Iron Kingdom – Shadows and Dust Review By ClarkKent

When last we visited the Iron Kingdom, the frigid temps forced Holdeneye to don his special Arctic Wolf Fur Armor (providing +50% cold resistance). With the changing seasons, the climate has transformed into a desert under a scorching hot sun. These Canucks have been putting out classic-style heavy metal since 2011, though founders Chris Osterman and Leighton Holmes originally started the band under the moniker Twisted in 2004. Despite all that history, Shadows and Dust, their sixth album, will be just the second time they’ve graced these halls, following Holdeneye’s review of 2019’s On the Hunt. As prepared as Holdeneye was for the frigid setting of On the Hunt, his Arctic armor unfortunately could not handle the sudden increase in temperature. So I have come in his stead, donning my Hooded Cloak of the Dragon (+50% heat resistance) to travel the Iron Kingdom and report my findings.

On Shadows and Dust, Iron Kingdom remain defenders of the NWOTHM brand. With their instruments and voices, Iron Kingdom summon classic Judas Priest, Iron Maiden, and Helloween. Much of what they offer is mid-tempo bruisers featuring energetic riffs and kit work. Opener “Defenders” proves to be the standard bearer for the mid-tempo stuff, with solid instrumentation and the catchiest chorus on the record. Iron Kingdom occasionally reach for Painkiller levels of thrash as well. The high-energy “Eternal Emperor” features some killer riffs and is so much fun it competes with the best in the genre. Only two songs fall below the four-minute mark (“Line of Fire,” “Dark Demands”), and these prove lean, mean thrash machines that inject the album with energy and momentum. Not that I frown upon the longer tracks. Iron Kingdom employs plenty of tricks to keep the music engaging, particularly energetic dueling solos from Osterman and Megan Merrick that are simply a blast.

The crew comprising this Kingdom prove themselves more than capable musicians. Osterman takes the traditional part of NWOTHM literally with a lively performance that mixes Bruce Dickinson and Michael Kiske. He hits the high notes, but has a light gruffness to keep songs from growing treacly sweet. Holmes provides occasional backup duty on some call-and-response portions. When he shouts “Fight or die!” in response to Osterman on “Line of Fire,” it’s just pure fun. Holmes also excels at the bass. This chosen weapon proves omnipresent thanks to the strong mixing, adding meat and groove to the underlying riffs. His terrific bass part on “Blood and Steel” turns that into a track highlight. Merrick and Osterman show off their stuff on the guitars, injecting the standard rhythm sections with some acrobatic fretwork that’s reminiscent of last year’s Helms Deep. Max Friesen handles kit duties with aplomb. His mid-tempo work keeps up a constant near-thrash level of energy to prime listeners for when songs do go to the next level.

Shadows and Dust shows a pretty significant creep in length compared to Iron Kingdom’s prior few albums. I believe this is the result of some slightly better song compositions, but also a little bloat. For the most part, these tunes don’t feel their length, but a few less memorable cuts do cause the record to sag. “Deadhouse Gates” threatens to kill the momentum mid-record as it becomes too repetitive in its final minute. Fortunately, “Line of Fire” comes to the rescue with a crucial momentum boost. Finale “Sacred Fire,” an epic in the vein of classic Maiden, also runs a touch too long, but manages to entertain for most of its seven-minute runtime. While Iron Kingdom don’t tread any new ground, Shadows and Dust nonetheless offers plenty of fun without any major missteps.

The Iron Kingdom has proved to be a worthy and fun place to visit. It’s far less expensive than the budget-breaking Magic Kingdom and far less brutal than the Steel Kingdom.1 Sure you can go back and spin classics like Keeper of the Seven Keys a whole bunch, but it’s also fun to hear some fresh songs in the genre from newer bands who know how to write a good lick or two. While the summer is so far shaping up to be another hot one, Shadows and Dust provides the perfect soundtrack to beat the heat. It’s that cool.

Rating: 3.5/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Self-Released (NA) / Steel Shark Records (EU)
Websites: Bandcamp | Facebook | Official Site
Releases Worldwide: June 5th, 2026

#2026 #35 #CanadianMetal #HeavyMetal #Helloween #HelmsDeep #IronKingdom #IronMaiden #JudasPriest #Jun26 #NWOTHM #Review #Reviews #SelfReleased #ShadowsAndDust #SteelSharkRecords

After careful consideration I've come to the conclusion that Giants & Monsters by #Helloween is their best album ever.

It's also their latest, came out last year. That's actually pretty insane - I know no other #metal band that even comes close to producing their best stuff after a full 40 years of creations.

(Not having to fake powerful duets is a part of the amazingness)

Marius Ianuș: O invocare a necuratului la care acesta a răspuns… Trebuie să renunțăm la Helloween și la aceste muzici spurcate și să ne întoarcem în Biserică și, prin Biserică (altfel e aproape imposibil), la Dumnezeu! 👉 https://c.aparatorul.md/ijdki 👈 #Balaurul #DuhuriNecurate #Helloween #SărbătoriVrăjitorești
https://c.aparatorul.md/ijdki
HELLOWEEN Bringing 40 Years Anniversary Tour To Latin America

Helloween returns to Latin America in 2026 with the 40 Years Anniversary Tour – celebrating four decades of heavy metal, power metal anthems and pure pumpkin madness. The Germans state: “Mexico, Costa Rica, Colombia, Peru, Chile, Argentina and Brazil… get ready for one unforgettable night with the pumpkin army. Grab your tickets now and join

BraveWords - Where Music Lives
Watch HELLOWEEN's Entire 40th Anniversary Show In Osaka; Fan-Filmed Video

Experience the full 2.5 hour celebration of Helloween’s 40 Years Anniversary Tour at Festival Hall in Osaka, Japan on May 7th. The legendary “United” lineup delivered blended four decades of power metal history into one unforgettable night. Fan-filmed video of the entire show courtesy of Takumi Fujiwara can be viewed below. Setlist: “March of Time”

BraveWords - Where Music Lives
Nicht wirklich #neuhier im Fediverse, aber auf dieser Instanz. Metalhead seit ich irgendwann in der Grundschule eine Kassette von #Helloween von einem Klassenkameraden bekommen habe. Und btw, #HeavenShallBurn ist die beste Band der Welt.

The album that makes you want to save the world… but first finish that air guitar solo 🤘🏽🤘🏽🎸🎃

El disco que te hace querer salvar el mundo… pero primero terminar ese solo de air guitar 🤘🏽🤘🏽🎸🎃
#heavymetal #helloween #music #metal #vinyl

It has that provocative and very Helloween-esque quality: energetic, catchy, and with an elegant meanness.🤘🏽🤘🏽🤘🏽🎸

Tiene ese punto provocador y muy Helloween: cañera, pegadiza y con mala leche elegante 🤘🏽🤘🏽🤘🏽🎸
#helloween #heavymetal #metal #music #vinyl

I suck at this whole “take selfies with celebrities” things… I just bumped into Michael Kiske of #Helloween on the streets of Seattle! But instead of stopping and asking for a selfie I just nodded at him when passing. 😅😭🤦🏼‍♂️

…he nodded back. 😂

Teenage me is so mad right now. This band has been a part of my life since the mid-80’s.

50+ me is responding with “I played it cool _on purpose_, we’re all humans here, here probably just wanted to walk in peace anyway.” 😏

🤘🏻

It not only marked Helloween's return to its essence; it was like a fiery oath that reminded power metal who rules when it's done with soul and speed 🤘🏽🤘🏽🤘🏽🎸

No solo marcó el regreso de Helloween a su esencia; fue como un juramento en llamas que recordó al power metal quién manda cuando se hace con alma y velocidad 🤘🏽🤘🏽🤘🏽🎸
#heavymetal #helloween #music #metal #vinyl