the disparity between Turianâs stark societal observations punctuated by raw emotional interjections of âFUCKâ. I havenât bothered to count the instances that this linguistic escalation occurs, but I guarantee that there are more fucks per stanza on Blood Quantum Blues than your favorite album this year. And, after youâve become addicted to its overdriven noise rock-meets-hardcore-meets-industrial madness, youâll know every single one as you shout along its contemptuous tales of cultural erasure. Indians donât vanish, and neither will my love for every riff, every breakdown, and every tirade of Blood Quantum Blues.
#2. Changeling // Changeling â Tom âFountainheadâ GeldschlĂ€ger poured everything into Changeling. Arranging over thirty performers across Changelingâs seems Sisyphean in scope, but GeldschlĂ€ger persevered. Through peerless fretless wailings, every instrument under the sun follows well-developed motifs, and a pure love for metal, Changeling expresses nostalgia and novelty in its every loaded nook and cranny. And behind each moment of dense and exuberant songcraft, GeldschlĂ€ger has tinkered to deliver an experience that feels carved over a lifetime. On top of all of that, GeldschlĂ€ger is also a true guitar wizardâhe zigs and zags and twists and twirls where others wear a scale to death. Like a classic novel or movie, Changeling reveals its worth both in immediate, jaw-dropping action and deep, attention-stealing detail. GeldschlĂ€ger even put together a Dolby Atmos mix for the album and held listening parties in Berlin. I hear theyâre wonderful. Come to California, Tom!
#1. Maud the Moth // The Distaff â When we seek art, we seek bravery and freedom of expression. And in the music that we seek in a refuge like Angry Metal guy, we often find these qualities expressed in emotional theme, in raw, sonic aggression, or in sweeping guitar-led grandeur. Woven from a different base cloth, Maud the Moth on paper does not fit that mold. Amaya LĂłpez-Carromero wields, instead, a piano and scrawled diary pages. She, too, has pain, the same as any human who has encountered a world unforgiving to a life that wishes to live in a divergent path. And like the artists we valueâor rather, like the artists I valueâAmaya presents her vision of this struggle with focused and expanding melodic lines, crushing and crying crescendos, and an earnestness that compels its audience to surrender for a moment to a world created by these musical ideas. When your sadness comes, it wonât weep in blacks and ivories the way that The Distaff does. But you can pop it on and pretend for its run that its triumph will transfer from your ears to the very center of your tingling chest.
Honorable Mentions:
Disappointments oâ the Year:
Songs oâ the Year:
Why give you one when I can give you twenty-seven? Why twenty-seven? Thatâs my secret. Now, Iâve talked enough. Go out there and enjoy some music, friends. And enjoy this photo of my dogs eating. And the Dolphlet admiring them!
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Thus Spoke
Iâve been blindsided by the yearâs end again, and now have to find some interesting things to say about 2025. Other than the fact that I turned 3010, my main personal Thing ov Significance is that I managed to land myself a new job, which Iâll start in the new year.11 Donât worry, though, I wonât be girl-bossing too hard to have time for AMG.
Musically, 2025 has been a (small) step down from 2024 for me, although this could just be due to my attention deficit. Iâve had my finger less firmly on the pulse in the last six months, such that several albums, by artists I like, many on this list, either took me completely by surprise on release day, or crossed my radar barely any sooner, thanks to me actually checking Slack for once. I donât have any well-defined excuse for this outside of plain old burnout plus terrible organization. On the other hand, the fact that I didnât review most of my favorite records this year means that I can bat away criticisms of self-indulgence by having a year-end list mostly comprised of albums I didnât write about. One thing I am happy to have achieved this year is running my first AMG Ranking piece on Panopticon. It might be the most verbose and least exciting of its kind for the majority of site readers, but being forced to immerse myself that extensively in the discography of an artist I love was very cool (albeit intense).
Speaking of my own erratic presence at HQ, leads me on to the hiatus (official or not) of several wonderful people among the staff, particularly my list-buddy Maddog, whom I miss very much. They all have good reasons, and I support them immensely, even if it means fewer of their excellent reviews. Fortunately, weâve also welcomed many newcomers to our ranks who can pick up my slack in their stead, and whose reviews help me improve my own writing whilst also appending to the endless list of Things I Must Listen To.
As my extensive yapping here shows, my ability to meet a word count hasnât improved much. Before finally moving on to the list, Iâll take the chance to reiterate my gratitude for everyone reading this, and some people who might not be. Thank you to all the staff for collectively making this all possible, and giving me the opportunity to speak about music and for peopleâyou guysâto actually read it. Thank you for reading. Even if our tastes are completely opposed and you think Iâm wrong about everything, Iâm glad youâre here.
Now for the bit people actually care about.
#ish. Panopticon // Songs of Hiraeth â Quietly12 released alongside Laurentian Blue, Songs of Hiraeth is a collection of songs composed between 2009-2011 that never saw the light of day. In it, you can hear the incredible development of Panopticonâs signature emotionally swelling black metal style in this period, and this record, like virtually all of them, as I repeated in my ranking blurbs, is gorgeously, absorbingly heartfelt and powerful. Unlike you might expect, it actually increases in intensity as it progresses (for me), with the final trifecta of âThe End is Drawing Near,â âA Letter,â and âThe Eulogyâ all gunning for my Songs oâ the Year playlist with first devastating rage and fury, then heartbroken solemnity and sublime melody throughout. I guess itâs not fully in the list purely because itâs not a âproperâ new release, or whatever.
#10. Grima // Nightside â It could have been easy to forget about Grima, given its dropping right on the cusp of the stacked Spring release season we had this year, and the fact that I didnât instantly mark it down for a TYMHM as with Clouds. But I didnât forget. Despite their wintry aesthetic, Grimaâs music warms my heart with folky magic and ardent blackened blizzards. Nightside is no exception, its warmth coming this time from a renewed emphasis on the atmosphere and bayan after the higher energies of Frostbitten. I love intense, harsh, frosty black metal, and I love how Grima do it (âImpending Death Premonition,â âWhere We are Lostâ). But what I love most of all about Grima is how they pair that with their folky tendencies, and the wayâas Sharky pointed outâVilhelmâs rasps graze over it all. This culminates, for me, in the more mournful and urgent tone of several tracks on Nightside, where intense moments still feel dreamlike (âThe Nightsideâ), and vocals breathe like ghostly whispers (âMist and Fogâ). Itâs not my favorite Grima record (thatâs probably Rotten Garden), but being a Grima record at all, given their caliber, means itâs bloody great and has to be on my list.
#9. Bianca // Bianca â Hereâs an excellent example of a record I very likely would never have heard were it not for the AMG writer community. And wow, am I grateful I did. Kenâs description alone caught my interest, let alone the tidbit that the project includes two members of another 2025 favorite of mine, Patristic.13 It takes familiar concepts from metal, both postâethereal atmospheres and haunting singingâand extremeâsky-piercing shrieks, undulating, relentless double-bass, and tangled guitar blizzardsâbut sounds like nothing else. Even in combining these elements, Bianca stands alone. The coalescence of blackened, doomed, ambient layers is mesmerizing, the pitches upward into mania, and lapses back into mournful mystique, captivating. Throat-gripping furor arrests me more inextricably than almost anything else this year (âAbysmal,â âNachthexeâ), and transcendent melodies forged from this black fire lift me fully out of my body (âAbysmal,â âTodestriebâ). Iâve been in love since.
#8. Der Weg Einer Freiheit // Innern â Innernâs influence on me was subtle and insidious. I would just put it on, be absorbedâor be sucked back in periodically, if I was working and not concentrating on itâand suddenly it would end. Then Iâd listen to it again. Der Weg Einer Freiheit has been developing their particular intense, dark, atmospheric kind of (post-) black over the last decade or so, and with Innern, itâs approaching an apex. Through endlessly enveloping compositions, filled with fury and urgency (âMarterâ) or solemn reflection and introspection (âEos,â âForlornâ), that flow seamlessly out of one another, Innern folds you insidiously into its depths. Compelling melodies, dynamic rushing percussion, and here-dramatic, there-soft-spoken vocals, each taking pieces and incorporating trials from Der Weg Einer Freiheitâs career so far, drive the thematic compositional thread through irresistibly. From the anticipatory opening shudders to the ebbing chords at its close, Innern is an experience best taken whole, and one Iâve indulged in countless times to go on this magnetic journey once again.
#7. Paradise Lost // Ascension â I never thought this would land here when first announced. Sure, I like Paradise Lost, but their back-catalog is so mixed (in style, let alone quality), that âlikingâ them for me comes down to enjoying a handful of their now 17 albums. Even the singlesâ being good failed to stir anything more than curiosity, given my experience with intra-album inconsistency. But when Ascension did finally grace my ears in full, it appropriately transcended any doubts and softened my heart towards these doom icons again.14 Paradise Lost were heavy again, melancholic and mopey againâin a cool, atmospheric wayâand Ascension just flowed, with grungy aggression and sadboi introspection in perfect equilibrium. This easy, natural duality that characterizes Gothic metal, and Paradise Lost themselves as genre pioneers, when theyâre at the top of their game, is exemplified in Ascension. Hopefully, the group can stay on this trajectory for number 18, if that comes.
#6. Clouds // Desprins â I donât understand how Clouds are as good as they are. I mean this as no insult to the musicians; what stuns me is the depth of pathos, and the consistency with which they deliver it, given the relatively understated and idiosyncratic manner in which they execute it. Their characteristic flute-folk-funeral doom is so ethereally, painfully sad without being overwrought, melodramatic, or crushing. It took my n00bish breath away four years ago, and this year Desprins came and took it again; this time with pieces of my soul attached. The music is just so beautifulâunrelentingly bleak, but beautiful, and Cloudsâ balance of the dark and the light through the synths and acoustics, and apathetic spoken-word is exquisite and deeply affecting. These composite melodies, swelling and trilling softly, are transportive for meâparticularly âLife Becomes Lifeless,â âChain Me,â âSorrowbound,â and âChasing Ghosts.â Desprins is everything I want funeral doom to be: a prolonged dream-state of melancholy that paradoxically brings me joy.
#5. Deafheaven // Lonely People with Power â I have never been a Deafheaven fan. In all honesty, Iâm still not. Lonely People with Power fires me up and fills my soul, while the rest of their discography continues to leave me completely cold. It seems that, briefly departing from metal entirely with Infinite Granite, has matured their sound, adding layers to their edgy blackgaze. Even when indifferent, I never understood the scorn their music generates, and now that Iâve fallen for Lonely People with Power, it makes even less sense. Not only is the way Deafheaven are combining rich, beautiful melodies withâyesâbrilliant black metal simply lovely to listen to, slick, seamless, sharp, etc, itâs also distinctive and engrossing. Thatâs before even getting into how emotionally resonant it is. And itâs not even like this means it canât be heavyâheck, one of these tracks is on my Heavy Moves Heavy playlist. Itâs not âcringeâ; itâs a phenomenal record and one of the best to release this year.
#4. 1914 // Viribus Unitis â I have always been most movedâemotionally and aestheticallyâby 1914âs brand of WWI-themed blackened-death than any other like act. Viribus Unitis somehow outdoes Where Fear and Weapons Meet, and possibly all of the bandâs previous efforts, for evocativeness and being straightforward and compelling. From the now hallmark bookends âWar In/Outâ to frequent samples to lyrics infused with real soldier testimony, Viribus Unitis envelops the listener in this portal to the past through 1914âs most powerful, urgently melodic compositions. Every song is heavy, dramatic, and snappy in just the right amounts, resulting in a series of back-to-back bangers that also occasionally really, really hit home emotionally. â1918 Pt 3: ADE (A duty to escape)â does all the above to perfection and has received an almost embarrassing number of replays in the short time since release. But â1919 (The Home where I Died)â did actually make me cry,15 and its fade into âWar Outâ is the perfect end to the monumental achievement Viribus Unitis represents.
#3. Patristic // Catechesis â It seems that every year, I review one particular atmospheric-dissonant death metal record which dominates my listening in that subgenre, and instantly secures a year-end list spot. In 2023, Serpent of Old, last year Ulcerate16, and this year Patristic. Catechesis was an immediate, visceral love for me, and not once since June has it left rotation. Sinister and dark, but irresistible in its seamlessly flowing, captivating macro-composition narrated by roars and solemn sermonizing; it ends far too soon. And in addition to being beautifully atmospheric and magnetic in melody and dissonance alike, it stands out for truly insane performances in their own right. Specifically, the drumming, which continues to blow my mind and propels Catechesis from greatness into excellence with hypnotic, intelligent rhythmic interplay. Patristicâs uncanny ability to make extreme, inaccessible music incomprehensibly engrossing and a magnificent expression of its concept are why I canât stop listening to Catechesis, and why itâs almost the best record of 2025.
#2. Qrixkuor // The Womb of the World â Much like reviewer Kenstrosity, whereas Qrixkuorâs debut Poison Palinopsia rewired my brain with its brilliance, I found follow-up Zoetrope a tad underwhelming. When said sponge began to hint, and then gush unstoppably about the duoâs second full-length, The Womb of the World, which was in his possession, vague hope turned to giddy excitement. Not only the twisted, psychedelic horror of their signature freeform blackened death would await me, but also a full live orchestra. Yet I still donât think anything could have adequately prepared me for how massive and mad The Womb of the World actually is. With the strings, horns, and piano swooping and crashing about in great surges and falls, Qrixkuorâs already grandiose style fully feels like some tormented classical opus, and itâs utterly magnificent. Things so small as my words canât do justice to the way the eerie and intense lurching orchestrals, maniacal snarling voices, and cavernous extreme metal combine to create some of the best things I have ever heard, ever. Weirdly memorable and violently compelling despite its monstrosity, Iâve become completely addicted to it since. Ken himself said, it is âa mastapeece for those to whom sanity is immaterial,â when he rightfully deemed it âExcellentâ. If I must rescind soundness of mind to so esteem The Womb of the World, I will do so gladly.
#1. Cave Sermon // Fragile Wings â Last year, Divine Laughter went from unknown to #5 on my year-end list in about 2 weeks, so when I found out there was a follow-upâthanks to my new Flippered list buddyâI dropped everything.17 My stratospheric expectations were not only met, but they were lifted into outer space. I would fear for Cave Sermonâs ability to deliver in the future, but Fragile Wings itself dismisses any trepidation. So recognizably, uniquely Cave Sermon, it displays a new, more uplifting interpretation of their sound. A commenter pointed out the lack of reference to So Hideous in my review, and in retrospect, I see their point, at least in degree: the two projects are similarly experimental and impressively novel-sounding without actually feeling avant-garde. But there is just something about Cave Sermon that puts them in an entirely different category of geniusâfor me. Fragile Wings is playful but not silly; itâs complex but memorable, groovy, and fun; itâs dissonant and strange, but itâs organic, harmonious, and digestible. The idea that just one person is behind this18 makes it that much more mind-blowing. At this rate, there could well be another Cave Sermon record next year, and on the current trajectory, it may finally land this fantastic artist the official Iconic status they have always deserved.
Honorable Mentions:
Songs of the Year
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Show 18 footnotes
Tyme
Iâve spent much of my 2025 thinking about privilege. Not in the sense that the media has conditioned me, or us, to think about it, but in a way that Iâve employed to shift some of the mundane aspects of life onto their respective heads. For instance, itâs a privilege to look in my closet and have to decide what to wear each day. Itâs a privilege to look in my kitchen pantry to figure out what Iâll eat for breakfast or, better yet, which coffee cup Iâll drink from. I could go on, but thereâs a word limit to these intros. Suffice to say, I really tried to dwell on my blessings rather than my challenges this year.
And despite the blessings of my professional life, which bestowed upon me the incredible privilege of being really fucking busy for the last âwhateverâ number of months, Iâve been equally, yet much less facetiously, blessed in my personal endeavors as well. For, in addition to having a bountiful roof over my head, a vehicle to get me back and forth to my extremely privileged job, a dog I can honestly say I will have NO idea how to say goodbye to if I donât go first, and a wife that, despite the ups and downs of a normal, healthy marriage, continues to love me, I have the distinct privilege of contributing my trve opinions on all things musically heavy, or adjacently heavy, here on the best heavy metal blog in the world! And now comes the part where I give thanks.
Thank you, first and foremost, to everyone who reads this blog every day. Without you, none of this would be worth doing. At least for me, who read, lurked, and commented for years before working up the courage to actually apply for this subservient existence. Thank you to this newest crop of freshly demoted n00bs and to my list mate Killjoy and the rest of the Freezer Freaks CrewâAlekhines Gun, Owlswald, and Clarkkent1âwho, through perseverance and a buttload of patience, managed to survive nearly two years on ice to land in the crosshairs of the commentariatâs adverse, and always wrong, opinions.2,3 Thanks as well, to ALL the senior staff who are way nicer than theyâd have you believe,4 except Grier, whoâs even nicer than everyone else. And finally, the editors, the man himself, Dr. AMG, for seeing enough in me to bring me over, and Steel, who runs the tightest, most compassionate ship Iâve ever had the privilege of sailing on. Thanks, boss!
Now! To the LIST!!!
#ish. AntinoĂ« // The Fold â When I snagged this late-year gem back in November, I had no idea it would have me shuffling my list. With a little more time, Iâm sure it would have moved up the ladder, but as it stands, AntinoĂ« grabbed my (ish) spot easily. With little to no instrumentation beyond her piano, Teresa Marraco crafted something so beautiful in its basic-ness that I was entranced. Her delicate melodies evoke vibes that are as much Darkher or Tori Amos5 as they are Emperor or Dimmu Borgir, and I am definitely here for it.
#10. King Witch // III â In a year when Messa released a new album as well, the fact that King Witch is sitting on my year-end proper list and not Sara Bianchin and company speaks volumes about the job Laura Donnelly, Jamie Gilchrist, and Rory Lee did on III. Whether crooning over wispy acoustics or belting out doomily powerful tones over rock-heavy riffs, Donnelly is the star of the show, and her performance had me swooning. From the minute I first heard âSuffer in Lifeâ with its swing-heavy riffs and killer vocals, I was happy to take King Witchâs III for a spin over and over, and itâs been part of my regular rotation since summer.
#9. Imperishable // Revelation in Purity â As the year wore on, I became increasingly sure that I may have underrated Imperishableâs Revelation in Purity. In fact, I found myself returning to it several times, forgoing subsequent spins of albums Iâd rated higher. With their Nile and Olkoth pedigree, Imperishableâs expert blend of blackened death metal hit an overtly swirling sweet spot for me. The songwriting on Revelation in Purity, while not groundbreaking, is expertly executed, rendering its quality undeniable. And when you toss in those very Alice in Chains-like grunge passages, akin to a cherry on top, it was easy for me to put Revelation in Purity on my year-end list.
#8. Mutagenic Host // The Diseased Machine â Mutagenic Hostâs The Diseased Machine was the first album I successfully coveted and secured from the sump pit alllll the way back in January of this year. As a freshly demoted staff member at the time, I was overly excited at the opportunity to take it on, and the album surely didnât disappoint. Mutagenic Host does death metal the way I like it: low-brow, Neanderthalic, and brutally chuggy. Itâs a tenuous thing to run across something you deem so good so early in the year, but The Diseased Machine has definitely stood the test of Tyme and proved worth every point of the quarter-pounder I placed on it.
#7. Igorrr // Amen â My fancy with Igorrr has always been somewhat of a passing one. I was nowhere near the listener who wouldâve been part of the bandâs early target audience (Mousissure, Nostril). Still, I found more common ground with 2017âs Savage Sinusoid and even more with 2020âs Spirituality and Distortion. But when those first electronic beats of Amenâs opening track, âDaemoni,â poured out of my speakers for the first time, I was completely plugged in to Igorrrâs chaotically beautiful brand of metal madness. Amenâs surprisingly accessible break-cored, trip-hopped blackened death âbaroqueâ itâs big boot off in my ass, and Iâve been relishing and wallowing in its avant-garde pain ever since.
#6. Cave Sermon // Fragile Wings â Cave Sermonâs Divine Laughter was something Iâd definitely missed out on in 2024. When Thus Spoke covered Cave Sermonâs rapid follow-up, Fragile Wings, in April, however, I vowed I wouldnât sleep on Charlie Parkâs solo black metal project this time around. And Iâm certainly glad I didnât. Words like âwistful,â âexuberant,â and âplayfulâ were tossed about in Thusâs excellent write-up and really homed in on what made listening to Fragile Wings such a connective experience for me. Imbued as Fragile Wings is with upbeat sadness, Cave Sermon proved that I can get on board with post metal, and to be honest, any metal that sounds this good is worth the time spent. And seriously, what is that cover?!6
#5. Crippling Alcoholism // Camgirl â Inspired by a subreddit Iâm glad I never stumbled across, Crippling Alcoholismâs provocative moniker steels those whoâd approach the bandâs output with a certain sense of visceral anticipation before hearing even one note. My love for the disturbingly creepy With Love from a Padded Room led me to the pink, candy-wrapped murderpop of Camgirl with nary a momentâs hesitation. I gladly signed on to plumb the depths of weirdness I knew would exist, but could not have anticipated the absolute fathomless darkness lurking within Camgirlâs saccharine sweetness, especially as revealed with subsequent spins. A disturbing diatribe on hopelessness, disappointment, loneliness, and sex in the digital age, Camgirl wraps its message in a deceivingly poppy form of electronica that, when all is said and done, will have you wondering what the fuck just happened. I love it.
#4. Dax Riggs // 7 Songs for Spiders â Dax Riggs may be one of the more underrated artists of the last thirty years, and while I know Iâm not the only one who rejoiced in the recent resurgence and subsequent touring schedule of one of the â90s best sludge acts, Acid Bath, I also realized a new album will probably never materialize, at least not under that moniker. Instead, the universe graced us with 7 Songs for Spiders, Daxâs first solo effort in nearly 15 years. Filled with simplistically haunting melodies sung in Riggsâs inimitable style, 7 Songs for Spiders strummed every one of my fuzzed-out, laid-back heart strings and has remained consistently satisfying since its January release.
#3. Maud the Moth // The Distaff â I stumbled across Maud the Moth in 2023 while exploring the ever-expanding milieu of performers associated with my favorite artist Darkher. Searching Amaya LĂłpez-Carromoeroâs back catalog, I dove into 2015âs The Inner Wastelands and 2020âs OrphnÄ, emerging a fan of Maud the Mothâs quirky neo-classical piano-led operatics. When The Distaff popped up in the sump, I was glad to see Dolphin Whisperer snag it, knowing his words would do the album eloquent justice. Soaring in scope and execution, Maud the Moth proffers her most complex yet beautiful release to date. Filled with classically executed vocal acrobatics and massive amounts of intricate instrumentation, The Distaff is less a thing just to be listened to, as it is a thing to be wholly experienced. As immersive a piece of music as Iâve heard all year.
#2. Structure // Heritage â M-A-S-S-I-V-E is the word that best describes Structureâs Heritage, which is to say itâs big, sad, and âheavy as fook!â7 Every time I threw this beast on, and the album opener began crawling forth, it conjured the same cinematic image in my mindâs eye. A lone, bloodied warrior, fists clenched, head bowed, wind-swept and rain-soaked hair hanging down, muscles taut and twitching in furious sadness, standing in a field full of his fallen brethren as a lightning-laced deluge washed the blood of dead soldiers into the hungry ground. Then, slowly, he casts his gaze skyward, anguished tears streaming, contemplating his sole survivor existence, and screaming at the thunder-filled heavens âWill I deserve to live on?â Every time, thatâs what I see when I listen to âWill I Deserve It,â and every time I break out in goose bumps with a lumpy throat and welling eyes. Heritage came as close to being my number one as to make the two offerings at the top of my 2025 list nearly interchangeable.
#1. Dormant Ordeal // Tooth and Nail â I know I underrated Dormant Ordealâs fourth album, Tooth and Nail, for, despite giving it the 4.0 treatment, the sheer excellence of this record has only improved over time. April was THE month for me this year, yielding my two favorite metal releases and leaving Polandâs metal map deeply staked with a big, black-and-gold Dormant Ordeal flag. In true, warrior-like fashion, Maciej NieĆcioruk and Maciej Proficz soldiered on without sole founding member Radek Kowal, which opened the door for Chase Westmoreland to waltz in and give my favorite drum performance of the year. From the brutally effective âHalo of Bonesâ to the excellent, Dylan Thomas-inspired âAgainst the Dying of the Light,â there wasnât an album I returned to more this year than Tooth and Nail, its visceral riffs and razor-sharp edges leaving long-lasting scars. But in a good way, you know? Itâs with profound pleasure that I dutifully crown Dormant Ordealâs Tooth and Nail my album of the year.
Honorable Mentions
Song oâ the Year:
âTwas a mother-fookinâ toss up between my top 2 albums. I flipped a coin, so close was the race. (Heads) Structure // (Tails) Dormant Ordeal.
WINNER(?):
Structure â âWill I Deserve Itâ â Satisfyingly goose-bumpy!8
Killjoy
The fact that Iâm writing this list feels nothing short of surreal. When I became a regular reader of this blog in 2019, I had a strong interest in metal but a knowledge of only a handful of its subgenres. I did not expect to make it this far when I auditioned, but somehow I became a member of the Freezer Crew. Although we were initially forced to huddle together for warmth to survive the n00b trials, as time went on, I developed a deep respect for all of my Crewmates. Their camaraderie and encouragement were great motivation for me to keep writing this year, even when it was tough. We were even allowed to organize a special edition Rodeö! Iâm so proud to associate with them.
On a more somber note, I was sad to see many of the longtime writers who helped me fall in love with this site slip into the abyss we sometimes call ânon-suspicious sabbatical.â While I will miss reading their eloquent words, their legacy and contributions will always influence and inspire me.
And now for some thank yous. Iâm grateful to AMG Himself for creating the site and allowing me to run rampant with my questionable opinions. A gorilla-sized thanks to Steel Druhm for keeping day-to-day operations running and being the kindest, cruelest taskmaster I could hope for. Thank you to my list mate, Tyme, for making my musical tastes seem better by association. Finally, Iâd like to publicly thank my wife for being so supportive of my new hobby.
Iâm excited for what awaits in 2026 (which hopefully includes more power metal than I managed to review in 2025)!
#ish. Kauan // Wayhome â Kauan has demonstrated time and again that their ability to compose evocative soundscapes is unmatched in the post-rock sphere. Wayhome draws a little bit from different eras in Kauanâs fruitful career to form a richer, warmer experience. Each individual instrumentâacoustic and electric guitars, strings, voiceâis a crucial brush stroke in a breathtaking panorama. This is some of the most enchanting music Iâve ever heard.
#10. Anfauglir // AkallabĂȘth â When I first grabbed AkallabĂȘth for review, I was blissfully unaware of the 72-minute runtime (but probably should have had an inkling). After spending some time with it, I became blissfully aware of how awesome it is. Based on the chapter of Tolkienâs The Silmarillion chronicling the 3,000-year rise and fall of the island of NĂșmenor, AkallabĂȘth is as epic in sound as it is in scope. Mrs. Killjoy was more interested in the concept than the music, but it still made for some fun conversations. While the long runtime makes it a bit harder to revisit than the other entries on this list, this is my idea of a great symphonic black metal album.
#9. In Mourning // The Immortal â Progressive death metal comes in all shapes and sizes, and I tend to be drawn to the more emotive flavors. When Disillusion released Ayam a few years ago, it took me a while to understand the hype. In a similar manner, it took longer than it probably should have for me to appreciate The Immortal. I donât know why this was, but in both cases Iâm glad I stuck with them. In Mourningâs signature combination of earnest melodies and energetic riffs is now embedded in my mind and heart.
#8. Asira // As Ink in Water â Due to journalistic circumstances that I wonât discuss with fans, I was fortunate enough to obtain this promo earlier than I normally would have. Good thing, too, because As Ink in Water turned out to be a grower for me. The vocals proved much less popular in the comments than I anticipated, but they are the biggest reason why this record resonates with me. The buttery-smooth guitar and bass lines are another big factor. The fact that As Ink in Water was released during the tail end of 2025 might mean it appears on fewer top ten lists, but it should not be missed.
#7. Judicator // Concord â I donât have a long history with Judicator. I am part of the seemingly small minority that prefers the post-Cordisco era, although I admit that I need to spend more time with their earlier work. Concord sees Judicator returning to their heavy/power metal roots after an experimental foray into progressive territory (which I also loved!). Other than brief saxophone and fiddle segments, there arenât any fancy frills this time, only lots of guitar hooks and infectious choruses. And, in this case, thatâs more than enough to make me happy.
#6. Valhalore // Beyond the Stars â I donât normally see the point in quibbling about scores, however, I feel that Beyond the Stars was soundly underrated. Itâs a distillation of everything I love about peak Eluveitie and Ăther Realm. The folk instrumentation blends perfectly with the fast-paced melodic death metal elements. The interludes cleverly foreshadow and ease the listener into the subsequent songs. I also love the tender vocal performance by Anna Murphy towards the end. Beyond the Stars is a fun and emotional journey from start to finish.
#5. Gloombound // Dreaming Delusion â Iâm always down to sample funeral doom, but it takes a very special kind to keep me coming back. Gloombound expertly walks the difficult balance between atmospheric and stimulating music. The overall sound is that of a soul trying to escape imprisonment, whether physical, emotional, or mental. Dreaming Delusion makes me feel different emotions every time I listen, but chief among them is a crushing awe.
#4. Phantom Spell // Heather & Hearth â I love uplifting, feel-good metal (this should not come as a surprise by now). So, it was almost inevitable that I would love the nostalgic keyboards and guitar solos of Heather & Hearth. But, for some reason, it took AMGâs landmark blog post about the evils of Spotify for me to really pay attention to Phantom Spell. Iâm grateful I did, because I might have missed out on one of the most addictive pieces of progressive rock Iâve ever heard.
#3. Halocraft // The Sky Will Remember â Halocraft quickly became one of my favorite bands since I discovered them early this year. Their purposeful yet dreamy brand of post-rock is practically custom-made for me. This year, they expanded their creative limits by writing two very different records. Iâm partial to The Sky Will Remember, but donât miss out on its companion, To Leave a Single Wolf Alive, for a gloomier vibe. Their prior albums are really good too, and I listen to them just as often.
#2. An Abstract Illusion // The Sleeping City â âIf not 4.5, then why 4.5 shaped?â, one of you rabble-rousers quipped about my review of The Sleeping City. The truth is, the more time I spend with it, the more I wonder if maybe I did underrate it. Iâve somehow grown to love The Sleeping City even more in the months since I awarded it a 4.0. Sure, the production leaves much to be desired, but there arenât any other notable qualities that I would consider faults. It wonât appeal to the exact same audience as the legendary Woe, but I have plenty of room in my heart for both (and likely whatever An Abstract Illusion devises next). It was such an honor to write about this wondrous record.
#1. Black Narcissus // There Lingers One Whoâs Long Forgotten â When I plucked There Lingers One Whoâs Long Forgotten from the promo pit, I was a little skeptical about music made with only bass and drums. It turns out, though, that this minimalist approachâalong with excellent songwriting, of courseâwas the key to unlocking a new realm of possibility within the post-rock genre. The bass blooms unfettered in this distraction-free biome, and the drum tone is crisp and refreshing. The two instruments intertwine to engender a spirit of companionship and exploration. There Lingers One Whoâs Long Forgotten will always have a special place in my heart, and I am grateful to Black Narcissus for sharing this gift.
Honorable Mentions:
Song oâ the Year:
Judicator â âConcordâ
ï»ż
#2025 #Aganoor #AnAbstractIllusion #AncientBards #Anfauglir #Antino #Antinoë #Asira #Bergfried #BlackNarcissus #BlogPosts #Braia #CaveSermon #CrimsonShadows #CripplingAlcoholism #Cryptopsy #DaxRiggs #Depravity #Diabolizer #DormantOrdeal #Gloombound #Halocraft #Igorrr #Imperishable #InMourning #Judicator #Kauan #KingWitch #Lipoma #Lists #Listurnalia #MaudTheMoth #Messa #MoronPolice #MutagenicHost #PhantomSpell #Pissgrave #Puteraeon #Structure #TymeSAndKilljoySTop10IshOf2025 #Valhalore #WyattEListurnalia is now upon us once again! If you are not ready to be assailed by non-stop lists and bad opinions for the next week and change, I suggest you get fooking ready! Listurnalia cannot be stopped, nor contained. It can only be tolerated and endured!
More than any year in recent history, 2025 saw more seasoned staffers step away from writing duties due to time constraints and life changes. To compensate for the loss of these slackwagoning quitters and shirkers, we added a gaggle of fresh new voices. This made for a bittersweet time around these parts as long-time friends departed and a bunch of untested, unknowns rose through the brutal n00b gauntlet to seize the means of promo production. These greenhorn neophytes have created great havoc at AMG HQ with their terrible taste, inability to follow directions, and steadfast refusal to ignore deathcore.
Weâve been here before, though, and we always straighten out the newbie upstarts. The daily beatings, deprivations, and absence of positive reinforcement will wear them down, and if not, we have plenty of space in the rotpit out back. This is, and will ever be, the AMG modality.
2026 will be an interesting year as the new crew members are shepherded by the olde while everyone is crushed beneath the iron heel of AMG management. Who will make it to 2027? Who will be sold off to Metal Wani for a box of bananas and Gorilla Glue? Place your bets in the official AMG Survival Pool!
As you read the Top Ten(ish) lists below, remember, reading our content is free, but you get what you pay for.
Grymm
#10. Venomous Echoes // Dysmor
#9. Blut Aus Nord // Ethereal Horizons
#8. Dormant Ordeal // Tooth and Nail
#7. Structure // Heritage
#6. Lorna Shore // I Feel The Everblack Festering Within Me
#5. Sigh // I Saw The Worldâs End â Hangmanâs Hymn MMXXV
#4. Imperial Triumphant // Goldstar
#3. Am I In Trouble? // Spectrum
#2. Dax Riggs // 7 Songs for Spiders
#1. Paradise Lost // Ascension â I fully expected Paradise Lost to come out with quality music, which has been mostly par for the course in their storied almost-40-year career, and no one could blame them if they decided to coast along on their legendary sound. Instead, Ascension sees them giving a masterclass in songcraft and atmosphere, showing everyone, everywhere, how itâs done. With Black Sabbath now officially put to rest, Anathema long gone, and whatever the fuck is happening within My Dying Bride these days, somebody has to fly the British Doom flag high and proud, and Paradise Lost have done a bang-up job of doing so.
Personal Highlight oâ the Year: Seeing Acid Bath live. I may or may not have cried during âVenus Blue,â and no, I donât fucking care. 19-Year-Old me was pleased as punch that 48-Year-Old me got to see a legendary band (and one of his personal favorites) come back from tragedy to pay tribute to their fallen bassist and friend, Audie Pitre, by giving it another long-awaited go.
Disappointment(s) oâ the Year:
Song oâ the Year:
El Cuervo
#ish. Astronoid // Stargod
#10. Ollie Wride // The Pressure Point
#9. Kauan // Wayhome
#8. Zéro Absolu // La Saignée
#7. Mutagenic Host // The Diseased Machine
#6. Asira // As Ink in Water
#5. Bruit // The Age of Ephemerality
#4. Saor // Amidst the Ruins
#3. The Midnight // Syndicate
#2. Steven Wilson // The Overview
#1. Messa // The Spin â In a year replete with comfort picksâprogressive rock, synthwave, and death metal aboundâhow is that Italyâs enigmatic, inscrutable Messa forged my Album oâ the Year? The Spin doesnât take the trouble to make itself easily approachable. Doom, prog, and post influences circle around velvety melodies that sometimes sound like deliberate songs, and sometimes like jazz improvisation. But itâs these very qualities that belie its subtle allure; only with repetition and attention does The Spin shine. Messa gradually reveals rhythmic motifs, instrumental nuances, and rich compositions that enhance my life on so many days. âThe Dress,â especially, is stunning. And though the recordâs loungey whimsy defies metal conventions, each track prizes genuine grit through its top-drawer guitar riffs. With the devotion it demands, no record from 2025 was more rewarding than The Spin.
Honorable Mentions:
Song oâ the Year:
ï»ż
GardensTale
#ish. Structure // Heritage
#10. In Mourning //The Immortal
#9. Flummox // Southern Progress
#8. Der Weg Einer Freiheit // Innern
#7. Nephylim // Circuition
#6. Besna // KrĂĄsno
#5. Messa // The Spin
#4. Labyrinthus Stellarum // Rift in Reality
#3. Gazpacho // Magic 8 Ball
#2. Dormant Ordeal// Tooth & Nail
#1. Moron Police // Pachinko â I was a little nervous when I first read about the length and ambition behind Pachinko, especially in the context of the incredible and very concise A Boat on the Sea. Iâve never been this happy to be this wrong. Nothing in the last decade has overtaken my life as much as Pachinko has, and Iâm listening to it yet again as I write this, and will probably restart it once it finishes. Pachinko has a lot in common with Everything Everywhere All At Once, one of my all-time favorite films, as a treatise on the chaos of life and the importance of friends and family. It treats its philosophy of silliness very seriously, laughing in the face of darkness in such a beautiful and inspiring way; it brightens my life every time I hear it. And it does all that in tribute to a dear friend who was gone too soon and too suddenly, and no other eulogistic album has let me feel like its subjectâs soul touched mine. An astounding monument to friendship on top of an incredibly accomplished hour of music. Pachinko is a miracle.
Honorable Mentions:
Song oâ the Year:
ï»ż
Non-metal Albums of the Year:
Mark Z.
#ish. Malefic Throne // The Conquering Darkness
#10. Urn // Demon Steel
#9. Teitanblood // From the Visceral Abyss
#8. Shed the Skin // The Carnage Cast Shadows
#7. Guts // Nightmare Fuel
#6. Dormant Ordeal // Tooth and Nail
#5. Perdition Temple // Malign Apotheosis
#4. Paradise Lost // Ascension
#3. Revocation // New Gods, New Masters
#2. Death Yell // Demons of Lust
#1. Abominator // The Fire Brethren â It took me a few years after hearing this Australian duoâs last album, 2015âs Evil Proclaimed, to realize I was wrong about them. Their raw and relentless black-death metal wasnât just good, it was fucking awesome. With their long-awaited sixth album, The Fire Brethren, Abominator has conjured flames that reach higher than ever. As always, the enraged rasps, scorching riffs, and endlessly pummeling rhythms are like plumes of hellfire shot directly into your ear canals. But amidst the bludgeoning is some genuinely great songwriting, with deep-cutting hooks (âThe Templarâs Curse,â âUnderworld Vociferationsâ), flashes of melody (âProgenitors of the Insurrection of Satanâ), thrashy breaks (âSulphur from the Heavensâ), and just enough variety to keep everything hitting as hard as possible. Itâs not for everyone, but for those into Angelcorpse and other music of that sort, The Fire Brethren is the type of album you just canât get enough of.
Honorable Mention:
Song (Title) oâ the Year:
Song oâ the Year:
ï»ż
Carcharodon
#ish. Dax Riggs // 7 Songs for Spiders
#10. Novarupta // Astral Sands
#9. Atlantic // Timeworn
#8. Structure // Heritage
#7. Agriculture // The Spiritual Sound
#6. Igorr // Amen
#5. Messa // The Spin
#4. Abigail Williams // A Void Within Existence
#3. Cave Sermon // Fragile Wings
#2. Dormant Ordeal // Tooth and Nail
#1. Grima // Nightside â In each of 2019, 2021, and 2022, Grima released an album and, in each of those years, I listed said album (#5, HM, and #10). But this year, the year in which I have listened to the least metal and, of course, written the least since I started here in 2018, is also the year that Grima got everything dialled in to just what I want from a Grima album. On Nightside, the duo struck the perfect balance between the traditional influences of 2019âs Will of the Primordial and the propulsive, frozen atmosphere of Frostbitten (2022). The combination gives Nightside an almost hypnotic and weirdly tranquil flow, offset by Vilhelmâs rasping vocals, which remain among the best in the BM game. Every time I come back to this record, and the title track in particular, itâs even better than I remember it being, and I always end up spinning three or more times back-to-back. An album that can keep playing that trick deserves its #1 spot in my book.
Honorable Mentions:
Songs oâ the Year:
ï»ż
Mysticus Hugebeard
#10. Orbit Culture // Death Above Life
#9. An Abstract Illusion // The Sleeping City
#8. Qrixkuor // The Womb of the World
#7. Dormant Ordeal // Tooth and Nail
#6. Panopticon // Laurentian Blue
#5. Blackbraid // Blackbraid III
#4. Arkhaaik // Uihtis
#3. Kauan // Wayhome
#2. Wardruna // Birna
#1. Thumos // The Trial of Socrates â I recall groggily stumbling upon Thumosâ The Trial of Socrates at work one early morning, and Iâm not sure if Iâve grown attached to it or itâs grown attached to me. It looms in my periphery, routinely interrupting my listening schedule for just one more spin. This gargantuan dive into ancient Greek philosophy and justice is melodically rich, laden with atmosphere, and fiercely intelligent. I love how this album stimulates my curiosity. I pore over The Trial of Socrates like a madman, piecing the puzzle together with feverish glee but never quite feeling finished, because every re-listen yields new shapes, new colors, new ideas. It eggs me on to research various topics on ancient Greek history or philosophy, and even made for an unlikely study partner during my long preparations for the German A1 exam. I always feel smarter by the end of itâhubris, Iâm sure, but The Trial of Socrates genuinely sparks my imagination in ways few albums do. Time to go listen to âThe PhĂŠdoâ for the zillionth time.
Honorable Mentions:
Songs oâ the Year:
The Dormant Stranger by Disarmonia Mundi
Do No Harm by Jamie Paige, Marcy Nabors, & Penny Parker
The Trial of Socrates by Thumos
Disappointment(s) oâ the year:
Samguineous Maximus
#ish. Imperial Triumphant // Goldstar
#10. Primitive Man // Observance
#9. Motherless // Do You Feel Safe?
#8. Deafheaven // Lonely People with Power
#7. Weeping Sores // The Convalescence Agonies
#6. Between the Buried and Me // The Blue Nowhere
#5. Calva Louise // Edge of the Abyss
#4. 1914 // Viribus Unitis
#3. Crippling Alcoholism // Camgirl
#2. Crippling Alcoholism // Bible Songs II
#1. Yellow Eyes // Confusion Gate â Yellow Eyes are one of the best black metal bands in the game, and Confusion Gate is their most impressive work to date. It sees the band return to a more traditional atmospheric sound, but with the lessons learned from their explorations of dissonance and ambience. The result is a kaleidoscopic blend of gorgeous melodies, haunting riffs, and a pervasive sense of pathos that only the best art can achieve. Confusion Gate feels like communing with nature from the top of a wintry peak, embodying both impossible grandeur and awesome terror. This is a record that bypasses the analytical reviewerâs brain and just hits me right in the feeling. It offers a unique catharsis in a year where I truly needed it.
Honorable Mentions
Song oâ the Year:
ï»żï»ż
Spicie Forrest
#ish. Cryptopsy // An Insatiable Violence
#10. Crimson Shadows // Whispers of War
#9. Oromet // The Sinking Isle
#8. -ii- // Apostles of the Flesh
#7. Suncraft // Welcome to the Coven
#6. Suncraft // Profanation of the Adamic Covenant
#5. Chestcrush // Κ΄ΧÎÎÎÎÎ΀ÎÎŁ
#4. Dormant Ordeal // Tooth and Nail
#3. Qrixkuor // The Womb of the World
#2. Primitive Man // Observance
#1. Wytch Hazel // V: Lamentations â I know, Iâm surprised too. But the bottom line is that Iâve been listening to V: Lamentations front to back at least once a week since it released on the most American of holidays, July 4th. For Steel, Wytch Hazelâs latest didnât have the same staying power as previous efforts, but Lamentations is the first to truly resonate with me. Though musically consistent with their Wishbone Ash-meets-Eagles style, vocalist Colin Hendra brings a new sense of passion to the record, and the interplay between instruments, vocals, and lyrics hits me like a lightning bolt. Very possibly inspired by the core Christian tenet laid out in Romans 6:23-24,2 Lamentations is a masterful portrayal of what it means to perpetually fail, to know youâll never be good enough, and in the face of a salvation that renders all efforts, deeds, and accomplishments worthless, to keep striving toward the impossible anyway. Even for godless sinners like me, Lamentations is a beautiful reminder that purpose is found in hardship, that the journey is the goal, and that falling down is merely an opportunity to stand up again.
Honorable Mentions:
Song oâ the Year:
Grin Reaper
(ish) Sallow Moth // Mossbane Lantern
#10. Turian // Blood Quantum Blues
#9. Calva Louise // Edge of the Abyss
#8. Lychgate // Precipice
#7. An Abstract Illusion // The Sleeping City
#6. Thron // Vurias
#5. Structure // Heritage
#4. Species // Changelings
#3. Havukruunu // Tavastland
#2. Aephanemer // Utopie
#1. 1914 // Viribus Unitis â I didnât know Viribus Unitis would be my top album of the year the first time I listened to it, but I knew it would list. 1914âs naked emotion and rousing story of a Ukrainian soldierâs survival through World War I, reconciliation with his family, and inescapable return to war remains as gripping and bittersweet now as it did the first time I heard it. Across adrenaline-fueled riffing, oppressive marches, and somber dirges, 1914 never relents on musical or lyrical weight. Though Viribus Unitis was released late in the year, it quickly became the standard I used to appraise albums while going through listing season. 1914 paints war-torn life with savage grace, supplying devastating melody and grueling crawls that elevate the album to such heights that Iâm genuinely moved each time I get to the end. Viribus Unitis is bleak, raw, and human, but for all that, Iâm never deterred from listening. Ultimately, 1914 clutches the threads of hope and weaves an aural tapestry that brings tragedy and triumph to life, cementing Viribus Unitis as my undisputed top album of 2025.
Honorable Mentions:
Songs oâ the Year:
Andy-War-Hall
#ish: Dragon Skull // Chaos Fire Vengeance
#10: Changeling // Changeling
#9: Steel Arctus // Dreamruler
#8: Abigail Williams //A Void Within Existence
#7: Petrified Giant // Endless Ark
#6: Imperial Triumphant // Goldstar
#5: Structure // Heritage
#4: Lipoma // No Cure for the Sick
#3: Crippling Alcoholism // Camgirl
#2: Hexrot // Formless Ruin of Oblivion
#1: 1914 // Viribus Unitis â Immersion defines great music and art for me. It is almost unfortunate how good 1914 are in this facet of their music. Their ability to transport the listener to the battlefield in all its violence, both carnal and psychological, is stupefying. The utter dehumanizing hatred with â1914 (The Siege of PrzemyĆl),â the ravenous bloodlust of â1917 (The Isonzo Front),â the hellish wails haunting â1918 Pt. 1 (WIA â Wounded in Action):â all portrayed vividly through 1914âs brilliantly caustic and composed musicianship and deeply personal lyricism. When Dmytro Ternushchak bellows âFor three days / The Russians attacked / And accomplished nothing but / 40,000 dead pigsâ [â1914 (The Siege of PrzemyĆl)â], itâs all you need to get into his characterâs violent headspace. When 1914 mournfully sing in Ukrainian âĐŠĐ” ĐŒĐŸŃ Đ·Đ”ĐŒĐ»Ńâ3 [1915 (Easter Battle for the Zwinin Ridge)], you grasp how someone could put their life on the line for kin and country. When our soldier sings âMy little girl reached out to me / But duty callsâ [1919 (The Home Where I Died)]⊠well, shit, your heart just has to break, right? 1914 donât play âhistory metal.â Viribus Unitis is as present and relevant as you can get.
Honorable Mentions:
Song oâ the Year:
ï»ż
Lavender Larcenist
#ish Spiritbox // Tsunami Sea
#10. Sold Soul // Just Like That, I Disappear Entirely
#9. Calva Louise // Edge of the Abyss
#8. Dying Wish // Flesh Stays Together
#7. Grima // Nightside
#6. Aversed // Erasure of Color
#5. Deafheaven // Lonely People With Power
#4. Ghost Bath // Rose Thorn Necklace
#3. Changeling // Changeling
#2. Dormant Ordeal // Tooth and Nail
#1. Crippling Alcoholism // Camgirl â Sometimes you listen to music, and you feel like it gets you. Camgirl was exactly that type of album, and it probably doesnât say anything good about me. Ever since Crippling Alcoholismâs latest graced my ears and I shared it with my partner, we have been singing âI fucking hate the way I look, yeah I look like a fat fucking scumbagâ way too often and mumbling âMr. Ran away, ran away from familyâ every chance we get. The album is dripping with the atmosphere of neon-lit back rooms, seedy interactions, and terrible decision-making. It feels like a lens into the lives of those society has left behind, and I canât help but feel a connection. The self-destructive nihilism, drugged-out sex, and abrupt violence that is all too common in those on the margins of life is something I think more and more we can all relate to, and Camgirl is the art that mirrors society back to us. As a result, it is an album that is just as ugly as it is terrifying and beautiful.
Honorable Mentions:
Song oâ the Year:
Creeping Ivy
#ish. Nite // Cult of the Serpent Sun
#10. Blackbraid // Blackbraid III
#9. Flummox // Southern Progress
#8. 1914 // Viribus Unitis
#7. Cave Sermon // Fragile Wings
#6. Saor // Amidst the Ruins
#5. Imperial Triumphant // Goldstar
#4. Phantom Spell // Heather & Hearth
#3. Coroner // Dissonance Theory
#2. Messa // The Spin
#1. Havukruunu // Tavastland â On their Bandcamp page, Havukruunu explain the concept of their fourth LP: âTavastland tells how in 1237 the Tavastians rose in rebellion against the church of Christ and drove the popes naked into the frost to die.â Sounds like the metal album of 2025 to me! But I didnât crown Tavastland for its lyrics that I canât understand. As Dr. A.N. Grier has been exhorting for a decade, Havukruunu stands as a model of Viking black metal consistency, having dropped only very good-to-great albums since 2015. Tavastland isnât a radical improvement over 2020âs Uinuous syömein sota, but itâs an (arguably excellent) improvement nonetheless, making it Havukruunuâs finest work yet. Yes, these fiery Finns forge sounds reminiscent of Bathory and Immortal, but Tavastland seized my attention for its adventurous prog sensibilities. Some of this can be attributed to the return of HĂŒmo, whose bass rattles like the four strings of Geddy Lee. But the prog is deep in the album craft, from the overture-style modulations of opener âKuolematon laulunhenkiâ to the extended guitar wankery of closer âDe miseriis fennorum.â Now if only I can learn Finnish, Iâll be able to appreciate the killer anti-popery narrative while headbanging to my Record oâ 2025.
Honorable Mentions:
Song oâ the Year:
ï»ż
Baguette of Bodom
#ish. In the Woods⊠// Otra
#10. Species // Changelings
#9. Dragon Skull // Chaos Fire Vengeance
#8. A-Z // A2ZÂČ
#7. Apocalypse Orchestra // A Plague upon Thee
#6. Amorphis // Borderland
#5. Dolmen Gate // Echoes of Ancient Tales
#4. Dormant Ordeal // Tooth and Nail
#3. Amalekim // Shir Hashirim
#2. Suotana // Ounas II
#1. Buried Realm // The Dormant Darkness â Melodic tech death? Symphonic power metal? Who knows! Much like my 2025 in general, The Dormant Darkness has a bit of everything in one gigantic clusterfuck. The great news is, neither I nor the album crumbled under all that weight. In a year full of odd twists and turns, my list became more varied and unusual than ever. Buried Realm took this variety and gave me everything I like about metal in one dense package: blazing speeds, soaring guitars, majestic vocals, and relentless fury. Itâs also inexplicably well-produced for how many layers there are to deal with. While 2025 was not a particularly star-studded release yearâespecially compared to most of the 2020s so farâit threw plenty of fun curveballs at me, and The Dormant Darkness exemplifies this with its Xothian fusion of metal subgenres in one big Ophidian I blender ov shred. I would also like to request several Christian Ălvestam features on every album, please.
Honorable Mentions:
Song oâ the Year:
Chaos Fire Vengeance by Dragon Skull
#1914 #2025 #AZ #AbigailWilliams #Abominator #Aephanemer #Agriculture #AmIInTrouble #Amalekim #Ambush #Amorphis #AnAbstractIllusion #ApocalypseOrchestra #Arkhaaik #Asira #Astronoid #Atlantic #AvaMendozaGabbyFlukeMogalCarolinaPĂ©rez #Aversed #Besna #BetweenTheBuriedAndMe #Bianca #Blackbraid #Blasphamagoatachrist #Blindfolded #BlogLists #Bloodywood #BlutAusNord #Bruit #BuriedRealm #CalvaLouise #CaveSermon #Changeling #Chestcrush #Coroner #CrimsonShadows #CripplingAlcoholism #DawnOfSolace #DaxRiggs #Deafheaven #DeathYell #DĂ©cryptal #Defigurement #DerWegEinerFreiheit #DolmenGate #DormantOrdeal #DragonSkull #DyingWish #Dynazty #Fange #FellOmen #Flummox #Gazpacho #GhostBath #Gorycz #Grima #Guts #HangoverInMinsk #Hasard #Havukruunu #Hexrot #HoodedMenace #Igorr #Igorrr #II #ImperialTriumphant #JonathanHultĂ©n #Kauan #LabyrinthusStellarum #Lipoma #Lists #Lorde #LornaShore #Lychgate #MaleficThrone #Messa #MoronPolice #Motherless #MutagenicHost #Nephylim #NightFlightOrchestra #Nite #Novarupta #OllieWride #Ophelion #OrbitCulture #Oromet #Panopticon #ParadiseLost #PedestalForLeviathan #PerditionTemple #PetrifiedGiant #PhantomSpell #PrimitiveMan #Proscription #Psychonaut #PupilSlicer #Puteraeon #Qrixkuor #Revocation #SallowMoth #Saor #ShadowOfIntent #ShayferJames #ShedTheSkin #Sigh #SoldSoul #Species #Spiritbox #Starscourge #SteelArctus #StevenWilson #Strigiform #Structure #Suncraft #Suotana #Teitanblood #TheAMGStaffPickTheirTopTenIshOf2025 #TheMidnight #Thron #Thumos #Turian #ĂltraRaptör #Urn #VenomousEchoes #VictimOfFire #Walg #Wardruna #WeepingSores #WyattE #WytchHazel #YellowEyes #Yellowcard #ZĂ©roAbsoluYou may be wondering what on earth I am doing willingly touching a black metal album, let alone complimenting one. Well, you know what they say: never let them know your next move. Mysterious Polish-Italian collective Amalekim garnered praise in these hallowed halls with their 2023 release Avodah Zarah, our own Thus Spoke calling it a highlight during a weaker year for the genre. Naturally, I disliked the album, which tends to be a good sign for the average black metal fan. I was nevertheless surprised to see Shir Hashirim released to little fanfare or label promotion after such a positive reception 18 months prior. One look at the âmelodicâ prefix reactivated my optimist instincts; maybe Amalekim was worth another shot. Two years is a long time in music, let alone fleeting personal tastes.
Not much has necessarily changed with Amalekimâs vicious formula, but the refinements are significant. The core of the bandâs sound still lies in the realms of early Gaerea but is also distinctly its own thing altogether. And contrary to Gaereaâs recent development,1 Amalekim isnât planning to go metalcore any time soon. No, Shir Hashirim further improves on the bandâs best qualities while retaining their identity, offering relentless speed and riffs for days (âChant II: Shir Hashirim,â âChant IV: Sodot HaYekumâ). Itâs what I like to call âviolently melodicâ for all the right reasons, both the intense drumming by Ktulak and the demonic vocals of MrĂłz enhancing the spite present in the dueling guitars. Most importantly, Amalekim never lets their foot off the gas pedal on their mission to create hauntingly aggressive yet beautifully melodic music.
Shir Hashirimâs success comes from its subversion of common black metal tropes without abandoning them. Gone is the overreliance on standard tremolo and blast beat abuse that I previously took issue with. Those elements are both still key to the album, but in a much more appealing and bite-sized, fresh context (âChant III: Mesharet HaShilton,â âChant VIII: Mishteh Malkhutiâ). Amalekimâs songwriting has evolved into a much more varied beast with plenty of creative drum and riff patterns to show for it. It almost feels like thereâs a bunch of death metal DNA in the bandâs songwriting this time (âChant VI: Tisha Daltotâ); in this way, I could see it being the blackened mirror image of Dormant Ordealâs newest. Where Shir Hashirim improves over Dormant Ordealâs excellent release is the wonderfully warm and roomy production, a complete opposite of what many others in this scene go for. It once again shows that your album doesnât need to be crushed or lo-fi to sound brutalâgreat production simply makes the performance all the more powerful and unyielding.
Shir Hashirim is the first black metal record in ages to catch my interest, and one of the best albums of the year at that. Violent, melodic, and extremely fast all at once, its 38-minute package of eight chants simply leaves me wanting to immediately replay the experience all over again. Itâs tight and consistent in a way few other records this year are, and its form of melodic fury makes the album unintentionally catchy. Amalekimâs oppressive and angry atmosphere should satiate the usual suspects, but the breakneck pace and no-nonsense songwriting on Shir Hashirim are sure to appeal to a wider audience as well.
Track to Check Out: âChant II: Shir Hashirim,â âChant IV: Sodot HaYekum,â and âChant VII: Hakaâas HaNachash.â
#2025 #Amalekim #AvantgardeMusic #BlackMetal #DormantOrdeal #Gaerea #ItalianMetal #MelodicBlackMetal #PolishMetal #ShirHashirim #ThingsYouMightHaveMissed2025 #TYMHM