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DECEASED Announce Double-Disc Set, March Of The Cadavers, Coming In August
#Deceased #MarchOfTheCadavers #40YearsOfDeathMetal #HellsHeadbangers #DeathMetal #August29 #DoubleCDRelease #AmericanDeathMetal #DeathMetalFromTheGrave #MetalAnniversary
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Deathhammer Announce New Album âCrimson Dawnâ, Promise More Filthy Blackthrash Mayhem
It's coming next month. Deathhammer Announce New Album âCrimson Dawnâ, Promise More Filthy Blackthrash Mayhem .
#Deathhammer #CrimsonDawn #Blackthrash #HellsHeadbangers #NorwegianMetal #ThrashMetal #BlackMetal #NewAlbum #MetalAlbum #August2025
Stuck in the Filter: February 2025âs Angry Misses
By Kenstrosity
February comes down the pipe about two or three months after February. A perfectly normal thing to experience here at AMG HQ, this Filterâs tardiness is brought to you in part by my body getting stuck in one of the tighter conduits that lines the concrete interior of this confounded bunker. My minions are elsewhere, trudging through similar environs, and report their findings to me via eldritch beast telepathy. Since I obviously donât speak eldritch tongue, I have to use my Codex of Enspongification to decipher these antediluvian transmissions. Iâm sure you can imagine, that takes no small measure of time, especially when youâre stuck in this galvanized prison of rusting sheetmetal.
Until my ungrateful minions can find me and rescue meâsomething I donât expect to happen anytime soon considering I give them no workers benefits or pay of any kindâyouâll have to make do with the selections of rough-hewn and sharp, but valuable, ore provided below. OBSERVE AT YOUR OWN RISK!
Kenstrosityâs Crusty Grab
Metaphobic // Deranged Excruciations [February 28th, 2025 â Everlasting Spew Records]
When Atlantan death metal quintet Metaphobic caught my attention with the megalithic riffs opening their debut LP Deranged Excruciations, I thought the stank face it brought out of me might be permanent. Nothing new and nothing sophisticated awaits here. Just brutalizing riffs delivered in a relentless sequence of destruction. Lead guitars squeal and scrape against the swampy ground underfoot, leaving a noxious slime trail behind âMental Deconstructionâ and âExecrationâ that tastes of Tomb Mold, Incantation, and Demilich to varying degrees. Guttural utterances and cacophonicâbut accessibly structuredâriffs offer the same infernal ferocity of the olden ways. However, in a similar manner to Noxis, their application here feels modern and fresh-ish (âExecration,â âVeiled Horizons,â âHypnosis Engramâ). Not nearly as nuanced as that comparison might suggest, Metaphobic are more than satisfied to use their brutish death metal as a cudgel for blunt force trauma. Nods to death doom in long-form wanderings like âDisciples of Vengeanceâ and âInsatiable Abyssâ provide an appreciable variation in pace, though it doesnât always work in Metaphobicâs favor. While those songs tend to meander too long on ideas unfit to support such mass for so long, livid outbursts like âVeiled Horizonsâ and âReconstituted Grey Matterâ more than make up for it. In short Deranged Excruciations commands my attention enough to earn my recommendation here, and my attention going forward.
Tymeâs Missing Minutes
Caustic Phlegm // Purulent Apocalypse [February 28, 2025 â Hells Headbangers]
Caustic Phlegm is the filth project helmed solely by Chestcrush main man Evan Vasilakos, who joyously employed his HM-2 and RAT pedals to create the utter disgustingness that is Purulent Apocalypse. A far cry from the angsty, Iâd-rather-see-humanity-dead blackened death metal of his main outfit, Caustic Phlegm is a throwback to the days when Carnage walked the streets of Sweden and Impetigo was melting faces and killing brain cells. Purulent Apocalypse is a platter of pestiferous riffs (âFouled, Infected & Infested,â âSoft Bones,â âBlister Blissâ), so many itâs like sitting on a death metal toilet puking and shitting riffs ad nauseam. Evanâs drum work, replete with the occasional but very satisfying St. Anger snare tone, drives the mindless fun forward, and the 80âs zombie giallo synth work would have Lucio Fulci himself clawing out of his grave to eat your face. Vasilakosâ vocals are a fine litany of belches, squelches, and gurgles that sound like a colony of maggots cleaning the putrid flesh from a corpulent corpse. Caustic Phlegm is the foul stench of death and will have you reaching for the soap and steel wool as you try to rid yourself of the Purulent Apocalypse infection.
Vermilia // Karsikko [February 14, 2025 â Self Release]
Had the incomparable Darkher not released The Buried Storm in 2022, Vermiliaâs Ruska would have garnered my top spot that year, which put her on my radar for the first time. When I saw Vermiliaâs follow-up, Karsikko had dropped in Februaryâsadly we didnât receive a promoâI jumped at the chance to filter it. While Karsikko is a bit more straightforward than Ruska, itâs full of liltingly beautiful pianos (âKarsikkoâ) that give way to icy black metal riffs (âKansojen Kaipuuâ) and gorgeously rendered folk metal melodies (âKoti,â âVeresiâ). Comparisons with Myrkur and Suldusk would be appropriate, but Vermilia continues to carve out her own space in the folk black metal scene, marrying beatific melody with beastly aggression. Performing all of the music on Karsikko, as is her one-woman calling card, renders her finished products even more impressive. The highlight has always been the voice, though, as Vermilia deftly transitions between angelic cleans (âSuruhymniâ) and frosty rasps (âVakatâ), completing a circle that makes each of her releases a joy to listen to. Itâs confounding that another of Vermiliaâs albums is an independent release, which might be artistically intentional or the result of bone-headed label execs. Either way, donât miss out on Karsikko, as Vermilia shouldnât stay unsigned for long.
Killjoyâs Drowsy Discovery
Noctambulist // Noctambulist II: De Droom [February 7th, 2025 â These Hands Melt]
Although I love blackgaze, I must admit that it can be challenging to find artists who stand out in the genre, whether through quality songwriting or unexpected twists. It turns out that the Dutch band Noctambulist1 offers both. Noctambulist II: De Droom is a fun and fresh blend of Deafheaven-adjacent blackgaze with a Molotov cocktail of post-punk energy. The power chord-driven guitar lines prove to be an unexpectedly compatible fuel source to propel the shimmering, gazey tremolos and blackened rasps to new heights. Many songs (particularly âAderlaterâ and âLichteterâ) start with neat intro melodies that catch the listenerâs attention, then build and ride that momentum throughout the remainder. A faint sense of lossâstemming from the achingly relatable theme of homeownership drifting further out of many peopleâs reachâpervades the record, but there is also an infectious cheerfulness. Despite their name, Noctambulist are hardly sleepwalking as they tread along a well-worn genre.
Thus Spokeâs Disregarded Diamonds
Sacred Noose // Vanishing Spires [February 2nd, 2025 â Breath Sun Bone Blood]
My experience with Irish extreme metal has been that it is all incredibly dark, twisted, and supremely, gorgeously dissonant.2 Belfast3 duo Sacred Noose make absolutely no exception to this rule. Vanishing Spiresâ ruthlessly brief 31 minutes are defined by stomach-tightening twisted blackened death designed to cut to the heart of misery and fear. The lurching sensation brought about by rapid tremolo descents and sudden accelerations of ever more dissonant chords, impenetrable drums, and pitch-shifting feedback is nauseating (âEntranced by Concrete Lathe,â âTrue Emancipationâ). The pure horror of the inhuman, high-pitched shrieks answering the already fearsome bellows is anxiety-inducing (ââBlack Tempests of Promise,â âMoribundâ). The near-constant buzzing of noise is oppressive (âTerminal Prologue,â âTrue Emancipationâ); the creeping, malevolent scales unnerving. And Sacred Noose play with their victim, luring them into a trap of deceptively familiar cavern-core (âSacred Nooseâ) before throwing a hood over their head and yanking them backwards into more horrifying mania; or perhaps theyâll start with the assault (âTrue Emancipationâ). This more âstraightforwardâ edge to Sacred Noose is most akin to a faster Sparagmos, while their dominant, demonic personality I can compare most faithfully to Thantifaxath, if Thantifaxath were more death-metal-inclined. Vanishing Spires is the first time since the latterâs 2023 Hive Mind Narcosis that a record has genuinely made me feel afraid.
Crown of Madness // Memories Fragmented [February 28th, 2025 â Transcending Obscurity Records]
Life unfortunately got in the way of me giving this a proper review, but Crown of Madness deserve better than to slip by unmentioned. Memories Fragmented is the duoâs debut, but Crown of Madness is one of several projects both are already in.4. The ominous yet colourful sci-fi/fantasy cover art and spiky logo scream âtech-deathâ and that is indeed what Crown of Madness deliver. At base, there is some damn fine technical death metal here thatâs impressive and acrobatic (), but snappy, not outstaying its welcomeâthe entire record barely stretches beyond 35 minutes. But there is more to Memories Fragmented, and as a result, it is memorable.5 A drawl to certain refrains (), the tendency to gently sway to a slow, near-pensiveness (), the atmospheric hanging of some tremolos over a warm, dense bass (). There is depth. And it reminded me quite starkly of early Ulcerate. In this vein, the record leans towards the more meandering side of the subgenre, gripping not with hooky riffs and heart-pumping tempos, but an intricate kind of intensity. Memories Fragmented arguably goes too far in the indistinct direction, and as a result, loses immediacy. But the churning, introspective compositions presage the potential for true brilliance on future releases.
Vacuous // In His Blood [February 28th, 2025 â Relapse Records]
Full of youthful vigour, Londonâs Vacuous demonstrate their willing ability to evolve with their sophomore, In His Blood. While debut Dreams of Dysphoria, which I covered back in 2022, played more or less by the disso-death book, here they are already experimenting. Strange, almost post-metal atmosphere now haunts the boundaries (âHunger,â âPublic Humiliation,â âNo Longer Humanâ), combining brilliantly with the bandâs already cavernous death metal sound, and amplifying its fearsomeness. Crowning example of this is the gem Vacuous save for the recordâs final act in closer âNo Longer Human.â In His Blood also sees them flirt with a punkier energy that borrows more than a little bit of malice from the blackened handbook (âIn His Blood,â âFlesh Paradeâ), backed up by d-beats, and contrasting well with their now less frequent crawls. At its most explosive, In His Blood feels downright unhinged, in the best way (âStress Positions,â âImmersionâ), but it never feels messy, and thereâs potential in here for Vacuous to evolve into yet another, incredibly potent form of unique, modern hybrid extreme metal. I wish there were more than 30 minutes of this.
Dolphin Whispererâs Bottom oâ the Barrel Boons
Pissgrave // Malignant Worthlessness [February 21st, 2025 â Profound Lore Records]
Though it may appear, at a glance, that I have gold-colored glasses for bands of rank and urological reference, Iâd call it more of a chance happening that such miscreant acts have created intriguing works. And, truthfully, PISSGRAVE has leaned closer to filth first, function second with the war-leaning crackle (and brazenly offensive cover art) that relegates their lineage to corners of listening ears who need therapy with a high tolerance for guts and grime. Malignant Worthlessness, of course, is not accessible by any means, though, despite these Philly boys packing these nine ode to a failed society in a package that doesnât cause immediate squirm. But with grooves trapped in an endless skronk and blast, and vocals shifted and layered to reflect the sound of a swarm of Daffy Ducks with a serious disdain for life, PISSGRAVE still embodies an endless swirl of unleashed aggression rendered in riffed and regurgitated form. Malignant Worthlessness lives on the dry and crispy side with most of its tones, which allows copious hits of quick delay and reverb on OUGHs and EEEEEEEUGHs to land with an extra psychedelic knocking when you least expect it. Little slows down the pain train here, with tracks like âHeaping Pile of Electrified Goreâ and âInternment Orgyâ taking brief detours into chunky guitar builds that feel within grasp of normalcy just before dropping back into an intensified flaying. Elsewhere, a martial urgency that reminds of Paracletus-era Deathspell Omega or the industrial-tinged pummel of Concrete Winds, stirs a twitching movement response, all while retaining a grinding death snarl and chromatic fury, leading its fused-by-hatred structures toward an explosive and fuming conclusion. Humanity has no place in the PISSGRAVE environs, and Malignant Worthlessness, in its celebration of a hostile world, does everything it can to reinforce that.
ç”æ«ćè·Ż // ç”端ăăćŒăć„ăă [February 20th, 2025 â Self Release]
For things that wander around the math rock world, nailing a vibe remains essential to enjoyment. Itâs all too easy in this day and edge to fall into the comfortable trap of ambient tapping and comfortable posty swirls to pleasant crescendos that renders many modern acts to high brow background music (even including bands I like, to a degree, like Covet or Jizue). New Japanese act ç”æ«ćè·Ż,6 however, chooses to imbue their nimble and tricky instrumental center with the searing emotion and urgency of a noisy post-hardcore, with searing vocal inclusions adding a gravitas to passages that would otherwise threaten to flutter away in glee (âèȘ€æź,â âç„ăăăăâ). On one end, ç”æ«ćè·Ż delivers a bright playfulness that swings with the pedal power and psychedelia of a young Tera Melos. Yet, weighted with a punk urgency and rawer Japanese assembly of tones, which give a physical clang to tight kit heads and blazing squeal to shrill loops and feedback, ç”æ«ćè·Ż finds a constant momentum in their shorter form excursion that makes my lack of understanding of its introspective lyrics a non-issue. Packing plaintive piano melodies (âăèȘç±ă« â), speaker blowing synth cranking (âdgdf++beâ), and prog-tinged guitar flutters (âç„ăăăăâ) into one listening session isnât easy, but with this debut outing of ç”端ăăćŒăć„ăă,7 ç”æ«ćè·Ż makes it seem as if theyâve been honing the craft for years.
Saundersâ Salacious Skeeves
Möuth // Gobal Warning [February 14th, 2025 â Self Release)
Veteran rockers The Hellacopters returned with a typically rollicking, fun album in February. Elsewhere, dropping with little fanfare, fellow Swedes and unsung power trio Möuth emerged with an intriguing debut rock platter, entitled Global Warning. Featuring more than meets the eye and flashing a dynamic rock sound, Möuth embrace both retro and modern influences, whipped into an infectious concoction of styles, ranging from Sabbathian lurches, doomy grooves, stoner vibes, and elements of psych, punk and hard rock. For the most part it works a treat, creating a welcome change of pace. Fuzzy, upbeat rockers (âDirt,â âAppetiteâ) snugly reside amongst moody, psych-bending numbers (âAlike,â âMantraâ), and heavier doom-laden rock, such as powerful opener âHoly Ground,â and brooding, emotive album centerpiece, âSheep.â Vocally, the passionate, Ozzy-esque croons hit the spot, matching up well to the bandâs multi-pronged rock flavors. Compact and infectious, varied in delivery and featuring enough tasty rhythms, fuzzy melodies and rock punch to satisfy, Global Warning marks an intriguing starting point for these Swedish rockers.
Chaos Inception // Vengeance Evangel [February 21st, 2025 â Lavadome Productions]
Emerging from a deep slumber in the depths of the underground, Alabamaâs long dormant death metal crew Chaos Inception returned with their first album since 2012âs The Abrogation. Third album Vengeance Evangel went under the radar, festering unclaimed in the promo sump. After the fact, the albumâs crushing, controlled chaos smacked me upside the skull with a violent modern interpretation of the classic Floridian death metal sound, with the musty hues of Tucker-era Morbid Angel most prevalent. This is blast-riddled, relentless stuff, played expertly by the trio of Matt Barnes (guitars), Gray White (vocals) and session drummer Kevin Paradis (ex-Benighted). Incredibly dense, atmospheric, and blazingly fast, Vengeance Evangel is a brutal, knotty, technical hammering, punctuated by sick, wildly inventive soloing. While not traditionally catchy, Vengeance Evangel is the kind of intense, layered death metal album that gets under the skin, grafting a deeper impression across repeated listens. The insane tempo shifts, jigsaw arrangements, and wickedly deranged axework delivers big time. From the violent, intricate throes of opener âArtillery of Humwawa,â and disturbed soundscapes of âLa Niebla en el Cementerio Etrusco,â through to the brutish grooves of âThymos Beast,â and exotic, tech death shards of âEmpire of Prevarication,â Vengeance Evangel does not neatly fit into any one subgenre category but ticks many boxes to cast a wide appeal to death fans of varied equations.
Steel Druhmâs Viscous Biscuits
Ereb Altor // HĂ€lsingemörker [ February 7th, 2025 â Hammerheart Records]
Steel loves his epic metal. I was raised on the stirring odes to swordsmanship and ungovernable back hair from Manowar and Cirth Ungol, and in time, I took a place at the great table in Wotanâs Golden Halls to appreciate the Viking metal exploits of Bathory and later adherents like Falkenbach and Moonsorrow. Swedenâs Ereb Altor got in the game late with their epic By Honour debut in 2008, boasting a very Bathory-esque sound and emotional tapestry that felt larger-than-life and stirred the loins to begird themselves. 10th album HĂ€lsingemörker is a glorious return to those halls of heroes and bravery. This is the large-scale songcraft first heard on Bathory albums like Hammerheart and Twilight of the Gods, and itâs most welcome to these ape ears. Cuts like âValkyrian Fateâ are exactly the kind of sweeping, epic numbers the bandâs excelled at over the years. It takes the core sound of Viking era Bathory and builds outward to craft bombastic and heroic compositions that feel HUUUGE. Itâs the kind of metal song that embiggens the soul and makes you want to take on a marauding horde by your lonesome and usurp all their battle booty. On âHĂ€lsingemörker,â you get a fat dose of Moonsorrow worship, and elsewhere, Primordial is strongly referenced to very good effect. HĂ€lsingemörker is easily the best Ereb Altor album in a while and the most in line with their beloved early sound. Strap on the sword and get after it!
#AmericanMetal #Arboreal #Benighted #BlackMetal #BlackSabbath #Blackgaze #BreathSunBoneBlood #Carnage #CausticPhlegm #ChaosInception #Chestcrush #ConcreteWinds #Coscradh #Covet #CrownOfMadness #Darkher #Deafheaven #DeathDoom #DeathMetal #DeathspellOmega #Demilich #DerangedExcruciations #DissonantDeathMetal #DustAge #EmbodimentOfDeath #ErebAltor #EverlastingSpewRecords #FolkMetal #GlobalWarning #HĂ€lsingemörker #HellsHeadbangers #Impetigo #InHisBlood #Incantation #IrishMetal #JapaneseMetal #jizue #Karsikko #LavadomeProductions #MalignantWorthlessness #MathRock #MelodicBlackMetal #MemoriesFragmented #Metaphobic #MorbidAngel #Möuth #Myserion #Noctambulist #NoctambulistIIDeDroom #Noxis #OzzyOsbourne #Pissgrave #PostMetal #postPunk #ProfoundLoreRecords #PurulentApocalypse #RelapseRecords #Rock #SacredNoose #SelfRelease #SelfReleased #SermonOfFlames #Sparagmos #SwedishMetal #TechnicalDeathMetal #TerZiele #TeraMelos #Thantifaxath #TheHelicopters #TheseHandsMelt #TombMold #TranscendingObscurityRecords #UKMetal #Ulcerate #Vacuous #VanishingSpires #VengeanceEvangel #Vermilia #VultureSVengeance #ç”æ«ćè·Ż #ç”端ăăćŒăć„ăă
Australian black metallist Lament In Winterâs Night releases a second long-player, Whereunto The Twilight Leads. The band Lament In Winterâs Night is another one-person operation of The Seer. A busâŠ
Stuck in the Filter: May 2024âs Angry Misses
By Kenstrosity
I thought the onset of summer would mean a total solar beatdown. Instead, itâs brought the rain. Absolutely chucking down rain. But, if you thought that bad weather leads to mercy from me, youâre dead wrong. In fact, I pushed my minions even harder to dredge up as many waterlogged nuggets of notable ore from our perpetually overtaxed filtration system.
And so, as my âstaff,â who are definitely paid (donât look into it) dry off in the industrial-grade wind tunnel, allow me to introduce Mayâs Filter entries for a public I truly donât care about at all (donât look into it). BEHOLD!
Icebergâs Divisive Defenstrations
Cobra The Impaler // Karma Collision [May 24th, 2024 â Listenable Records]
Belgiumâs Cobra The Impaler bill themselves as carrying the torch of classic-era Mastodon, a band hitting so many spectrums of metal comparing oneâs music to theirs is a much safer bet than not. Led by primary songwriter and ex-Aborted guitarist Tace DC, the band sit somewhere in the murky grey between progressive and technical modern metal. The aforementioned Mastodon worship is strong hereâespecially in opener âMagnetic Hexââalthough the crystal clean production by Jens Borgren really prevents the use of the term âsludge.â Elsewhere there are prog-metal moments of Virus/Vector-era Haken (âKarma Collision,â âThe Fountainâ) and some of the relentless, drums-in-front compositions of Gojira (âKarma Collision,â âThe Assassins of the Visionâ). Vocalist Manuel Remmerieâs also has his work cut out for him, delivering plenty of admirable cleans in both high and low registers alongside full-throated screams and somewhat less effective pitched growls. The instrumental performances here are top-notch, professional in the verse/chorus sections, and continuouslyâsometimes outstandinglyâcreative in the free-form bridges. There is some tightening to be done with the accessibility of the chorusesâthey fall flat against the superior instrumental sectionsâ but there are moments of brilliance and a ton of potential in this five-piece.
Capstan // The Mosaic [May 24th, 2024 â Fearless Records]
Anyone whoâs plugged into the post-hardcore scene should know that Floridaâs Capstan transcend theârightfully deservedâvitriol thrown at the style. I donât think any Fearless band has ever been reviewed here, but Capstanâs latest opus The Mosaic deserves a shoutout to whomever hasnât run screaming from these halls. Led by vocalist Anthony DeMarioâsure to be a divisive figure with his unapologetic pop punk cleansâthe band has continuously augmented their Warped-core sound with the mathy guitar noodlings of Chon or Polyphia, and an impressive triple vocalist attack for thick, elaborate harmonies. This album, clocking in at over an hour, doesnât pull any punches, showcasing trip-hop, breakdown-laced numbers (âBete Noireâ), full throated anthems about self-loathing and heartbreak (âMisery Sceneâ) and even lighter, crooning ballads (âWhat Can I Sayâ). Synergy and professionalism are where the band shine; everything has is slickly produced and the performancesâespecially those vocalsâare whip-smart. Plenty of editing could have been done, but you can tell how much fun the band is having. Anyone with a passing interest or nostalgia for 2000âs post-hardcore should check this out. Plus their drummer plays with traditional grip, and watching a jazz guy slam out breakdowns is pretty rad in my book.
GardensTaleâs Dose of Decay
Strychnos // Armageddon Patronage [May 17th, 2024 â Dark Descent Records]
I donât always check out albums that set the comment section and/or Discord abuzz, but when I do, it rarely results in anything less than interesting. Case in point, the bottomless evil of Strychnos, a Danish outfit that struggled to get off the ground in the early 00âs, eked out a single EP in the 10âs, and suddenly started shitting out heaving platters of malicious black/death since the pandemic. Armageddon Patronage is the second full-length off their new production line, and it brings every horseman along for its deadly ride. War is embodied by the lethal double feature that starts the charge, with swelling riffs battering the unjust to fertilizer. The unflinching and unfeeling brutality of Famine seethes from âChoking Salvation,â and out the beaks of âPale Black Birdsâ pours Pestilence with slavering enthusiasm. Frontman Martin Leth Anderson, who also handles bass for Undergang, employs a bellowing growl that encapsulates hopelessness and suffering, and the excellent, malevolent riffs usher an effective aura of utter destruction. Death, however, comes not at the end, but during the doom-laden centerpiece, the despondent âEndless Void Dimensionâ with its atmospheric Gregorian chanting. I have no qualms becoming a patron to this spiteful chunk of armageddon.
Dear Hollowâs Shtanky Shwamp of Shrieks
Saidan // Visual Kill: The Blossoming of Psychotic Depravity [May 24th, 2024 â Self-Released]
Saidan do things a little differently. The Nashville duoâs themes rooted in Japanese folklore and the formidable and mysterious yokai in particular, combined with a relentlessly riffy and punk-driven tour-de-force of black metal proportions are always food for thought in the actâs brief and formidable history. Seamlessly transitioning between punk chord progressions and bouncy drums to blastbeats and kvlt tremolo to groovy riffs and rhythms, anchored by Splatterpvnkâs ripping vocals, it never shies away from punishment. However, interwoven with this assault is a distinctly melodic undercurrent that brightens the progressions and gives purpose and a sense of fun â a hyper-melodic black metal act would be jealous. You wonât be able to shake the grooves of âDesecration of a Lustful Illusion,â the symphonic black intensity of âGenocidal Bloodfiendâ and âVeins of the Wickedâ hit you like a cyclone, and the classic thrash solos and anime-theme-song vibe of âSick Abducted Purity,â âVisual Kill,â and âSwitchblade Paradiseâ are guaranteed to get your head banging â plus, the interlude âseraphic lullabyâ and instrumental closer âsufferâ ainât half bad. Visual Kill is like if Powerglove wrote a black metal album that you could actually take seriously, backed up with the technicality, songwriting chops, and sheer unbridled energy to make it work.
Parfaxitas // Weaver of the Black Moon [May 31st, 2024 â Terratur Possessions]
The minds behind Parfaxitas should need little introduction, although the moniker will likely not ring any bells. Representing three separate scenes and their respective contributions to black metal lore, two American stringsmen from acts Merihem, Suffering Hour, and Manetherean, Icelandic drummer B.E. from Almyrkvi, Sinmara, Slidhr, and Wormlust, and Norwegian vocalist K.R. From Whoredom Rife collide. Weaver of the Black Moon combines the blueprint of second-wave Norwegian black with the obsidian dissonance of Icelandic, and the experimental edge of American acts, making it a tour-de-force of both vicious sound and tortured atmosphere. Dissonance rains down like acid, a backdrop, and shroud of otherworldly sounds that shimmer and crunch in ways that recall both the winding passages of Suffering Hour and the psychedelic rawness of Wormlust simultaneously. Hammered by vicious blastbeats and guided by tortured barks, the guitar and meandering fluid bass guide listeners from untouchable intensity (âThou Shalt Worship No Otherâ) to haunting and hypnotic atmosphere (âRavens of Dispersionâ) â stealing the show. Parfaxitas features a whole lot of firepower, culminating in epic closer âFields of Nightmares,â a crescendo of punishing and otherworldly proportions.
Aseitas // Eden Trough [May 30th, 2024 â Total Dissonance Worship]
After Aseitasâ formidable 2020 album False Peace, which narrowly missed my AOTYâs, the Portland trio is back with another album â which could easily be classified as an EP in its tidy thirty-minute runtime. Eden Trough condenses the lofty and decadent ambition of its predecessor for an album devoted to complete takedown in winding riffs, punishing death metal, and ravaging vocals. From the thick and punishing signature shifts of âLibertine Captorâ and âAlabaster Bones,â complete with shifting riffs and a liminal sense of melody, to the more droning and haunting âBreak the Neck of Every Beautiful Thing,â to the epic and cosmic psychedelia of ten-minute centerpiece âTiamat,â Aseitasâ shows its tantalizing and gradual progression to an echelon of indispensable in the world of dissonant death. Offering influences of convulsive mathcore, mammoth post-metal, and unhinged yet intensely calculated technicality, Eden Trough is a must-listen for the long-time fan, as well as proffering a snapshot to the curious of what makes Aseitas so special to begin with.
Dolphin Whispererâs Progalicious Ponderings
Azure // Fym [May 23rd, 2024 â Self Release]
Are you way into high fantasy and exuberant, progressive albums that reflect that sentiment? If so, look no further than Azureâs third opus, Fym, which over its runtime recounts the tales of a mystical foxâs journey in a frightening and whimsical world. Normally I wouldnât think twice about an album with such a storybook concept.1 But between Chris Sampsonâs vocal navigations that ring as hyper-tenor and dolphin-like (âThe Lavender Foxâ)2 as they do sullen and heart-wrenching (âKingdom of Ice and Light,â âMoonriseâ), and Galen Stapleyâs mystical fretboard wizardry that marries funk chords, soundtrack melodies, and dance-able shred, Azure packs too much sunshine in their prog for me to ignore. And at almost eighty minutes, they pack a lot of it too. However, each run through Fymâs pages finds a new rumbling bass bounce to propel a hop, a new vocal run to twirl my tongue (with notes that I couldnât possibly hit), or a synthfully sinful refrain to stain my brain matter with happy juiceââThe Azdinist // Den of Dawnsâ or âAgentic Stateâ unite these ideas bestâitâs truly a hard album to put down. Combining just about every era of Genesis with the acrobatics of Dream Theater, the play and ambition of the earliest of Pain of Salvation theatrics, and healthy dose of modern bastardizations (check the autotune/pitchshifting on âDoppelgĂ€ngerâ), Azure has made a mighty statement with Fym that Iâm still digesting. And with as many inventive synth patches, harmonic vocal layers, and cinematic builds as this rainbow dose of prog pushes, itâll be quite some time before Iâve made up my mind about it all. So Iâll continue in pieces. Or all at once. Whatever time allows because Fym is just that much fun.
PreHistoric Animals // Finding Love in Strange Places [May 16th, 2024 â Dutch Music Works]
And here we are with, whatâs that, another prog concept album? This oneâs a little less terrestrial though, featuring healthy infusions of a futuristic space drama and heavy-hitting synthwave doots and bounces. Over the course of their past couple works, PreHistoric Animals has found an ease in comfortable exploration with their Kingâs X-like tendency to grip with a barbed verse melody or chorus explosion, layered tastefully with harmonic vocal accompaniment and groove-heavy riffs. But, despite that comparison, itâs clear from the opening synth pulse of âThe City of My Dreamsâ and âLiving in a World of Blissâ that an electronic and hooky identity thatâs caught between Toto and Yes imbues the edges of refrains that stick like honey to vocalist Stefan Altzarâs easy-on-the-ears narrative. Finding Love in Strange Places can get bogged down a touch in its word-driven nature, though, especially on the various interludes and certain longer tracks like âUnbreakableâ and âNothing Has Changed but Everything Is Different.â None of that fluff ever truly interrupts Finding Loveâs heartbeat rhythms, which hold a steady if highly syncopated simplicity and form a hi-hat charming vessel that keeps the head nodding in progressive pomp. Oh, and it helps that guitarists Altzar and Daniel Magdic (ex-Pain of Salvation) have studied the slow-burn solo nature of greats like David Gilmour (Pink Floyd) and Brian May (Queen), with tasteful legato and searing ascensions aiding in earned crescendo at Finding Loveâs best moments (âLiving in a World of Bliss,â âThe Secret of Goodnessâ). Having reliably churned out confident and catchy works every other years since 2018, PreHistoric Animals fly relatively low in the flock of modern prog, but these space-bound Swedes have earned a likely lifelong aquatic fan at this stage of their growing career. Give Love a chance!
Matrass // Cathedrals [May 17th, 2024 â La Tangente Label]
And, last but not least from my assortment, Matrass hails from France to bring you Cathedrals, which is⊠yes, you guessed it, another prog concept album! If youâre worried about another album of the synthtastic and 80s prog-themed variety, though, donât fret about what Matrass brings to the table. Playing closer to post than progressive waters, Cathedrals flitters about dreamy, lounge jazz guitar passages before crushing down with Cult of Luna riffs and Tesseract-inspired, low-end atmospherics. But most important to the groove and cinematic lilt that defines Cathedrals is the methods by which vocalist ClĂ©mentine Browne navigates jangling verses with gentle croons and accented, rhythmic spoken word before frying down with screeching and hissing fervor against heavy chord crushes. That talent for establishing and reinforcing mood lands idiosyncratic in the realm of post acts, so her exact methods may not fit the bill for all fans of the rise-and-fall aesthetic the genre offers. And though Matrass remains largely iterative of this mood through its hour-long run, itâs that successful idea of atmosphere that allows peak tracks âShreds,â âAdriftâ (which features Browne on saxophone instead), and âCathedralsâ to conjure such powerful and drifting thoughts in my head. And when youâre in its valleys? Matrass still maintains a textural backdrop that spells high potential for this young act.
Saundersâ Sulfuric Stash
Desolus // System Shock [March 10th, 2024 â Hells Headbangers]
Whoâs up for some explosive, throwback thrashy goodness? Although hailing from the States, Desolus take plenty of inspiration from classic German trash titans Kreator, Destruction and Sodom. Throw in classic Dark Angel vibes, a heavy, modern edge and crunchy production job, and the bandâs debut System Shock ticks all the boxes for a thrashing great time. This shit is seriously jacked with unhinged, old-school aggression, spitfire riffs and stampeding percussion propelling the albumâs ten speed-driven assaults. An utterly deranged, â80s underground-inspired vocal performance adds further steel-plated authenticity to a retro-minded sound that manages to sound fresh and inspired. Aside from rare moments of slower melodic nuance on the otherwise blistering âSea of Fire,â and the aptly titled âInterludeâ providing a handy breather, Desolus crank speed and intensity to the max, rarely breaking from their relentless stride. The opening one-two salvo of âSystem Shockâ and bonkers lunacy of âFrom Man to Machineâ set a savage tone and gritty platform from which Desolus launch assault after assault of high-octane thrash mania. âCures of the Technomancerâ is an absolute riff beast with groove and speed for days, while âThe Invasion Beginsâ deftly puts you in a false sense of bouncy melodic security before jamming the afterburners into a typically ferocious attack. Exuberant, nasty stuff.
Terminal Nation // Echoes of the Devilâs Den [May 3rd, 2024 â 20 Buck Spin]
The second album from Pittsburgh bruisers Terminal Nation hits with sledgehammer force, obliterating any semblance of subtlety in favor of an extra beefy, in-your-face hybrid of death metal and hardcore. Echoes of the Devilâs Den features a searing, politically charged and seriously pissed-off bite. High-profile guest vocal slots seamlessly blend into the vicious attack, including strong turns from Integrityâs Dwid Hellion (âRelease the Serpentsâ), Killswitch Engageâs Jesse Leach (âMerchants of Bloodshedâ) and Nails frontman Todd Jones. Jones features on âWritten by the Victor,â a vicious tune that harnesses thick, neck-wrecking grooves and punishing, doom-laden death grooves. The albumâs hardcore influence and political slant may turn off certain listeners, but those who donât mind some hardcore in their death stew should find plenty to like here. The gritty, muscular exterior features nods to Bolt Thrower and All Shall Perish, while the weighty, mid-paced crush, chunky riffs and breakdowns are balanced by tasteful melodic counterpoints and livelier bursts of speed (âDying Aliveâ). Not all works; the provocative, anti-police song âNo Reform (New Age Slave Patrol)â musically has its moments; however, the heavy-handed lyrical approach sticks out like a sore thumb. Nevertheless, Echoes of the Devilâs Den swings and slugs you more often than it misses.
Steel Druhmâs Sewer Tarts
The Troops of Doom // A Mass to the Grotesque [May 31, 2024 â Alma Mater Records]
For their sophomore outing, Brazilian death-thrashers The Troops of Doom took their vintage Sepultura-esque sound and juiced it up considerably from what we heard on 2022s Antichrist Reborn. A Mass to the Grotesque still sounds a bunch like classic Sepultura but itâs much more refined, developed and expanded in scope. Yet itâs still a frenzied, thrashing assault full of lyrics about evil, demons, and all things anti-Christian. It sounds like something that should have dropped in as the 80s thrash wave started mutating into proto-death, and that is a beloved era of music for yours Steely. Songs like âChapels of the Unholyâ and âDawn of Mephistoâ sit right on the bleeding edge of thrash and early death, with Slayer-tastic riffs colliding with early examples of death grooves. What makes this so entertaining is how the band reaches outside of the Sepultura homage bubble to drag in new elements to expand their sound. Some songs feel slightly progressive (âDenied Divinityâ) while elsewhere they shoehorn epic doom into the massive âPsalm 7:8 â God of Bizarre.â The straight-up riffbeasts are my favorites though, with âThe Imposter Kingâ being a big, fat, sweaty highlight. While these cats are always going to get compared to classic Sepultura, they made real efforts here to stake out their own identity. This is a wild, testosterone-fueled ride featuring the maximum allowable Satan, and I support that.
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