Casually encountered this awesome track and decided to share it because it's awesome.
#KEYGENCHURCH #ElectronicMusic
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Cya2MV_GRI

Casually encountered this awesome track and decided to share it because it's awesome.
#KEYGENCHURCH #ElectronicMusic
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Cya2MV_GRI

Sometimes if you're having a stressful time, what you really need is a pair of headphones, some Keygen Church and the solitaire from Last Call BBS.
Aujourd'hui sur Blog Ă part â
Keygen Church: Nel Nome del Codice
Aujourdâhui, je vais vous parler de musique liturgique. Aucun rapport avec mon boulot puisquâil sâagit du nouvel album de Keygen Church, Nel Nome del Codice.
Heavy Moves Heavy 2024 â AMGâs Ultimate Workout Playlist
By Ferox
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.
The AMG Iron Movers Collective is a man down this year, as the crush of Listurnalia duties prevented Steel Druhm from forging a third consecutive contribution. The four remaining protein ponies on staff (myself, Kenstrosity, Thus Spoke, and Holdeneye) dug deeper into our Codices of Suffering to bring you a list of sufficient girth. Here are the songs released in 2024 that dominated our respective workouts. The resulting playlist is appended to this article. Play it straight through or set it to shuffle; HMH is designed to work either way. From our oubliette to yours, may these battle-hardened tracks fuel your gains in the new year.
There is also an intruder this time around, as Dolphin Whisperer drops by semi-invited to share his favorite tracks suitable for The Things That Dolph Does. That playlist, suitable for blood pressure-reducing pursuits off all kinds, is compiled separately.
Ferox Snorts His Pre-Workout Powder :
âDrill the Skullâ // Necrot (Lifeless Birth) â Kicking things off with one of the yearâs premiere bangers. The implied subject song title is a staple of my workout playlists, because it sounds like someoneâs giving me orders. (You) âDrill the Skullâ! I will! I will drill the skull.
âGod Slayerâ // Vredehammer (God Slayer) â Stand tall. Stand proud. Stand strong. Wage war. Lots of implied subject goodness in this one. Vredehammerâs latest may have been a mild disappointment, but it did throw off the Workout Song oâthe Year.
âNumidian Knowledgeâ // Necrowretch (Swords of Daijal) â Numidian communities cultivated cereals such as wheat and barley, and legumes such as beans, peas, and lentils. Thereâs nothing inherently sinister about that body of knowledge, but this Necrowretch ripper will make you feel like you just consummated a black bargain in exchange for one final rep.
âInto the Court of Yanluowangâ // Ripped to Shreds (Sanshi) â The opener to this killer slab beats you up with five minutes of punk-inflected death metal before rewarding you with the Guitar Solo oâthe Year.
âThe Way of Decayâ // Sentient Horror (In Service of the Dead) â Dropping in some 3.0 Swedeath in honor of Absent Geezer Steel Druhm. I personally thought he underrated the new one from Jerseyâs Sentient Horror, which kicks off with this scabby statement of purpose.
âAristocratic Suicidal Black Metalâ // Spectral Wound (Songs of Blood and Mire) â Early Bathory remains a stalwart of the original Heavy Moves Heavy playlist. âA Fine Day to Dieâ is one of a dozen or so songs that have never rotated off the List in its twelve or so years of existence. Ferox Song oâthe Year âAristocratic Suicidal Black Metalâ succeeds bigly in carrying Quorthonâs torch into new battles.
âHordes of the Horned Godâ // Hellbutcher (Hellbutcher) â The saliva-flecked excretions of Nifelheim and Impaled Nazarene have likewise graced the original Heavy Moves Heavy time and again. I wish there was a song called âHellbutcherâ on Hellbutcherâs Hellbutcher, but this supergroup led by Nifelheimâs front man answers the bell in every other way on their debut.
âInfernal Bustâ // Demiser (Slave to the Scythe) â This song, near as I can tell, is about having it off with a demon. When you get swole, your opportunities to fuck demons, babadooks, and wendigos grow right along with your musclesâso this is included to goose you along.
âWormridden Torsoâ // Stenched (Purulence Gushing from the Grave) â Adrian from Stenched has crafted a guitar tone most unpleasant and motivating. Finish your set so youâre closer to the end of the song and you can get it out of your earholes.
âDisattachment of a Prophylactic in the Brainâ // Undeath (More Insane) â Hereâs a jolt of caffeine to get you through the muddy middle of your workout. This track gambols madly about, slapping you in the face to wake you from your Stenched-coma.
âSecond Demonâ // Void Witch (Horripilating Presence) â The Void Witch sound fires on all cylinders here, and so will you as you listen to this track. The grunge-descended guitar solo toward the end of track is one of 2024âs great moments.
âMammothâs Handâ // The Black Dahlia Murder (Servitude) â This cut from the The Black Dahlia Murderâs worthy new effort gives me those classic Deflorate-era vibes. I listened to that album while doing my strength training for a martial arts tournament, and âMammothâs Handâ feels like it could slide in between âBlack Valorâ and âNecropolis.â
Kenstrosity Bursts Through His Own Workout Gear:
âPain Enduringâ // Replicant (Infinite Mortality) â They say âno pain, no gain.â Or at least they used to. Some assert this to be a debunked myth, but regardless, I live to feel the gainz. This absolute blunderbuss of groove and riff mastery by Replicant ensures progressive overload and personal bests from every movement. 2
âXetinal Artificeâ // Karst (Eclipsed Beneath Umbral Divine) â You know your workout is going to leave you a trembling puddle on the ground when your trainer walks you into the crustiest, rustiest facility imaginable. Thusly, Karstâs âXetinal Artificeâ leaves me a trembling puddle on the ground after a brutal session of crusty death metal riffs.
âPure Adrenaline Hard-Onâ // Scumbag (Homicide Cult) â Some people rely on preworkout and supplements to energize them before a hard workout. I donât need that. I have the hyper-effective hype machine that is Scumbagâs âPure Adrenaline Hard-On.â Everything you need is right in the name!
âSturmtruppâ // Kanonenfieber (Die Urkatastrophe) â One day per week (sometimes two if Iâm feeling frisky), I engage in high-intensity or high-endurance cardio training. That means speed. That means form. That means rhythm. That means something to keep me motivated and focused. Nothing beats Kanonenfieberâs âSturptruppâ for that exact regimen.
âLeviathanâ // Keres (Homo Homini Lupus) â Sometimes the only way to get me through my workout is to find my inner animal and let it rampage through the last few sets. The earth-shattering stomp of Keresâ âLeviathanâ is the perfect elixir to entice that inner beast into meatspace.
âPaths of Visceral Fearsâ // Noxis (Violence Inherent in the System) â Fear is the enemy of gainz. However, the only way past fear is through fear. Thatâs where Noxisâ âPaths of Visceral Fearsâ and its multitudinous motivating riffs come into play. How can you be scared of that crazy heavy lift when youâve got Noxis spotting you?
âDevil in the Basementâ // Unhallowed Deliverance (Of Spectres and Strife) â The sheer heft of this track alone makes all of my personal bests look like warmups. That gives me something to strive for! Between immense grooves, crushing riffs, and a relentless pace, Unhallowed Deliveranceâs âDevil in the Basementâ urges me to my peak form.
âLust for the Severed Headâ // Fit for an Autopsy (The Nothing That Is) â Deathcore is always a great source of meatheaded riffs. Fit for an Autopsy pull a rare card, however, with âLust for the Severed Head.â Seamlessly blending muscular grooves with a technical prowess rarefied, âLust for the Severed Headâ inspires me to push that final rep past failure every time.
âOf Pillars and Treesâ // Brodequin (Harbinger of Woe) â Youâd think material like this would be too dense to serve gym hours well. However, Brodequinâs âOf Pillars and Treesâ swaggers so confidently into the land of steel and sweat that one canât help but follow it directly to the bench.
âIn Your Gutsâ // Glassbone (Deaf to Suffering) â Slam is probably the best vehicle for pacing and focus in the weight room. Nothing gives me a better metronome to maximize my breathing, and perfect my form. The insanely gritty, nasty, hardcore-twisted ways of Glassboneâs âIn Your Gutsâ ensures that I donât deviate from the ideal path to GAINZ.
âMucus, Phlegm and Bileâ // Stenched (Prurulence Gushing from the Coffin) â When youâre lifting heavy, the more viscous and vile the tunes, the greater the gainz. Enter Stenchedâs âMucus, Phlegm and Bile.â Boasting marvellously heavy tones and spans of d-beat expulsions perfect for high intensity training, Stenched will help you shatter your PRs every time.
âPlant-Based Anatomyâ // Flaaghra (Plant-Based Anatomy) â In my lifelong journey towards tree-trunk legs, it pays to have tunes that embody the stalwart strength of the mighty sequoia to keep me motivated. And so, when leg day #2 comes around in my weekly routine, I jam âPlant-Based Anatomy,â Flaaghraâs brutal slam stomping set at a perfect pace for brutal leg routines.
Holdeneye Practices Radical Body Acceptance:
âBrotherhood of Sleepâ // Aborted (Vault of Horrors) â Nothing, I repeat nothing, is more important to long-term gainz development than sleep. I donât know what this universe-crushing song is actually about, but I like to imagine it promoting a fraternity of people who value getting to bed at a decent hour.
âWe Slitherâ // Unhallowed Deliverance (Of Spectres and Strife) â The proper tunage is essential if youâre going to transform your garter snake arms into pythons, and this particular track never fails to engorge each and every one of my serpentine members.
âBerserkirâ // Brothers of Metal (Fimbulvinter) â Ah, the obligatory inclusion of a song about Vikings going ape-shit. Songs about raging Norsepeople always add +1 to my Strength saving throws, and this one has had me on a roll lately.
âFall of the Leafâ // Brodequin (Harbinger of Woe) â Donât forget to grow those glutes! The cover model on Harbinger of Fate is demonstrating just how brutal the abductor machine can be (notice the ropes for added resistance!), but having a superior posterior is always worth the effort.
âShadows of the Brightest Nightâ // Necrophobic (In the Twilight Grey) â Groove is the secret to just about every great gym song, and this might be Necrophobicâs grooviest tune yet. Its shadows have been brightening the darkest corners of my garage gym all year long.
âLa Chiave Del Mio Amorâ // Keygen Church (Nel Name Del Codice) â Organ music sets my organ juices to flowing, and lifting to this Bachian banger always leaves my body feeling Baroque-en in the best way possible.
âThe Temple Firesâ // Pneuma Hagion (From Beyond) â Iâd like to think that I treat my body like a temple, but I routinely offer more calories unto my inner altar than its fires can consume. Perma-bulking isnât a choice, itâs a lifestyle!
âWeaponized Lossâ // Vitriol (Suffer & Become) â But, if I am ever going to end my perma-bulk, it will take an enormous amount of motivation, and this militant beatdown might be just what I need to brave the no manâs land that is caloric deficit.
âMonsterslayerâ // Nemedian Chronicles (The Savage Sword) â Thereâs not a person on Earth who hasnât imagined themselves to be Conan the Barbarian while attempting to build thick muscles and sinews in the gym, and this little tune recounts the Cimmerianâs physical attributes while laying down a magnificent, martial metal march. I canât tell if this song makes me feel more like a monster or a monster slayer, but either way, I win.
âI Am the Pathâ // Hell:on (Shaman) â Fitness is a multi-faceted discipline, and we each have our own strengths and stumbling blocks. It might take help from a trainer, a medical doctor, a psychological professional, a training partner, or a support group, but remember that you are the path to your own health, and there is no shame in taking steps to get the help you need to be successful. You are worth it!
âShadow of Evilâ // Oxygen Destroyer (Guardian of the Universe) â As I walk around my garage gym between sets while nursing an enormous pump, I like to picture myself as a gigantic monster, laying waste to all that is in my path. Lord Kaiju and Co. lay down a performance here that makes me feel downright radioactive.
âSword of a Thousand Truthsâ // Ironflame (Kingdom Torn Asunder) â This isnât the first plodding Ironflame chugfest to grace one of my Heavy Moves Heavy playlists, and I sure hope itâs not the last. Bonus points for the #glutegoals on the cover.
Thus Spoke and the Smiting of the Half-Depth Heretics:
âDragonâ // Exocrine (Legend) â The lead melody in this just does something to meâthe way it fades in at the beginning, the way it comes back, the way it plays off the speedy, techy goodness of the rest of the track. Yes.
âA Body for a Bodyâ // To the Grave, Connor Dickson, Siantell Johns (Everyoneâs A Murderer) â Forced to choose on a record I could have filled this list with, this one came out on top. Furious, groovy, face-meltingly heavy, irresistible; âA body for a body for a body, MOTHERFUCKKERRR!â
âSuffocate (feat. Poppy)â // Knocked Loose, Poppy (You Wonât Go Before Youâre Supposed To) â Everything about this is just perfect in the gym. Disagree? âSHUT YOUR LYING MOUTH!â Thank you, Poppy.
âSolusâ // Devenial Verdict (Blessing of Despair) â One of my favourite songs of the year in general, this one got me through many, many sets. Just, like, on repeat. Particularly the last part. Ugh.
âBeneath Ashen Skiesâ // Vale of Pnath (Between the Worldâs of Life and Death) â I discovered in the latter half of the year that I severely underrated this album, because I realised Iâd been sticking it on again and again in the gym, automatically, and it was working brilliantly. The little dancy circular melodies in this are *chefâs kiss*.
âDer Maulwurfâ // Kanonenfieber (Die Urkatastrophe) â Works equally well for voluntarily moving heavy shit as it does for digging trenches. With its steady rhythm and big anthemic chorus in your ears, nothing can stand in your way.
âShiverâ // Teeth (The Will of Hate) â Already having the ideal underlying tempo, sounding so insidiously mean and creepy takes this song beyond a stomp and into anabolic territory. Also, fantastic name.
âVoidwombâ // Glacial Tomb (Lightless Expanse) â Kind of slow and menacing (a good thing) for the majority, its slide into the best and agonisingly shortest guitar solo of the year is a pure jolt of adrenaline. Another one that gets put on repeat.
âMatricide 8.21â // Fleshgod Apocalypse (Opera) â Yeah, I know, âwhat the fuck(?!),â Iâm not even a fan of these guys, but seriously, this thing is motivating as hell. Just give it a chance.
âTo See Death Just Once // Ulcerate (Cutting the Throat of God) â Not exactly what youâd traditionally expect to see on one of these, but I love it so much I donât care. And the same applies while actually in the gym: if you lift to what you love, things will (usually) go well.
âTwelve Moons in Hellâ // Spectral Wound (Songs of Blood and Mire) â Long and short: this is just a banger. The day I realised that new-second-wave black metal was great for lifting was a good day and Iâd like to share this with you.
âConcrete Cryptâ // Resin Tomb (Cerebral Purgatory) â A concrete crypt is now what Iâm definitely going to call the thing where you totally bin yourself by going a bit too hard on one liftââIâm in the concrete crypt now.â Ok obviously, Iâm absolutely not going to do that, but it is some great alliteration, and a stomp to boot.
Dolph is⊠fucking meditating? Who let this piece in???
âRoseâ // Kashiwa Daisuke (TITAN) â As the engorged fibers feel the tickle of contraction scamper in backflow,3 glitching, bass-loaded synth throbs arrive massage the ears and spread a parasympathetic wave up the spine. From root we rise, in pulse we are grounded. In our growing safety we inhale the chiming of dancing piano above it all. Allow Kashiwa Daisukeâs vibrancy help to shake away the growing lactic waste in your weary body.
âFloatingâ // Maria Chiara ArgirĂČ (Closer) â Moving from a place of rest to a place of gentle movement, a heartbeat steady kick thumps against an ethereal call to the flow of water. Though cool to the touch and electronic in construction, an analog warmth and hum bustles under the surface erupting in a solo trumpetâs cry. Sing with it, reach your arms high. Your voice has power.
âèĄç Capture and Elongate (Serenity)â // OU (èé II: Frailty) â Your power in calm growsâand with growth we seek order. But order is hard to find in the shifting rhythms of OUâs poly-play. Follow the voice, maybe with your own. Feel it resonate in your chest as you again find deeper inhales in the space of serenity, powerful exhales in its crashing volume swells.
âWHO KNOWS ?â // toe (NOW I SEE THE LIGHT) â The kindling of your gentleness catches fireâa brilliant lightâas toe serves increasingly bright guitar patterns and fragile vocal harmonies to sweep your worries away. It can be uneasy standing proudly beside beauty like this. Embrace it. You are worthy. Spread your arms wide and expand alongside airy post rock crescendos.
âăăȘăăźăă°ă§ (Beside You)â // Yunowa (Phantom) â Every light exists with a shadow. Yunowa has a shadow too, a dream like a sinking ship. But struggle, heartacheâacceptance of and living throughâthese are all part of life. Rub your hands together. Place one hand over your heart, and the other over that hand. Close your eyes and rest your shoulders as a languished guitar solo screams catharsis.
âRaat Ki Raniâ // Arooj Aftab (Night Reign) â A heart that has wanted and waited will bloom like raat ki rani, the jasmine of the night. Only in the hiding sun can you filled your lungs with its wonder. Breathe deeply as Arooj Aftabâs sultry, modulated croon carries you like a hidden fragrance with gentleness of a healing love.
âEg Veit I Himmelrik Ei Borgâ // Sylvaine (Eg Er Framand) The night remains ominous despite its treasures. But the dark cannot exist without the light. Let Sylvaineâs ode to the comfort of this duality, her siren salutation against plaintive guitar lines and horn-call synths, find the peace of the moment. Reach your chin high with relaxed shoulders to feel itâs spacious and resonant vibrations travel from ear to mind.
âReflections of Godâ // Jaubi (A Sound Heart) â Stepping away from darkness requires travel still through more darkness, a journey which requires devotion. Jaubi expresses their devotion, an assurance that the now leads to a better place, through relentless piano harmonies, sighing sarangi calls, and a continual march toward resolution. Visualizing the destination will slowly reveal its path. You must walk it. Keep breathing.
âWe Canât See It, but Itâs Thereâ // Pat Metheny (Moondial) For as long as Pat Metheny has been questing in delicate guitar harmony, he has not yet either reached the end. I know itâs there. You know itâs there. He knows itâs there. One day, waiting for all of us, itâs there. But in these minutes we spend with Mr. Metheny, in these minutes you spend in repetitious quests for solace, the answer remains there. Somewhere. With practice, a trialed body and mind, weâll find it. Keep searching.
âHyttaâ // Kalandra (A Frame of Mind) â All roads lead us home. âHyttaâ is not just a home but a state, a vision of comfort, of opening doors, of settling dishes, of chirping birdsâa stream trickles in the distance. âHyttaâ is the destination revealed through the honing of physical faculties and the unifying of your wandering thoughts. Today you are here. Your sculpted being, your gentle breath, youâve unlocked the gates. Enjoy it in this moment because you may not be here tomorrow. And thatâs ok.4
#2024 #Aborted #AroojAftab #Brodequin #BrothersOfMetal #ConnorDickson #Demiser #DevenialVerdict #Exocrine #FitForAnAutopsy #flaaghra #FleshgodApocalypse #GlacialTomb #Glassbone #HeavyMovesHeavy #HellOn #Hellbutcher #Ironflame #Jaubi #Kalandra #Kanonenfeiber #Karst #KASHIWADaisuke #Keres #KeygenChurch #KnockedLoose #MartaChiaraArgirĂČ #Necrophobic #Necrot #Necrowretch #NemedianChronicles #Noxis #OU #OxygenDestroyer #PatMetheny #PneumaHagion #Replicant #ResinTomb #RippedToShreds #Scumbag #SentientHorror #SiantellJohns #SpectralWound #Stenched #Sylvaine #Teeth #TheBlackDahliaMurder #ToTheGrave #toe #Ulcerate #Undeath #UnhallowedDeliverance #ValeOfPnath #Vitriol #VoidWitch #Vredehammer #Yunowa
Holdeneyeâs Top Ten(ish) of 2024
By Holdeneye
This was a strange year for old Holdeneye, characterized by relative outer peace and significant inner turmoil. Peruse my last few lists, and youâll see that Iâve been on a mental health journey for some time now, and this year has honestly been the toughest nut for me to crack. Iâve spent the last few years changing my external circumstances to set me up for interior success, and that has certainly helped. But Iâm starting to come to grips with the fact that my choice to follow a career as a first responder, while it has benefitted my family and myself enormously, has come at a cost. Combine with that the absurdities of modern society, and the anxieties and pressures of parenting children, and Iâve been finding my fortitude to be mightily tested. Iâm afraid Iâm come down with a moderate-to-severe case of cynicism.
George Carlin once said, âInside every cynical person is a disappointed idealist,â and I strongly agree. Iâm by nature a pretty soft-hearted, idealistic person, but with high ideals come high expectationsâand high expectations are basically impossible to meet. I spent much of this year (years, really) embracing my newfound cynicism because it seemed easier and less painful than having my impossibly high expectations disappointed again and again. Fortunately, I stumbled upon a book called Hope for Cynics by Jamil Zaki, and it has been an amazing tool for recalibrating my perspective on life. The book provesâscientificallyâthat Samwise Gamgee was correct when he said, âThereâs some good in this world, Mr. Frodo, and itâs worth fighting for.â I highly recommend that anyone and everyone read itâitâs exactly what the world needs to hear right now.
Cynicism is not conducive to creative work, so my 2024 AMG output was abysmal. Instead of listening to new albums, I listened to my Manowar playlist over and over and over. At one point, I finally pulled the trigger and told Steel I needed to step away. I felt good about that decision, that is until my friend Kenstrosity had his home destroyed by a hurricane. The way the Angry Metal community banded together to support Ken broke through the hard crust that had been forming around my tender heart. The staff, and especially you, the readers, jumped at the chance to help, and it was incredibly inspiringâand it once again proved just how wholesome and unique this little internet community can be. Iâm resolving to stay involved, producing whatever content I can make time for, but more importantly, to just be around. When times are hard, I tend to withdraw, but Iâm finding that those are the times when I really need to fight to stay engaged.
Thanks for your patience and for your even-handed, if brutal, leadership, Steel. Thanks to everyone who makes this place so special; you are all agents in the war on cynicism. Special shoutouts to Dr. Wvrm, Ferox, and Doom_et_Al for hanging out with me in personâextra special to Doomy for letting me crash at his placeâand to Crispy Hooligan (Rest In Retirement) for recognizing and chatting with me at a Judas Priest show. It was awesome to take my AMG community into three dimensions this year.
Well, youâve heard enough from this gloomy goose! Rest assured that Iâm looking to 2025 with hope and a healthy skepticism instead of my usual oscillation between idealism and cynicism. Onto the tunes!
#ish. Judas Priest // Invincible Shield â This one comes as a bit of a shock to me. When it first released, I was pretty indifferent. I really enjoyed the previous album Firepower, but I didnât feel a strong need to hear or enjoy a new Judas Priest album in 2024. I have my ten-year-old son to thank for changing my mind. While I was driving him to school one day, he randomly said, âDad, my favorite band is Imagine Dragons, but my favorite music is heavy metal.â I knew I had to capitalize on this make-or-break moment, so as soon as I got home, I bought two pre-sale tickets to the Invincible Shield tour. Seeing these legends with my boy was a core memory that I will always treasure, and while I prepped for the show, I began to see Invincible Shield for what it really is: one more gift from the metal gods of old, one that is far more energetic and ruthless than it has any right to be. Sample: âPanic Attackâ
#10. Necrophobic // In the Twilight Grey â As someone who gained their black metal fangs because of Necrophobicâs modern-day sound, I understand that Iâm unfairly biased to enjoy everything theyâre putting out these days. But biased or not, I absolutely dig what Necrophobic have done on In the Twilight Grey. Theyâve taken just about every shade of black metal available and incorporated a bit of this one and a bit of that one to construct a varied collage of blackened brutality. The guitar work on this record is exemplary, and it speaks to my classic heavy metal heart with lead after lead that could fit on just about any Priest album. I didnât listen to much black metal this year, and this album is partially to blame. In the Twilight Grey arrived early on and essentially sated my appetite for blackened platters. Sample: âShadows of the Brightest Nightâ
#9. Ironflame // Kingdom Torn Asunder â Consistency is an underrated and often maligned trait when it comes to music, but itâs something I really value. I love when every day is just about the same as the last. I can eat the same meal three times per day, no problem. As I mentioned above, I can listen to the same Manowar playlist on repeat for months at a time. I like consistency because I like to know what Iâm getting. Ironflame has become my poster child for consistency when it comes to modern traditional metal, and I while I may know exactly what an Ironflame record is going to sound like before I ever play it, I take an enormous amount of joy finding my preconceived notions to be 100% accurate. Andrew dâCagna can write killer metal anthems in his sleep, and Kingdom Torn Asunder is full of them. Sample: âSword of a Thousand Truthsâ
#8. Vitriol // Suffer & Become â This album definitely tested the limits of my musical taste. Vitriolâs brand of death metal is so punishing that it becomes overwhelming for me, but Suffer & Become includes just enough beauty to let the beast shine by contrast. Full disclosure: I have to be in the right mood for this album. It is so dense, so challenging, so heavy, that it makes me uncomfortable. Without relying on the overt groove or melody that usually anchors the music I enjoy, Suffer & Become manages to hook me through pure violence, leaving me just a few fleeting moments to pop my ahead above the surface to grab a quick breath before dragging me back below. Released back in January, my response to this record was the first indication that my taste (and my list) in 2024 would be trending in a brutal direction. Sample: âThe Flowers of Sadismâ
#7. Oxygen Destroyer // Guardian of the Universe â As I went to wheel my thrash can to the street, I wondered if it would even be worth the trip. While I didnât listen to all that many albums in total this year, I had an especially noteworthy dearth of thrash albums that caught my attention. Fortunately, the one album that did end up in my thrash can filled it to the point of overflowing. Oxygen Destroyer has received honorable mention on my year-end list before, but this time around, the band has leveled up in so many ways that it was impossible for me not to put Guardian of the Universe on my list proper. Where previous albums were more of an even death/thrash mix, this one is an absolute thrashterpiece, and every single song has at least one earworm riff that refuses to leave my brain. Lord Kaijuâs utterly pissed-off vocals are the perfect match for what the rest of the band is doing musically, and with one forthcoming exception, there was no better half-hour set of music with which to torture myself this year. Sample: âBanishing the Iris of Sempiternal Tenebrosityâ
#6. Aborted // Vault of Horrors â Iâm a late-stage Aborted adopter. Vault of Horrors was my first exposure to the band, and the uniqueness of this album is probably responsible for why Iâve come to enjoy the band so much. I was at first put off by all the guest vocalists, but then I remembered that I love hardcore vocals. Abortedâs mixture of brutal death and deathcore is already potent, but when a host of talented hardcore and metal vocalists add their voices to the mix, the result is an adrenaline-pumping, testosterone-boosting beatdown. One of my favorite metal moments of the year goes to witnessing many of these cuts live in the mighty presence of my Angry Metal brothers Ferox and Doom_et_Al. Vault of Horrors has been one of my gym mainstays since its release, and that quality alone is nearly enough to boost an album onto my Top Ten(ish). Sample: âDeath Cultâ
#5. Unhallowed Deliverance // Of Spectres and Strife â I honestly canât remember what review it was for, but one of our lovely readers suggested this album in the comments, and I havenât been able to stop listening to it. Unhallowed Deliverance is another band that mixes brutal death metal and deathcore, but where Aborted goes for the throat nearly 100% of the time, these guys throw in a pinch of atmosphere and a boatload of technicality to create an insanely strong, multifaceted sound. Frontman Arthur Haltrich complements his standard death/deathcore growls and shrieks with some of the gnarliest belches, gurgles, and verbal flatulence Iâve ever heard, giving Of Spectres and Strifeâs sonic texture even more depth that its already intricate music provides. The record even includes a collaboration with Kenneth Copeland, the artist responsible for my 2020 Song oâ the Year. Sample: âTreatise on the Lowest Form of Manâ
#4. Nemedian Chronicles // The Savage Sword â Itâs been many months since Iceberg grossly underrated this absolute gem, and it is a gem that Iâve clutched as greedily as if Iâd personally plucked it from a cursed dungeonâs treasure hoard ever since. When I first sampled The Savage Sword, I was intimidated by its 70-minute length, but it took little more than a single listen for me to realize that this album is incredibly well-executed from start to finish. Yes, Nemedian Chronicles made the bold choice to start the record with what are essentially two intro tracks, but they are so epic and genuine that they act as a pair of tentacles, forcefully drawing me into the conceptâs Hyborian world and setting me up to enjoy of deep immersion. The rest of the album is a masterclass on how to properly deliver epic heavy and power metal goods, and it is frankly the best Blind Guardian album released since the 90s. Sample: âThe Savage Swordâ
#3. Brodequin // Harbinger of Woe â More like Harbinger of Whoa, amirite? I could probably sum this album up with just that single word âwhoa,â but Steel would most likely force me to sit on that old-timey chair on the cover art if I didnât elaborate. This was another comment section find, and Iâll be damned if it didnât grab me almost immediatelyâa rare occurrence for music of this level of intensity. The production on this album raises it so far above much of its comparable competition because it so perfectly balances the materialâs speed and chaos with an overwhelmingly tangible heft. Harbinger of Woeâs 30-minute runtime is so bludgeoning that my watch sometimes registers my listening sessions as cardio, so Iâd like to think that this album has made me a healthier person in 2024. Brodequin, or Brother Quinn as I like to refer to them, can take comfort in putting out one of the finest brutal death metal albums in a year filled with quality brutal death metal albums. Sample: âOf Pillars and Treesâ
#2. Keygen Church // Nel Nome Del Codice â In what is perhaps my greatest musical surprise of the year, this album instantly bewitched me body and soul, and I love, I love, I love it, and wish from this day forth never to be parted from it. Iâve enjoyed some of Victor Loveâs work in Master Boot Record, but as someone who is drawn to liturgical expressions of spirituality, Keygen Churchâs inclusion of Baroque organs and choirs absolutely godsmacked me from moment one. If you asked me to name the greatest song of all time in any genre, Iâd probably go with Bachâs âToccata and Fugue in D Minor,â so it should come as no surprise that Nel Nome Del Codice feels as if it were tailormade to tickle me right in the pipe organs. I have no idea how music like this is produced, but my hat is off to Love for creating such a powerful aural experience. Sample: âSulla Via Della Gloriaâ
#1. Hell:on // Shaman â When I dropped a 4.5 on this back in May, I was pretty confident that nothing else would be able to top it, and since Iâm almost always right, I was right, of course. Hell:onâs mix of death metal, throat-singing, ritualistic rhythms, and Eastern instrumentation makes me feel like Iâm trapped within some infernal combination of a death metal concert and a Witcher III boss fight, and itâs a feeling that has yet to get old. The band went all-in on the inclusion of their Ukrainian cultural elements within their music this time around, and it was an incredible success. In a year where death metal made up the majority of my top records, Shaman had to fight to keep its place upon the top of the heap, but no other album felt as spiritually dense to me in a year where Iâve fought to find my own personal peace. The textures offered here both exhilarate me and help me into a meditative state, and the resulting empowerment has been a Godsend to me. Sample: âWhat Steppes Dream Aboutâ
Honorable Mentions
Olde Record (and Hot Take) oâ the Year
Manowar // Warriors of the World â When I wasnât listening to new music in 2024âwhich was really, really oftenâI was probably listening to Manowar. I listened to them so much, in fact, that my streaming platform placed me within the bandâs top 0.1% of listeners worldwide. Warriors of the World was the first true heavy metal album that I ever purchased, and so many of its songs remain personal favorites to this very day. As I ravaged the bandâs discography this year, I came to the realization that Manowar circa 2002 is the absolute highwater mark for heavy music. This album has some weird inclusions that make it feel somewhat unbalanced and goofy at times, but Iâm convinced that if the band had cut a bit of the fluff and added in the two cuts from the Dawn of Battle EP, Warriors of the World would have been a 5.0 and the greatest metal album of all time. Disagree? Then youâre not into metal, and you are not my friend. Just kidding. We can still be friends, poser!
Disappointment oâ the Year
In Aphelion // Reaperdawn â After In Aphelionâs debut Moribund pummeled its way into the top tier of my Top Ten(ish) of 2022, I had huge expectations for its follow-up, Reaperdawn. Whether it is because several of the bandâs members released a similar-sounding and stronger album with their main project Necrophobic or because these songs just donât match up to the debut, this one just didnât do it for me. It has a nice blackened aesthetic and some quality moments and performances, but it lacks the edge that made Moribund feel so genuinely dangerous. I hope to hear something new from these guys in the not-so-distant future, because I know theyâre capable of going for my throat.
Song oâ the Year
Hell:on // âI Am the Pathâ â This song resonated with me from the very first time I heard it. The way the song swings back and forth between brutal death metal and ritualistic groove strikes the perfect balance for me, and the folk instrumentation adds even more layers to the experience. I canât tell you how many times Iâve listened to âI Am the Pathâ this year, but just about every time I do, I feel my eyes wanting to roll into the back of my head so I can commune with the primal spirits of the earth. The trackâs title and chorus have become something of a personal mantra for me as Iâve struggled to find inner harmony this year. It reminds me that I can make all the positive external changes in the world, but if I really seek health and joy, I must walk that most challenging of all paths: the path within.
#2024 #Aborted #BlogPosts #Brodequin #BrothersOfMetal #Fimbulvinter #FromBeyond #GuardianOfTheUniverse #HarbingerOfWoe #HellOn #HoldeneyeSTopTenIshOf2024 #InAphelion #InTheTwilightGrey #InvincibleShield #Ironflame #JudasPriest #KeygenChurch #KingdomTornAsunder #Lists #Manowar #Necrophobic #NelNomeDelCodice #NemedianChronicles #OfSpectresAndStrife #OxygenDestroyer #PneumaHagion #Reaperdawn #Shaman #SufferBecome #TheSavageSword #UnhallowedDeliverance #VaultOfHorrors #Vitriol #WarriorsOfTheWorld
Sentynel and Twelveâs Top Ten(ish) of 2024
By Steel Druhm
Sentynel
When I wrote my piece for the fifteen years feature, despite referring to âten years of running the servers,â it hadnât really clicked for me that Iâve been here ten years. It was in fact, May 2014 that we moved the server over and I officially joined the staff. While but an eyeblink compared to the oldeness of some of our crew,1 itâs a long time, and a large chunk of my rapidly oldenating life. Itâs also over five years since my first actual review. Every year since then, Iâve promised myself Iâd write more and then not done that. Whoops. On the plus side, covering bands I already like went a lot better this year than it did last year, with very good or better albums from all three. And the Contrite Metal Guy piece allowed me to correct the record on some errors from earlier in my reviewing career.
This year, my list covers more genres than ever beforeâthere are a few entries I suspect will surprise people, not least because they surprised me. Despite being into instrumental music, the biggest commonality here is great vocals. Overall, I think itâs been a good year. I left organizing my list to the last possible moment due to a particularly rough house move (sorry, deadlines) and was, as usual, flapping about whether Iâd have enough good entries. When I sat down to actually write it I realized Iâd filled my list and HM slots with no trouble. And for the first time, Iâve been compelled to do a Song oâ the Year list rather than an individual pick.
In addition to the traditional thanks to the readers and the rest of the staff, olde and new, I also need to add a (returned) thanks to the bands. AMG walks a difficult line with our honest approach to reviewing, and itâs not easy sending your work out to face that. Obviously, without bands sending us music weâd have nothing to write here. I met Tribunal and Mares of Thrace at their gig in MontrĂ©al this year, and it was immensely reassuring to hear, from them and others, that our coverage can make a real difference.
#ish. Amiensus // Reclamation â The two parts to Reclamation are officially listed as Reclamation: Part 1 and Reclamation Pt. II, an inconsistency offensive enough to bar them from my actual top ten. Okay, fine, thatâs not true, I just whiffed on this until Thusâ TYMHM on part I (sorry Ken) and thereâs too much of it to have listened to enough to place either part properly. Nonetheless, these are really beautiful progressive, melodic black metal and absolutely worth the time investment. The balance and transitions between the harsh, the bleak, and the beautiful are often the downfall of this sort of music, and Amiensus absolutely nail it.
#10. Dvne // Voidkind â The brilliant Etemen Ănka took a while to grow on me, and likewise Voidkind. I could rarely name a specific song â their post/sludge sound doesnât lend itself to big singalong choruses, and Iâm terrible with names without that. But every song is memorable. Whenever I see them live, I go âooh, I love this oneâ at the intro to every song. Voidkind is no exception. The more Iâve listened to it the more Iâve appreciated it. The riffs, the build-ups, the denouementsâlistening to it is one âooh, I love this oneâ moment after another.
#9. Seven Spires // A Fortress Called Home â Seven Spires continue to carry the whole symphonic metal genre pretty much single-handedly. I still think the editing on A Fortress Called Home could be a little tighter, but I love their sound and songwriting. Mixing in influences from death and doom to the power metal base gives weight. The soaring highs and emotive storytelling here are as good as theyâve ever been. Great cinematic music.
#8. Saturday Night Satan // All Things Black â All Things Black is just a huge amount of fun. It recalls Ghost before their full embrace of pop: proper catchy, occult-themed, rocking heavy metal with a charismatic vocalist. Iâve had â5AMâ stuck in my head all year (occasionally at 5AM) and six-ninths of the tracks are in the running for the best song on the record. Uncomplicated but great.
#7. Northern Genocide // The Point of No Return â Wince-inducing band name and confusing theme/sound divergence aside, The Point of No Return rules. High-energy, multifaceted, synthy, dancy, it reminds me of Sybreed but with more going on. I definitely have a bit of a thing for bands that can throw half a dozen styles in and carry the execution off on the basis of being loads of fun (Diablo Swing Orchestra, Sanguine Glacialis). Iâve listened to it a lot when Iâm not in the mood for something complex and itâs held up remarkably well.
#6. Kanonenfieber // Die Urkatastrophe â I donât love Die Urkatastrophe to the extent that Carcharodon does, but itâs still a great album. An incredible vocal performance and sharp melodic writing carry a weighty story, even if I donât quite have the German to appreciate the lyrics. Blackened death is not my usual style, but the craft here drew me in anyway. I highly recommend their live show as wellâthereâs a theatricality to it which really works, without taking away from the brutality of the music or the themes.
#5. Suldusk // Anthesis â I tend to take a break from albums Iâve reviewed after submitting the review. Even when I love something, the endless repeats as I try and line up my thoughts can get a bit wearing. So itâs telling how I feel about a record when I go back to it. I put Anthesis on a few weeks later and was immediately transported again. If anything itâs grown on me over the year. Beautiful, atmospheric and evocative, this is atmoblack at its best.
#4. Kalandra // A Frame of Mind â My favorite unexpected discovery of the year. Kalandra are absolutely spellbinding. Heavy themes, gorgeous Nordic folk instrumentation, and deft composition make for a genuinely moving listen. Katrine Stenbekkâs vocals are absolutely captivating and I could genuinely listen to her all day, yet part of the beauty of A Frame of Mind is how well she complements the instruments. I had to fight Dolph for TYMHM rights for this, and as I said there, I cannot recommend it enough.
#3. Fellowship // The Skies Above Eternity â There was pretty much no chance The Skies Above Eternity wasnât going to land high up my list. After the last record, they would have had to have royally fucked it for that not to happen, and they have not, in fact, royally fucked it. The jury is still out on whether I feel that this is a better record than The Saberlight Chronicles, but itâs certainly up there. Fantastic songs and endearingly honest positivity have always been Fellowshipâs strong point, and this is no exception.
#2. Ulcerate // Cutting the Throat of God â I would not, prior to Cutting the Throat of God, have expected to see dissodeath gracing my list in any capacity, much less almost topping it, squeezed between two⊠slightly less brutal records. But then, prior to this album, I wouldnât have expected to describe dissodeath as suspiciously melodic either. So, surprise! Ulcerateâs composition here is stellar. They weave unsettlingly dissonant yet pretty melody into bleak, brutal death metal and the results are infectious. I got so excited about the whole thing that I even tried listening to a couple of the other dissodeath hits this year, but alas, they just donât have what Ulcerate have.
#1. Meer // Wheels Within Wheels â Well, this was inevitable. Thereâs very little out there that sounds like Meerâs symphonic, progressive pop/rock. âSymphonicâ is often a euphemism for âsome string synths are used,â but Meerâs mini chamber orchestra do symphonic properly. And their lead vocal duo is fantastic. Playing House blew me away and very nearly topped my list. Wheels Within Wheels is better. Itâs hard to follow up a great record, and itâs hard to compete with the feeling of hearing a band for the first time. But this does both. Take the great foundation from the previous record, turn up the rock elements, mix in a touch of post-, and sharpen up the songwriting, and you get the brilliant Wheels Within Wheels. 2
Honorable Mentions
Songs oâ the Year
Alphabetically ordered, because Iâm a coward.
Twelve
Writing these year-end summaries is always a cathartic experience. Itâs odd to try and summarize the year youâve had, in whatever way resonates best, to an audience of people you donât know, but that does take some pressure off. Every year, I get a new chance to be grateful for the writers and readers on this blog, and to reflect on what went wrong, what went right, and where I am now versus where I was a year ago.
I can confidently say that, by any measure, 2024 was the worst year of my life. Between personal losses and professional disasters, I spent most of the year feeling demotivated, dejected, and just shy of despairing. And yet, when I compiled my year-end list, I was pleasantly surprised, because there isnât actually all that much dark material here. Youâd think, based on how I started this paragraph, that my list would be filled with the dark and dismal metals from the year, but instead, it leans much lighter, more optimistic, and hopeful. Hope is a tough thing to squash completely, and throughout the year, I have stubbornly remained optimistic that things would get betterâand, sure enough, they have. Iâll begin 2025 in a much better place, and take the lessons of the year with me all the way to the next article.
I would be remiss if I didnât thank my fellow writers here for their support as I contributed an uneven year (at best) to the blogâyour friendships, banter, recommendations, and rare-but-memorable offline appearances mean the world to me. As I come up to the end of my sixth year writing here, Iâm still having a blast. Not to mention the music! The music is good too. Speaking of whichâŠ
#ish. Opeth // The Last Will and Testament â Having first encountered Opeth during the Pale Communion days, I never really formed an opinion on the growls/no-growls debate. Even so, despite my genuine admiration for their last few releases, The Last Will and Testament feels like some kind of return to form for these giants. An album as dense as it is powerful, The Last Will and Testament keeps me coming back. Perhaps because of that density, I had trouble figuring out how and where exactly to list it. Maybe it came out a little too late in the year for me; I may well regret this âlowâ placement before long.
#10. Madder Mortem // Old Eyes, New Heart â Old Eyes, New Heart is, appropriately, an album with real heart. I love its laid-back approach that does nothing to diminish the cold darkness that surrounds it. And yet, the sense of hope and determination I get from listening to it electrifying. Just listen to âCold Hard Rainâââthereâs hope in the darkâ is one of the best moments in any album Iâve heard all year. The approach Madder Mortem brings to Old Eyes, New Heart is resonant, mixing dark and light in a way that just worked for me this year. It is an excellent album.
#9. Fellowship // The Skies Above Eternity â Conversely, Fellowship brought all kinds of power metal glory to The Skies Above Eternity, an outrageously fun album adorned with hope, excitement, and super impressive performances from everyone involved. The Skies Above Eternity is just so much fun to listen to; it fills the Angus McSix-sized hole in this year-end list admirably because a year without some kind of super-well-done over-the-top power metal is a year thatâs just no good. Thankfully, Fellowship are clearly here to stay.
# 8. Dawnwalker //The Unknowing â The Unknowing is one of those albums that rewards repeated listens. Of course, I listened to it plenty before writing my review in October, but Iâve kept listening to it since and I just keep noticing new things. Itâs enough to make me want to rewrite the whole review, honestly; thereâs just so much to The Unknowing, and I love the way Dawnwalker made this album simple and complex at the same time. The ebb and flow is very well done, the performances are powerful, and the meanings just keep on coming. This is a great album to get lost in, and I still recommend it highly.
#7. Hamferð // Men Guðs hond er sterk â âBut Godâs Hand is Strongâ is an amazing title for such a dark album. Maybe thatâs part of why I like it so muchâthat idea of hope transcending everything else, of faith and optimism keeping you going when things are really bad. Of course, it helps that Hamferð are phenomenal musicians who know exactly what theyâre doing; Men Guðs hond er sterk is a crushingly powerful doom album, well-written and performed to the highest standards. Hamferð have long been my go-to band when itâs cold and dark out. Well, winter is back, and thank goodness Hamderð is too.
#6. In Vain // Solemn â I love epic, complex metal, and In Vain delivers with Solemn. I love Solemn for its melodic qualities, its huge ambitions, and its soaring highs. That it uses a horn section is icing on the cake; the first listen-through is unpredictable, but the quality is consistently high. Solemn is one of those great albums that just doesnât really have faultsâit was never a question of whether Iâd like it, just one of how much. Itâs that solid, and has all kinds of staying power. A definite highlight from the year in whatever style of metal you think it fits in best.
#5. ĂrstĂðir lĂfsins // Aldrlok â I love ĂrstĂðir lĂfsins. Iâve criticized their albums before, but the truth is that the base of their sound is so wonderfully up my alley that Iâm not sure itâs possible for me to dislike their music. Iâm always so excited when ĂrstĂðir lĂfsins releases new music, and Aldrlok has grown on me immensely since its release in June. I love its mystical quality, its evocative style, and its historic powerâĂrstĂðir lĂfsins approach their music in a way that few bands or projects do, and it resonates so well. Itâs a long album for sure, but it is filled with outstanding material and well worth the deep dive it offers.
#4. Silhouette // Les Dires de lâAme â Silhouette first grabbed my attention with the release of Les retranchements a couple of years ago. Since then, it feels like theyâve grown tremendously; Les Dires de lâAme feels grander, darker, and more complex than Les retranchements, and I love this direction. The melodies, harmonies, and vocal performances are stunning, and the balance of beauty and darkness is incredibly well-done. Even now, I feel like Les Dires de lâAme is still growing on me; I am fully enamored with this symphonic sojourn, and expect to remain so for some time.
#3. Hell:on // Shaman â For a long time, I assumed Shaman would be my album of the year, and it was not something I would have predicted before May. And yet, here it is: Shaman is incredible, a powerful slab of death metal decorated with just enough melodic, mystic, and folk elements to keep me coming back. Itâs rare that I like death metal this much, but Hell:on is just so compelling, from the throat singing to the acoustic interludes that break up blisteringly powerful riffing. Shamanâs got it all, and it is captivating at every moment from beginning to end.
#2. Forndom // MoĂŸir â I canât believe Iâm not giving this one Album of the Year. Maybe it just came out too recently, but itâs still surprising because I adore Forndom. MoĂŸirâs orchestral folk approach to creating time-defying music is essentially flawless, and it is so easy to get lost in. The vocal work, orchestral performances, and lead violin are all exemplary, and itâs been truly wonderful exploring this darker, grander side of Forndom these last several weeks. On the one hand, I wish it had come out sooner so I could have more time with it before writing this blurbâon the other, it suits December weather so well that I believe Iâve been getting the best out of it since day one. Forndom is doing amazing work, and I really canât recommend MoĂŸir enough. Time travel is real, and I am convinced that Forndom knows the secret.
#1. Meer // Wheels Within Wheels â What can I even write here that Sentynel hasnât said better in his own review? Wheels Within Wheels is my new go-to album when things are badâit is melancholic and angry, but also optimistic and hopeful, a delicate-yet-gorgeous balance that really speaks to me. Itâs got a ton of variance, and knows when to go big and when to keep quiet. The songwriting is exemplary, and you really feel the impact of the many musicians whoâve come together for each song. The singing in particular is outstanding, lifted by strings, piano, guitar, and drums with a cohesion that most projects can only dream of. More than all of that, however, is that Wheels Within Wheels is an honest, vulnerable album. It is willing to be fragile and open and is achingly beautiful in those moments. Lyrically, itâs like a hand outstretched, a friend with an ear always ready to listen. Done well, this progressive rock style has limitless potential, and Meer do it so, so well. I really love this album; in many ways, it saved my year.
Honorable Mention
Song of the Year
Iâve written the word âhopeâ too much in this articleâI know that. But metal music is personal, and often our choices for our favorites reflect our experiences. This year, I needed hope. Thatâs why âCome to Lightâ by Meer is my song of the year for 2024âbecause there were times when this song genuinely kept my head up, kept me smiling, and forced me into the right headspace to get through what really was a very bad year. Now Iâm on the other side of it, and hey, itâs still an amazing song! It perfectly encapsulates that limitless potential I was going on about a few sections ago, and realizes it in such a beautiful, endearing way. An outstanding song from an outstanding album by an outstanding band.
#2024 #Amiensus #ArstidirLifsins #BlogPosts #Dawnwalker #Dvne #Fellowship #Forndom #Hamferð #HellOn #iHÀxa #InVain #Iotunn #Kalandra #Kanonenfeiber #KeygenChurch #Lowen #MadderMortem #Meer #NorthernGenocide #Opeth #SaturdayNightSatan #SentynelAndTwelveSTopTenIshOf2024 #SevenSpires #Silhouette #Suldusk #TheDreadCrewOfOddwood #Ulcerate
Another MBR banger has just been released. Gig is on Saturday in the Grand Social, and close to sold out.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RDDwO0CJIO0
#masterBootRecord #keygenChurch #castlevania #vampireSurvivors
Master Boot Record â Hardwarez Review
By Mystikus Hugebeard
Anno Domini 2024. In the early months, the code-whisperer Victor Love donned his Omnissiah robes and preached the score-counter-ruining sermon Nel Nome Del Codice within the Keygen Church. Now, the worldâs premier practitioner of digital blasphemy has returned in his true, glorious form: Master Boot Record. There is no digi-christ here, only The Code. MBR is poised to release update 11.0 to your pathetic operating systems. Update name: Hardwarez. This is not the beginning; MBR has long since invaded the AMG website, one virus in particular bestowing 2022âs Personal Computer the title of Record oâ the Month. No, this is not the beginning⊠but this will be the end. Hardwarez will not suffer your computer to survive.
The phrase âif it ainât broke, donât fix itâ applies to few artists quite so well as MBR. For any newcomers or rubberneckers, MBR is, to put it lightly, a mix of Dragonforce-adjacent energetic riffage, the classical-minded bombast of Johann Sebastian Bach, and a chiptune videogame soundtrack. The metal is fully synthesized with programmed drums, floppy drive synth riffs, and lightning-quick keyboards. This is how itâs been for ten albums over the last eight years and how itâll be in the future. If that sounds dismissive, it shouldnât; MBRâs is a wholly unique sound that works extraordinarily well. However, a man cannot, or perhaps should not, be so prolific in releasing music without even surface-level changes between albums. Love has refined and then maintained the MBR sound across nearly a dozen albums, while progressively updating and experimenting with his songwriting approach, be it through epic, 15+ minute song lengths (C:/DEFRAG), adding a vocalist (Direct Memory Access), or even donning the occasional baroque harpsichord (Personal Computer). This naturally begs the question as to how Hardwarez might aim to differentiate itselfâŠ
âŠwhich it does by being heavy. Stupidly, obscenely, disgustingly heavy at times. I even spun the full MBR discography to be sure, and while a few parts in Personal Computer come close, one could confidently say that Hardwarez is some of MBRâs heaviest material to date, and itâs a blast. Opener âBIOSâ boots up Hardwarez with thrashy riffs and fast soloing, while the following âMOBOâ builds towards colossal, Bach-iavellian refrains full of classical grandeur. And then, âCPUâ drops a riff-heavy enough to brick my computer and is a seriously strong contender for my Song oâ the Year. The heaviest songs hit all the harder because of how theyâre placed within the album. Hardwarez is a masterclass in pacing, creating clear peaks and valleys spread across the 42-minute runtime. âRAMâ is a joyous, 80âs-infused slab of riffs and hyperactive solos that fits snugly between the less intense âGPUâ and the slick, powerful âFDD,â with the latterâs extended synth-y outro escalating beautifully into the immediately massive âHDD.â Excellent pacing like this makes it nigh impossible to grow bored, and when the album is over, youâll already feel ready to spin it again.
In the wake of Hardwarez strongest moments, itâs easy to ruminate over nebulous missed opportunities. While MBR has historically leaned into progressive songwriting, Hardwarez is much more direct; âCASEâ being the most obvious, um, case. It ends Hardwarez on a high note and features one of the best, and heaviest, riffs, but it follows a strictly repetitive ABAB structure. Compared to the more adventurously composed âRAMâ and âFDDâ that augment their strongest moments with build-ups and varied structure, âCASEâ begins to frustrate. I want to return for the whole experience of a song, not just one (admittedly stellar) riff. Hardwarez heaviness is its strongest aspect, and, I believe, would be all the stronger were it entreated with bolder songwriting, which Love has proven ad nauseam that he is capable of. Still, this might be unfair. Hardwarez is tight as hell, extremely consistent, and endlessly replayable. Itâs a clear success, and worth celebratingâbut itâs Loveâs own fault for proving that he can do even better.
Beyond that, âPSUâ is a slight let-down with some melodically cluttered sections, but its worst sin is being surrounded by excellence, and thatâs what Hardwarez provides in spades. It might not break the score counter like Keygen Churchâs Nel Nome Del Codice on account of being less groundbreaking and challenging in its scope, but Hardwarez is nevertheless another essential MBR release to add to the growing pile. Itâs as energetic and intoxicating as ever, and has shown that this heavier iteration of MBR is one of its best and deserves to be explored even furtheERRORâERRORâERRORâERRORRRRRRRRRR
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There is nobody to contact for further assistance
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C:\Users\vittorio>shutdown /r
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Rating: Very Good!!
DR: 4 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps
Label: Metal Blade Records
Websites: facebook | bandcamp | official
Releases Worldwide: October 11th, 2024
#2024 #35 #DragonForce #ElectronicMetal #Hardwarez #IndustrialMetal #ItalianMetal #KeygenChurch #MasterBootRecord #MetalBladeRecords #NelNomeDelCodice #Oct24 #PersonalComputer #Synthwave