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MAJESTICA Frontman TOMMY JOHANSSON Shares Metal Medley Of â80s & â90s Cartoon Theme Songs (Video)
#MAJESTICA #TOMMYJOHANSSON #Frontman #SharesMetalMedleyOf #video #guitarist #BraveWords #metal #music
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MAJESTICA Frontman TOMMY JOHANSSON Shares Metal Medley Of â80s & â90s Cartoon Theme Songs (Video)
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Icelandâs POWER PALADIN Team Up With MAJESTICAâs TOMMY JOHANSSON For âThe Arcane Towerâ; Official Video Streaming
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Watch MAJESTICA Perform âNo Pain, No Gainâ Live At Wacken Open Air 2025; Pro-Shot Video
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MAJESTICA Frontman TOMMY JOHANSSON Shares Cover Of GARY MOORE Classic âVictims Of The Futureâ (Video)
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MAJESTICA Frontman TOMMY JOHANSSON Shares Epic Rock Cover Of HANSON Hit âMmmbopâ (Video)
#MAJESTICA #TOMMYJOHANSSON #Frontman #SharesEpicRockCoverOf #powermetal #album #newrelease #EP #video #guitarist #BraveWords #metal
Every year has been shitty for a while, and in some ways, 2025 was the shittiest of them all. The widespread sense that the End Is Nigh is what I would charitably call our zeitgeist.1 And I feel comfortable saying, itâs a shitty zeitgeist. But in defiance of the shit burger weâre all eating every day while we wait for the AI drone war to start, 2025 was my best year in a while. It did, in fact, see me more involved on the front and back ends of AngryMetalGuy.com than Iâd been in a long time. And like those lists weâve already published, AMG, both as a persona and community, has been a refuge for me during difficult times. The joy of discovery and the eclecticism inherent in what we do here have been a major part of why I love this blog. So, honestly, thatâs been nice.
In terms of the blogâs health, AngryMetalGuy.com is holding steady. Weâve got a growing team of n00bs covering some of the holes weâve had in the schedule.2 I worked very hard on training them in combination with Druhm, and itâs fair to say we were both happy with the result. We had some of our best candidates to date, and that made me proud and happy. Thereâs still room for a few more, so we might dig into the pool in the early part of 2026. So if you applied, all hope is not lost. We continue to attract around 1.25 million views a month, and thatâs held steady for three years running. Obviously, we would like to continue to grow. But I have a sneaking suspicion that weâre actually seeing a slight downturn in visitors because of Generative AI. There are, of course, a lot of people who go to Google and write âMy Favorite Band â New Album Review,â and they will be greeted by an AngryMetalGuy.com link that tends to place pretty highly on the Google Machine and awaits their complaints with open arms. But I suspect there are other kinds of views weâve accrued â those which end up in people grabbing album art or looking for release dates â that disappear when people are requesting that ChatGPT do that for them. And while LLMs will link you after plagiarizing you, theyâll only do it if you let them, and we do not. And so any conversions of people checking linked resources are probably lost.3 There have been some weird months here and there with seemingly anomalously low numbers, so who even knows.
The active n00bs have allowed us to revive the three-posts-a-day pace,4 and we only went dark for five days during 2025. As a collective, we posted 699 postsâdown from the very peak of 2019âs nearly 1,000 posts!âbut in line with where weâve been since Covid. And, our posts continue to be longer than they were in 2019, averaging 901 words for a total of 629,905 words that we produced for free in 2025. Thatâs a 2600-page term paperâTimes New Roman, 12 point font, double-spaced on A4 paper.5 This dedication to quantity derives from the whip of an analytics-driven Steel Druhm, but wouldnât be possible without our amazing staff putting their shoulders to the Eternal Boulder ov Metalâą and rolling it uphill every day, saying âOne must imagine Sisyphus happy. One must imagine Sisyphus happy. One must imagine Sisyphus happy.â
We continue to have international appeal, as well, though the country rankings havenât changed much from 2024. Like last year, our top five is made up of the English-speaking world (US, UK, CAN, AUS at five) + Germany (at four).6 Weirdly, we are getting a sizable amount of traffic from China, which clocks in at six for the first time. There are almost certainly shenanigans at play with those numbers, as I am not aware of any influx of Chinese fans here recently. Maybe thatâs AI traffic. Maybe thatâs VPN traffic. Maybe weâve been infiltrated and are now a communist honey pot. Maybe Druhm is buying traffic. Or, maybe, Winnie the Pooh has finally discovered how excellent the realm of heavy metal really is, and China is going through a different kind of cultural revolution! Regardless, 7-10 is made up of the Netherlands, Sweden, Poland, and France, with Spain and Finland dropping out of the top ten. The biggest news, however, when it comes to our international readership, is that signs point strongly to Pope Francis having been our solitary reader in the Holy See. The venerable Franciscan passed away in April of 2025, and I donât believe itâs a coincidence that no one appears to have made the pilgrimage from the Vatican to Angry Metal Guy this year.
Itâs worth noting that we lost more than a few stalwarts along the way in 2025,7 largely due to the #Cursed-Boomer-Posting chat on Slack, which has torn us apart. There may also have been some other influences, such as marriages, having high-paying jobs, running TV shows, having actual lives, or resenting me.8 Regardless, for all those who have worked hard to make AngryMetalGuy.com go, but who are not here with us anymore, I just want to say thank you. Despite my autistic isolation and standoffishness, I do love you all and miss you. The door is, of course, always open. And I am happy to see some special little guys whoâve been in deep freeze popping their heads out of the sand and grabbing promo. Itâs a wonderful sight to behold, and maybe weâll see some newfound productivity from old friends in 2026.
To close, I want to thank everyone â readers and writers alike â for your enthusiasm, your dedication to AngryMetalGuy.com as an institution, and your undying fealty to me, Angry Metal Guy.9 I know I can come off as harsh. And I know that some people grumble that Iâm too hard on them when I read their texts or when they have divergent opinions in the comments, but thatâs only true if youâve never met a passive construction you didnât love or if youâre wrong about metal. And, as I tell my students, weâre a team. Our goal is to make sure that AMG produces the very highest quality writing, while covering as much of the scene as possible.10 And given the loyalty of our readers, your comments, and âthe eye test,â as it were, we are achieving that goal consistently. Iâm still very proud of that and, if I stop to think about it, humbled by it, too.
While it feels like thereâs a lot to dread after the 2025 that was, we still have a lot to be excited about here. So letâs hope that 2026 isnât all like itâs felt in the first five days or so. Anyway, I have gone on far too long, have a wordy, overwrought list.
#(ish) 3: Helms Deep // Chasing the Dragon [June 20th, 2025 | Nameless Grave Records | Bandcamp] â Chasing the Dragon is super fun. Itâs fun, itâs loud, and itâs a little stupid in a way that I find endearing. And, as I remarked in June, while US Power Metal has been getting a lot of love around these parts, Helms Deep has not been on the receiving end of nearly enough of that love. While other bands showed up to a back alley knife fight, these Florida men showed up with a bejet-packed dragon and a collection of songs that burned hotter than dragonsfire, melting the competition down and shaming their lineages for decades to come. And joking hyperbole aside, Helms Deep doesnât feel like a novelty act. They arenât just good âcause I find them funny. Chasing the Dragon features playing thatâs sharp and vital across the board, with guitars that never stand still, a singer who sells every chorus with the right balance of chops, cheese, and buckets of swagger. Said differently, Helms Deep is just dudes playing good, honest heavy metal while having a great time. What more do you need?
#(ish) 2: Vittra // Intense Indifference [September 19th, 2025 | Self-release | Bandcamp] â Vittraâs Intense Indifference shows up hungry, plays fast, hits hard, and gets out before you have time to get bored. Thirty-three minutes of riff-first, bethrashened melodeath go by in a blur; the hooks are sticky, the harmonies are sharp, and the energy is manic and adventurous. While the At the Gates lineage is obvious,11 Vittra pulls in enough Soilwork polish and Mors Principium Est flash to songwriting thatâs focused on momentum rather than atmosphere, and the result is addictive. And what really pushes this record from really good to great are the flashes of the unexpected: honkytonk piano, bluesy acoustic passages, and classic rock phrasing that shouldnât work, but does. Itâs great listening to an album this full of piss and vinegar. I get excited when bands pop up that make the kind of thrashy, intense melodic death that never begs for an Insomnium comp. And sure, these guys have room to grow, but Intense Indifference caused me to feel anything but.
#(ish) 1: Arjen Anthony Lucassen // Songs No One Will Hear [September 12th, 2025 | InsideOut Music | Bandcamp] â Arjen Lucassen has been a favorite of mine during the time that AngryMetalGuy.com has been up and running. The âpoofy-haired cheeseheadâ12 behind many of my favorite albums during AMGâs time is still a gem even in 2025. Crazily, Arjenâs first âsolo recordâ Lost in the New Real was released in 2012,13 and Songs No One Will Hear is its direct successor. A true concept recordâwith Toehiderâs god-tier singer, Michael Mills, voicing a radio DJ talking to listeners about impending doomâit reflects both our End Is Nigh Zeitgeist and Arjenâs particular⊠idiom. Thoroughly enjoyable from start to finish, Songs No One Will Hear is both tongue-in-cheek and yet deeply aware of the nature of information, grifting, and societal collapse, while still displaying the kind of referential goofiness that made Lost in the New Real such a charming record.14 The thing that dinged Songs No One Will Hear a little for me is the sense of uncanny familiarity. At times, it sounds like Arjen was working specifically to emulate the structure of Lost in the New Real. That created a bit of cognitive dissonance that I have never quite gotten over. It also drove a lot of replays of its under-the-radar predecessor rather than the album I should have been reviewing. But is Songs one of the best 11 records oâ 2025? I certainly think so.
#10: An Abstract Illusion // The Sleeping City [October 17th, 2025 | Willowtip | Bandcamp] â The Sleeping City had two strikes against it. First, it had the unenviable task of following Woe, a record that could easily have been the template on which they built their sound. Itâs hard to break away from an overwhelmingly popular sound, yet these Ore Islanders took a left turn, exhibiting a level of daring I admire. The shift in aesthetic is the story of The Sleeping City in a lot of ways; the synths, the vibe, and the mood lean into dystopian sci-fi, and itâs a choice that works. What I love about The Sleeping City is that itâs detailed and detail-oriented without distracting from the expansiveness of the songwriting, which remains evocative and carefully structured. And while they sound comfortable letting songs breathe, they never get lost in the quest for âatmosphereâ that undermines many modern releases. Second,15 the real gripe about The Sleeping City was the mastering job. But even a mastering job that clips peaks and fills valleys shows just how strong the raw material is. And so, finally, The Sleeping City feels like the product of a band choosing growth over safety while being true to themselves. And thatâs an admirable trait that I hope they never lose.
#9: Fallujah // Xenotaph [June 13th, 2025 | Nuclear Blast Records | Bandcamp] â Fallujah landing on my list came as a genuine surprise to me, mostly because I really had quietly written them off. I used to like them, but they never carried that In Flames-style of eternal hope for me. Xenotaph pulled me back in by doing a deceptively simple thing: reintroducing attack. Everything about this record feels more immediate; guitars cut, compositions move with purpose, and songs are taut and sharp. The atmospheric elements remain, but theyâre now integrated into something heavier and more immediate. I love the balance Fallujah finds, combining that late-Cynic energy with the aggression of brutal and technical death. And the deeper I got, the more Xenotaph rewarded me. Repetition revealed interlinked ideas and layered guitar work that shoots like a web throughout, creating a sinuous structure on which everything rests. As I wrote in my Record oâ the Month blurb, âFallujah has achieved a conceptual evolution on Xenotaph that feels true to their origins and yet develops their sound in ways that make it accessible, and yet, truly unique.â It isnât exactly br00tal death metal, but itâs not so drenched in âatmosphereâ that it lacks tension. Most importantly, it worked.
#8: Scardust // Souls [July 18th, 2025 | Frontiers Records | Stream or Buy at Qobuz] â Scardust landing at number eight sans review is another casualty of my 2025 Stack oâ Shame, though this was less neglect than simple overextension in a year where too many heavy hitters landed at once. July, yo, what a month. Unfortunately, I missed the review window, then I missed the window to pawn it off responsibly, and by the time I circled back, it was late. However, Scardustâs third full-length is a sharp, confident 42 minutes of symphonic power/prog that feels fully aware and unique. While it doesnât quite lock together as tightly as Strangers did at a conceptual and compositional level, Souls more than compensates for that with sheer craft. The orchestral and choral arrangements are some of the strongest I heard all year, and Scardustâs chemistry is ridonkulous. The rhythm section especially deserves accolades, with basswork that should be forcing its way into âbest ofâ conversations. As a band, Scardust exists in the interstices of genre, where comparisons kind of work but canât capture their unique voice. And while the band is impressive, the compositions feel so coherent because of Noa Gruman, who carries the album with control, range, and an incomparable soprano. Her extreme register (that is, growls) stays mostly holstered here, but her presenceâand sheer talentâis on constant display, balancing different styles, moods, and feels. And her vocal performance isnât the only standout vocal performance on Souls. The closing âTouch of Lifeâ trilogy finds Ross Jennings (Haken) popping up in full âweird Rossâ mode, which ends up as the cherry on top. The result is smart, muscular, and memorable; an album Iâm ashamed to have missed.
#7: Aephanemer // Utopie [October 31st, 2025 | Napalm Records | Bandcamp] â Aephanemerâs Utopie landed, as I mentioned in my Record oâ the Month blurb, squarely at the top of my Stack oâ Shame. I was honored to be able to get access to this and start listening early, and I was immediately impressed. Yet, I got sick. Darkness took me, and I strayed out of thought and time, and stars wheeled overhead, and every day was as long as the life age of the earth. Meanwhile, Utopie sat there reminding me of my failures until Grin Reaper saved my ass and gave Aephanemerâs newest opus the unhinged tongue bath it so rightfully deserved. Utopie takes everything these French melodic death metallers have been doing over the past couple of albums and tightens the screws until the whole machine purrs with confidence. The neoclassical elements have become a perfect blend that helps everything work perfectly. Utopie flows; songs connect, ideas develop, momentum carries everything forward, and yet Aephanemer does not sacrifice the immediacy and energy that makes melodic death metal such a fine dopamine mine. While I havenât sat down and learned the parts, I feel like the guitars are more fluid and more expressive, resulting in special melodies propelled by a buoyancy reflected in the theme. And you know me, what I want from great records is a holistic sense of greatness. Happily, Aephanemer accomplishes just that on Utopie. Had I been operating at full capacity when it dropped, I would have written a review that kids would call âextra.â16
#6: Insania // The Great Apocalypse [June 13th, 2025 | Frontiers Music | Stream or Buy on Qobuz] â The Great Apocalypse, contrary to its name, is sneaky. It doesnât gallop in and smack you in the face with shock or novelty, but instead, it reveals its strength through confidence, craft, and an almost unfair level of replay value. What initially feels likeâand has been so often written off asâa solid, familiar Europower record gradually opens up to be something richer and more rewarding. And itâs kept paying dividends the longer Iâve been sitting with it. Insania sounds, as I noted when I wrote the review, like a band fully aware of their lineage and completely at ease with it. But the truly confident understand themselves enough to think differently. The resulting record is full of massive, sticky hooks, choruses that hit with power metal optimism and momentum, and electrifying guitars throughout. In fact, while investigating their discography, I was struck by how much Insania upped their game on The Great Apocalypse. And key to that is the guitar, which elevates the record by resisting predictability and yet coexisting on a meta-level with the genre that they know so well. Songs evolve instead of looping, melodies get reshaped rather than repeated, and familiar ideas or tropes are nudged just enough off-center to stay engaging but familiar. The Great Apocalypse approaches with intention, and Insania performs like a band thatâs rediscovering why they love playing this kind of music in the first place. This record is exhilarating, memorable, and deeply satisfying, which is why it belongs among these other great releases.
#5: Kalaveraztekah // Nikan Axkan [May 2nd, 2025 | Self-release | Bandcamp] â In what Iâm pretty sure is a first for me, an ĂnsĂŻgnĂ«d BĂ€nd Rödëö contestant has made my Top Ten(ish) list. Iâve had plenty of unsigned bands on my lists, but I walked into Kalaveraztekahâs masterful Nikan Axkan utterly unprepared for what I would find. Like a kid buying music in the â90s, I just looked at that amazing cover art and decided that I was going to join the team reviewing this record instead of the other one. And that twist of fate has earned Mexicoâs finest Aztec-themed death metal band a spot on the End oâ Year Metal List oâ Recordâą.17 As I cleverly wrote in my Record oâ the Month blurb: âThereâs no sense that these HidrocĂĄlidos are some kind of novelty act. They arenât a Mexican Eluveitie, just playing Dark Tranquillity riffs while putting a Ritual Death Flute over it for 40 seconds in every song.â18 Rather, Nikan Axkan is chock full of muscular riffing and the kind of grindy death metal that Iâve always associated with the Mexican scene. Combined with a high-concept connecting to Mexican pre-history and the judicious use of a fucking death flute, I just never quit listening to Nikan Axkan.19 And so here they are, in the Top 5 of my Top 10(ish) of 2025,20 and it couldnât be more deserved.
#4: Impureza // AlcĂĄzares [July 11th, 2025 | Season of Mist | Bandcamp] â I admit, I have tried to lead by example. I have attempted to become a servant leader. Rather than eating up a ton of oxygen and making everything actually about me (instead of just in jest) and what I want as Angry Metal Guy, I have, with time and wisdom, tried to allow others a chance to spread their wings. One of the things that means is that I canât just bogart other writersâ âdiscoveries,â and I try not to block them if they grab something before I do.21 So, in that context, youâll understand that I got pretty excited when I realized that I could review the newest Impureza without poaching it. The bandâs approach to metalâinfused with flamenco and semi-fantastical alternate-historical high concepts about colonial historyâhad entranced me previously, but I always felt like they were leaving a lot on the table. Their sound had not quite blended the flamenco and the metal, but rather, the genres sat side by side. AlcĂĄzares changes that. From start to finish, AlcĂĄzares is addictive, creative, musically impressive, and just a lot of fun. The artful ability of these OrlĂ©anais-via-España to marry such disparate styles with genuinely unique approaches to music that run as deeply as the very notion of meter is one of the most impressive feats accomplished in metal in 2025. But itâs not just a meta-concern of the artistic feat that excites me. AlcĂĄzares is a fucking banger that can stimulate your intellect, or that can leave your neck sore. Take your pick!22
#3: Phantom Spell // Heather & Hearth [July 18th, 2025 | Cruz del Sur Music | Bandcamp] â Phantom Spell has the benefit of being a genuine surprise. My happy place, when I can afford to be there, is digging through the promo bin and listening to everything I can get my hands on. I have made so many fantastic discoveries there, just immersed in my own little world, listening to samples to get a feel of what weâre being sent. Heather & Hearth looked like classic Steel Druhmcore: Cruz del Sur Records, retro metal, D&D Basic Set art. I popped it in, got dragged in, and totally distracted from the rest of what I was doing. I know that this might seem incongruent, but Heather & Hearth sounds fresh. In a world of hypercompressed, hyper-reamped, extremer-than-thou metal, the act of writing good songs with tons of vocal harmonies, instruments that sit in their sonic corridors, andâdespite being recorded by one single dudeâa convincingly live vibe feels âlike a radical act.â23 I quickly grew to love Heather & Hearth, shared it with all the normies I know who love Ghost (âIsnât this so much better?â), and began singing its praises. And Iâve been happy to see it popping up on lists throughout list season. It means a lot to me that people can hear just how good Phantom Spell is. And Phantom Spell also proved to be quite generative, in that I wrote the Spotify post as a response to a discussion about why Heather & Hearth wasnât available there. Easily one of the best records I heard in 2025, and Iâm looking forward to hearing so much more.
#2: In Mourning // The Immortal [August 29th, 2025 | Supreme Chaos Records | Bandcamp] â When a record is truly exceptional, the hardest part is often articulating why it has transcended other things without reducing it to a checklist. In Mourningâs fantastic The Immortal resists that kind of accounting in the best possible way. Its melodies are lush and emotionally evocative, capable of landing with equal force whether theyâre carried by aching vocals or unfurled through long, expansive, yet intimate, trem-picked guitar passages. The riffing is punishing but disciplined, balancing weighty chug with sharper, blackened melodies, creating a constant tension between death metal heft and sadboi atmosphere without fully committing to drowning the production in reverb. And yet, none of this marks a radical departure from what In Mourning has done beforeâhas been doing since 2008. The crucial difference here is in execution: every compositional choice seems to land exactly where it should be. In a sense, this calls attention to the role of probability, as much as inspiration or songcraft, in composition. Some records feel blessed from the outset, where one can go through the same process again and never produce the same results. The hooks here stick without feeling forced, climaxes are perfectly placed, and the pacing across the record gives each track room to breathe while contributing to the kind of flow reserved for only the best albums. Even moments that might feel familiar hit differently on The Immortal, like everything snaps into place. The Immortal succeeds, then, not just on craft but on feel: it feels heavier, sadder, and more resonant than its predecessors; and it stands comfortably among the strongest melodic death metal releases in years.
#1: Calva Louise // Edge of the Abyss [July 11th, 2025 | Mascot Records | Bandcamp] â Edge of the Abyss ran away with my listening this year in a way I genuinely donât remember happening before, and that probably tells you most of what you need to know. The record is frantic, restless, and overloaded with ideas, moving between genres and feels with the speed of fast-cut editing; shifting at the drop of a dime. That both makes the record fun to listen to and keeps it surprising and fresh even after dozens of listens. The pace and density line up uncannily well with where my own brain tends to live, and I suspect thatâs a part of why it lodged itself so firmly in my rotation. Calva Louise writes songs that feel driven by impulse and curiosity rather than caution or genre boundaries, and that creative energy and freedom are contagious. Jess Allanicâs pop instincts and melodic sense anchor the chaos, lending the lighter passages real emotional weight and memorability, rather than merely serving as connective tissue. Edge of the Abyssâs incorporation of Latin rhythmic elements and melodic sensibilities ended up also being a personal bonus; Latin music has been a refuge for me from musical monotony for years, and hearing them integrated naturally into Edge of the Abyss was exciting, and it generated affection for this wayward Venezuelan and her French and English bandmates. What really sealed the deal for me, though, was how committed the band sounds to its vision. The songwriting is ambitious and fun, but it doesnât feel scattered. The album has a cinematic feel â complemented by literally cinematic music videos â but doesnât feel bloated or melodramatic. And Calva Louise sports a swagger unique to bands who are just doing exactly what they want to be doing. Since July, Iâve kept coming back to Edge of the Abyss and forgetting I had even enjoyed other records this year. Thereâs a real sense of becoming here; of a band pulling its influences together into something that feels unique. And I also feel invested in Calva Louise in a way I havenât been with many bands. I really am so happy to see them growing and succeeding. I love seeing them landing on peopleâs lists here and elsewhere. They have so much potential, and I am so eager to see what they do next. But should the worst befall them, Iâll always have Edge of the Abyss, and it already feels like an all-timer.
Honorable Mentions
Sarastus // Agony Eternal [July 1st, 2025 | Dominance of Darkness Records | Bandcamp] â Stolen from me by one Kenstrosity, Sarastus was a joyous discovery by me in the depths of the promo bin. One part black metal with a touch of death nâ roll for vibes, Agony Eternal strikes hard at modern conventions of black metal and sounds fresh by playing fast, unapologetic, engaging music with razor-sharp riffs. Melodic, without being sickly sweet or cheesy, with a ton of attack and great songwriting chops, Sarastus really threads the needle on Agony Eternal, making something that is driven and addictive, but undeniably black metal.
Wytch Hazel // V: Lamentations [July 4th, 2025 | Bad Omen | Bandcamp] â Iâve been back and forth with Wytch Hazel in the past. I have enjoyed what they do, but in the past Iâve been more skeptical of specifically nostalgiacore records that donât feel like theyâre adding much ânew.â First, I think Iâm just getting past that problem, as the ânewâ in metal is emphasizing things I donât love about the scene. But second, I think V: Lamentations is just a more engaging record. From the word âgo,â Wytch Hazel writes with a kind of urgency that gives their brand of â70s-tinged metal an extra kick, and the energy sits so well with me. Maybe the songwriting is just a bit tighter, maybe itâs faster, I donât knowâI didnât write the proper review. All I know is that I keep circling back to Lamentations in a way that I havenât done as much with their earlier albums. And that made it easy to put in the running for Listurnalia and to give my personal Angry Stamp oâ Approvalâą.
Mors Principium Est // Darkness Invisible [September 26th, 2025 | Perception/Reigning Phoenix Music | Stream or Buy on Qobuz] â Probably the grower of the year, Darkness Invisible surprised me by sticking around. When I started reviewing it, I expected not to like it much. I had been a big fan of the bandâs previous output and of their former guitaristâs solo record from last year. But with familiarityâand time spent dissecting itâI became increasingly impressed with the album. While the production is busy and pulls it down, the writing forges a new path that better represents the vision of MPEâs founding member, Ville Viljanen. And that vision is bleak, blackened, and surprisingly sticky. No matter your opinion on the end of the previous incarnation, Darkness Invisible at least demonstrates that there is still a vital future for Finlandâs most underrated melodic death metal powerhouse. And thatâs a future to which I look forward.
Blackbraid // Blackbraid III [August 8th, 2025 | Self-release | Bandcamp] â I have a Gollumesque distaste for modern black metal. I am physically incapable of starting a review or blurb of a black metal band without reminding readers how much I hate âatmosphereâ in the post-Cascadian black metal era. âGive it to us raw and wriggling!â I growl at all the fat hobbitses who try to feed me empty, overcooked âatmosphere.â Blackbraid doesnât want to feed me atmosphere. Instead, Blackbraidâs III trembles with a vibe that brings me back to discovering black metal; at times blistering, at times introspective, but rarely overstaying its welcome and never feeling like its primary goal is to be the band that defanged black metal for good to make it okay to listen to for kids in the suburbs. Iâll be listening to III for a long time.
TĂłmarĂșm // Beyond Obsidian Euphoria â This record is too long. Itâs got too much hype among the staff. And also, itâs too damned good to be an honorable mention. And yet, there are only so many #(ish)es, and I got to Beyond Obsidian Eurphoria too late to really give it the kind of sustained love that it needs to properly list. Still, once I started listening, Iâve been swinging past it every day. Sometimes twice. The songwriting is a bit wandering, the album is a bit overwhelming, and yet there is an undeniable vibe that TĂłmarĂșm traffics in, and thatâs sneakily sticky. Combine that techy Death with something akin to Disillusion, and maybe youâve got your comp. The only complaint I have is that some of the melodies end up intentionally arch in a way that makes me think that they are actively trying not to give the ear something to latch onto. Thatâs dumb, but itâs also very 2025. And hey, at least thereâs a really easy trick for them to sell out with.
âŠand Oceans // The Regeneration Itinerary [May 23rd, 2025 | Season of Mist | Bandcamp] âThe Regeneration Itinerary was a lot more controversial among fans than I expected, but I really enjoyed it. As I wrote in May, âItâs always fun to watch bands defy Angry Metal Guyâs Law of Diminishing Recordingsâą, and while The Regeneration Itinerary isnât their best record yet, 30 years after their debut, âŠand Oceans is still releasing vital music thatâs impossible to overlook.â And thatâs just true facts as stated by a metal-knower. While not quite the tour de force of its predecessors, this record is a solid bit of weirdo black metal with some of the best art in the biz. I recommend it highly.
Haxprocess24 // Beyond What Eyes Can See [July 25th, 2025 | Transcending Obscurity Records | Bandcamp] â Four songs, three of which are over 10 minutes long, and a combo of what Iâd call post-Opeth songwriting with OSDM aesthetics, Beyond What Eyes Can See deserved more attention this year and ended up, instead, on my Stack oâ Shameâą. This isnât a reflection on them; they play vital death metal and deserve accolades for their expansive vision and the way everything flows. They just got eaten up by the July where everything got released. Sorry, boys, but hereâs your fig leaf!
Majestica // Power Train [February 7th, 2025 | Nuclear Blast Records | Stream or Buy at Qobuz] â Back in like 2008, I saw a band called ReinXeed play a whole bunch of covers of Swedish dance/electronica âgroupâ E-Type at a Culture Night in UmeĂ„. I remember hearing from people in the local scene that they were âbig in Japan,â and I listened to some stuff, but wasnât super moved by it at the time. In 2019, ReinXeed changed their name to Majestica and got signed to Nuclear Blast. And damnit if they arenât just a lot better than they were in 2008. Power Train, which is on our collective Stack oâ Shameâą, is the bandâs third full-length under the moniker, and it rocks the same kind of sickly sweet melodies, guitar gymnastics, and general sense of fun that makes power metal my go-to genre a lot of days. While not quite as sticky and addictive as some other things higher up the list, Power Train was a solid addition to the bandâs discography and one of the better power records I heard this year. Youâve come a long way, baby!
Dormant Ordeal // Tooth and Nail [April 18th, 2025 | Willowtip Records | Bandcamp] â While not as high on this record as others on the staff, Dormant Ordeal is undeniably vital. And Iâm just never going to write a better blurb than I did when they got Record oâ the Month for April: âThis record hits a sweet spot inside of me, best described as the âoh yeah, thatâs how death metal is doneâ spot. The riffs flow, and my brain just opens up the spigots, releasing a veritable tsunami of dopamine. Every riff that cuts, every transition that seethes, and every recognition of the slick, skilled ways that these guys construct songs, I get a nice big kick of that Happy Chemical. Tooth and Nail is dynamic, punishing, aggressive, and better yet, itâs smart.â Man, that guy can write!
Aversed // Erasure of Color [March 25th, 2025 | M-Theory Audio | Bandcamp] â Last, and I guess technically least â but that isnât taking into account that there were like 10,000 albums released in 2025 and there are only like 25 on this list â is Aversedâs Erasure of Color. Part of the reason for its late arrival is that, despite being our Record oâ the Month for March, Erasure of Color didnât actually make it onto my personal playlist until quite a bit later. And damn, that was kind of a big miss on my part. Great melodeath with a unique flavor and great intensity; thereâs something thoughtful and sharp about this record. Combine that with excellent album art and the Dolphin Whisperer seal of approval, and Erasure of Color has everything fans of melodeath need to carry them through this wasteland. I will need to keep my eyes on Aversed going forward.
#AndOceans #2025 #Aephanemer #AnAbstractIllusion #AngryMetalGuy #AngryMetalGuySTop10Ish #ArjenLucassen #Aversed #Blackbraid #CalvaLouise #ChasingTheDragon #DormantOrdeal #EdgeOfTheAbyss #Fallujah #Haxprocess #HelmsDeep #Impureza #InMourning #Insania #IntenseIndifference #Kalaveraztekah #Majestica #MorsPrincipiumEst #PhantomSpell #Sarastus #Scardust #TĂłmarĂșm #Vittra #WytchHazel
Before I was press-ganged into the Skull Pit, I, Ferox, began curating an exercise playlist named Heavy Moves Heavy. For a decade, I alone reaped the benefits of this creationâmany were the hours spent preening aboard my Squat Yacht, mixing oils so that I could marvel at the glistening gainz unlocked by the List. My indentured servitude is your good fortune, because a new and improved version of the Heavy Moves Heavy playlist is now available to all readers of AMG in good standing.1 The lifters among us have spent countless hours in the Exercise Oubliette testing these songs for tensile strength and ideological purity. Enjoyâbut donât listen if you are being screened for PEDs in the near future. This music will cause your free testosterone levels to skyrocket even as it adds length and sheen to your back pelt. ~ Ferox
A year has passed, and now the barbell of honour has been placed on my (regrettably smaller) shoulders as Ferox steps back from the AMG side-quest to focus on his main story. Our leader may be absent, but our search for gains continues with an otherwise full house and new recruits to boot. The songs that guided and shaped our workouts are compiled here in a playlist guaranteed to boost yours, whether you listen on shuffle or straight the way through.1 So what are you waiting for? Down your pre-workout, grab your straps and your knee-sleeves, and get ready to get massive. ~ Thus Spoke
Thus Spoke Enters Muscle Mommy Mode:
âSilence like the Graveâ // Paradise Lost (Ascension) â Straightforwardly solid, catchy, sharp, with a killer atmosphere. Insta-playlist save when the single dropped. Paradise Lost back on top-form and just time to give you the energy for moving heavy things.
âMagnoliaâ // Deafheaven (Lonely People with Power) â Oh yeah, Iâm dead serious. Sorry not sorry to any haters out there. This is four minutes and change of unqualified emotion and racing thoughts and it gets my blood running hot every damn time.
âAgainst the Dying of the Lightâ // Dormant Ordeal (Tooth and Nail) â Unironically motivating in a way presumably not intended. Just when you want to quit, that roar of âraaage, RAAAAAAGGGE,â and the impeccable drum and guitar work come in to see you through.
âCondemnesiaâ // Cytotoxin (Biographyte) â The devastation of a currently-occurring nuclear disasterâcomplete with a frantically clicking geiger counter and a witnessâ agonised moansâportrayed through slick, punchy tech-death. Do I need to explain?
âPerfida Contracçao do Açoâ // Filii Nigrantium Infernalium (Perfida Contracçao do Aço) â I wouldnât normally go for something like this; the vocals are kind of horrible. But the energetic ridiculousness is so fucking feral it takes you beyond pumped and into crazed maniac territory; which is obviously ideal for the gym.
âDNA (Do Not Amputate)â // To the Grave (Still) â Mean, melodic, and with a message, thereâs nothing about this that doesnât work while lifting. If Iâm going to include any deathcore in the playlist at all, then it has to be To the Grave.
âEunuch Makerâ // Depravity (Bestial Possession) â If your resting-murder-face, hoodie, and headphones arenât enough to keep people from having the audacity to speak to you, then listening to this could help. Itâs massive, and fun as hell, and will make you look extra mean through osmosis, I guarantee.
âArchitects of Extinctionâ // Psycroptic (Architects of Extinction) â Banger alert. The change in vocals makes this a smidge less strong than it otherwise would be, but câmon; a riff that good has got to be anabolic.
âAmaranthâ // Nephylim (Circuition) â My dopamine-fixation song for the best part of a month. Itâs uplifting, itâs catchy, itâs infinitely replayable. What more do you want?
âNatural Lawâ // Primitive Man (Observance) â Itâs not too long, itâs a very important, massive chunk of overwhelming heaviness that makes me feel ten times the size and heft I actually am. You can get through all three (or however many) sets with spare time to admire the pump.
âDeathlessâ // Phobocosm (Gateway) â Monstrous, massive, intense. Fast and furious isnât always it; more and more, I crave slow, oppressive, and malevolent. Itâs just what I crave to dig deeper.
â1918 Pt 3: ADE (A duty to escape)â // 1914 (Viribus Unitis) â It took less than a single complete playthrough for this to end up on this list. Itâs heavy enough for leg day, and itâs atmospheric and moving in that perfect way that helps you dissociate from how much your body hurts. Iâve had it on repeat through many a tough session since.
Kenstrosity Bursts Through His Own Workout Gear:
âRot in the Pitâ // Depravity (Bestial Possession) â If there was ever a song that eradicated mental blocks to that next rep, that next PR, that next push, itâs âRot in the Pit.â Boasting mountain-moving swagger and a center riff that risks greater injury to my body than any ego lift could ever approach, Depravity penned a bona fide gymstormer with âRot in the Pit.â
âSummoning Sicknessâ // Pedestal for Leviathan (Enter: Vampyric Manifestation) â Imagine getting legs so powerful and swole they force your gait to changeâbut youâre doing it in the basement of your Transylvanian vampire castle with Igor loading up weights on the bar for your next PR. Thatâs what âSummoning Sicknessâ feels like when Iâm pushing
âNachthexeâ // Bianca (Bianca) â You wouldnât expect something that dabbles so heavily in atmosphere to possess such meaty muscle as this, but Biancaâs âNachthexeâ proves the might of the sleeper build. Once they take of the airy, soft pump cover, a devastating topology of deadly power ripples just under the skin.
âThe Insufferable Weightâ // Barren Path (Grieving) â Donât let the lighter weights Iâm lugging around fool you. Volume days are fucking brutal, and a challenge for both my mind and my body. Barren Pathâs âThe Insufferable Weightâ adrenalizes me with itâs speed and brutal rhythms just enough to survive those endless reps.
âGranfalloonâ // Unbirth (Asomatous Besmirchment) â Unbirth is the pool from which some the nastiest, grooviest, and most deceptively complex riffs spawn. This is great fodder for those compound movements that build strength and density. You could pick anything off of Asomatous Besmirchment for such gains, but my preference is âGranfalloon.â
âKollapsâ // Jordsjuk (Naglet til livet) â Black metal? For the gym? You fucking bet. Guaranteed to pull you back from the brink of absolute failure, Jordsjukâs âKollapsâ thrashes and shimmers with enough vibrancy and verve to make whatever load Iâm pushing feel like light weight.
âInfestisâ // Igorrr (Amen) â You wouldnât expect something as weird and wacky as Igorrr to fit in the land of iron and steel, but here we are. With stomping riffs and vicious roars, âInfestisâ is top tier workout gear. Great for keeping pace and supporting breath control, youâll find much progress with Igorrr by your side.
âFlashback (ft. Strawberry Hospital)â // Blind Equation (A Funeral in Purgatory) â Every year I open up one slot for those high intensity workouts where cardio and strength meet. This year, my spotter cheering me on when Iâm doing sprints and weighted jumps is Blind Equationâs intense and lightning-fast âFlashback.â Gotta go fast!!!
âLeave the Flesh Behindâ // Ashen (Leave the Flesh Behind) â Probably the underdog in the litter, Ashenâs âLeave the Fleshâ behind is all muscle, and a mountain of it at that. These riffs represent both the immovable object and the unstoppable force. One day, I hope to be like them.
â12 Worm Woundsâ // Death Whore (Blood Washes Everything Away) â It was difficult to narrow down a selection from Death Whoreâs lean and mean debut, but I keep coming back to the swaggering riffs of â12 Worm Woundsâ went I need motivation for that next lift. It just makes everything Iâm doing seem like the most fun Iâll ever have.
âThe Fire in Which We Burnâ // âŠand Oceans (The Regeneration Itinerary) â Boasting what I consider to be the single best black metal riff of 2025, âŠand Oceans greatly surprised me with a swaggering barnstormer of a track ready made to stoke the fire in my chest for a second wind. Hand me another set of plates, itâs time to go up for one more set!
âNever Difiledâ // Serenity in Murder (Timeless Reverie) â Who needs to spell correctly when you have hundreds of pounds to push on the bar? This is the question I ask whenever the adrenaline-soaked âNever Difiledâ plays as I rack up the plates for my next set. Nobodyâs ever been able to give me an answer.
âThe Twisted Helixâ // Mutagenic Host (The Diseased Machine) â They say genetics play a huge role in what kind of gains you can expect to achieve naturally in the gym. Well, Iâm an ectomorph so itâs toughâand takes a lot more timeâto build and maintain muscle. The solution? Twist my helixes and instantly quadruple my gains. Mutagenic Hostâs âThe Twisted Helixâ is just the tool for the job!
â+++Engine Kill+++â // Ruinous Power (EXTREME DANGER: Prototype Weaponry) â Sometimes you just need something threatening to rip the rails right off the track to hype you up for a grueling session. Thatâs what songs like Ruinous Powerâs â+++Engine Kill+++â are for. Short, to the point, and vicious, it will get your blood surging and your body raring to go.
âFemtoâs Themeâ // Flummox (Southern Progress) â Something so theatrical doesnât sound like a natural fit when working out, but the sheer heft and chunky rhythms of Flummoxâs âFemtoâs Themeâ defies those expectations. Iâve been using it for leg days and the results are crazy town! Donât believe me? Try it for yourself!
Steel Druhm Trains His Ape Arms to Crush the Empire State Building:
âAbandoned Feretrumâ // Sepulchral (Beneath the Shroud) â Blending old school black and death noise, Sepulchral mainline pure badger adrenaline and rattlesnake venom into your major muscle groups. Handle those power chugs with care, Brah.
âNecrobotic Enslavementâ // Glorious Depravity (Death Never Sleeps) â Taking discarded Morbid Angel riffs and repurposing them to turn a peaceful man rabid is why we have science. Take 2 doses of âNecrobotic Enslavementâ 30 minutes before throwing 45 lb plates at people who sit on exercise machines and chat.
âA Scream in the Snowâ // Black Soul Horde (Symphony of Chaos) â Trve metal can embiggen the innate desire for strength and raw power like no other, and âA Scream in the Snowâ will have you swinging olympic bars to get that sword arm ready for bloody constraint and weightroom glory.
âEyes on Sixâ // Biohazard (Divided We Fall) â Loudmouthed tough guys from Brooklyn scream at you to watch your back as they try to snap it with angry riffs and bad attitudes. This is for the caveman living in your reptile brain.
âCarry Onâ // Nite (Cult of the Serpent Sun) â Badass riffs and Manowar-esque demands that you carry on despite hardships are the crucial things that separate a routine workout from a Herculean trial that transforms you. Carry on to bigness.
âCrusadersâ // Starlight Ritual (Rogue Angels) â A dirty, greasy 80s metal anthem that sounds like proto-Iron Maiden is what you need to evolve from tubby baby to a fucking WRATHCHILD. Join this crusade and tip your templar.
âIron Signâ // Ambush (Evil in All Dimensions) â Unraveling the Riddle of Steel requires a long, hard journey guided only by iron signs. This cut will set you on the right path toward your ferric destiny.
âBending the Steelâ // Ambush (Evil in All Dimensions) â If youâre out there bending the steel, why not get moral support from Ambush with this massive aggressive dose of testosterone and primal motivation? When the singer shouts, âLetâs go, boys!â youâll feel your strength grow 3 times (plus two!). With an iron will, you gotta keep bending the steel!
âGaruda (Eater of Snakes)â // Brainstorm (Plague of Rats) â Brainstorm write heavy metal for leg day, and Garuda is your feathery guardian iron eagle compelling you to crush that feeble PB. The strong can tell their eagle where to fly and what snakes to eat.
âBeyond Enemy Linesâ // Brainstorm (Plague of Rats) â Brainstorm ainât done with you by a damn sight! If the thundering drums and beefy riffs here donât get you chalked up and ready for iron warfare, you should take up underwater doily knitting.
Steel-Jacketed Olden Bonus:
âSpark to the Flameâ // Winterâs Bane (Redivivus) â One of the greatest gym/workout songs EVER. Lyrics that speak of creating a better version of yourself as you burn in the crucible of effort will help you rise high as those burly riffs hammer your inner coward into moist gum paste.
Grin Reaper Gets Down with the Fitness:
âNo Pain, No Gainâ // Majestica (Power Train) â Metals of Power and Heft are a must for my workouts, especially stretching and pre-lifting calisthenics. Majesticaâs cheesy anthem is perfect montage-fodder, and even though the track is rife with clichĂ©d chestnuts, it features kinetic hooks that gird my gears for whatâs to come.
âStorm the Gatesâ // Soulfly (Chama) â Once Iâm limbered up, itâs time to sweat. Max and the boysâ bouncy grooves peddle just the right combination of chest-thumping swagger and ferocity to make sure my next rep sets the tone for a simmering sesh of glorious gainz.
âSkullbatteringâ // Werewolves (The Ugliest of All) â Thereâs no better way to keep momentum hurtling forward than with a good olâ fashioned ode to smashing braincases. Setting the right tone for a workout is paramount, and here Werewolves does not fuck around. Thereâs nothing pretty or flowery about âSkullbattering,â but if swole is your goal, you need to exorcise the Ugly.
âAnodyne Rustâ // Blood Red Throne (Siltskin) â I hurt my shoulder a few years ago, and though stretching and (prescribed) drugs didnât help much, bulking up did. Exercise slipped out of my routine as work and family commitments grew (as did my waistline), but as Iâve recently knocked the Rust off my dumbbells, Iâm reminded of the palliative restoration that comes from pumping iron and death metal.
âRavenous Leechâ // Guts (Nightmare Fuel) â Scuzzy, groovy, and unapologetically fun, Nightmare Fuel is filled to the gills with mid-paced chugs that make a great soundtrack for AMRAP workouts. While most of Gutsâ bloody remnants will Fuel your workout, spinning âRavenous Leechâ is sure to leave you hungry for even more punishment.
âBy Lead or Steelâ // Barbarous (Initium Mors) â Does Cannibal Corpse feature heavily in your gym listening? If so, consider Barbarous, who channels similar vibes and vitriol with less viscera. Itâll make you want to drink motör oil and punch babies, and thatâs the kind of shove you need when youâre out on swole patrol.2
âKaltfrontâ // Eisbrecher (Kaltfront) â Something about heavy distortion, dance-adjacent electronics, and gravelly vocals makes âNew German Hardnessâ prime listening for calculated and efficient movements. With near imperceptible head bops and a commitment to perfect form, this âKaltfrontâ leaves me focused and hard as a block of ice.
âHope Terminatorâ // Cytotoxin (Biographyte) â Plenty of great death metal jams spurn gym-list inclusion with slow-build intros, not getting to proper stankinâ until theyâre well into the track. Cytotoxin knows better, immediately flaying you with technicality. âHope Terminatorâ is the perfect mid-playlist piece to curb fatigue and keep your spirit engorged.
âLet There Be Oblivionâ // Ade (Supplicium) â Romeâs Ade lays down a banger of a riff on âLet There Be Oblivion,â and itâs long and strong enough to push me through a set or two. If Iâm struggling during a workout, whether in motivation or physically, I need every ounce of energy I can muster, and songs like this one can be the tipping point.
âBlinding Oblivionâ // Depravity (Bestial Possession) â Like Gutsâ Nightmare Fuel, Bestial Possession boasts track after track of gym-ready scorchers. I chose âBlinding Oblivionâ 1. to maintain consistency with âLet There Be Oblivionâ and 2. because something about the subtle melody in the song gives it an air of refreshment that I need as the demands of my workout ramp to a frothing climax.
âElevator Operatorâ // Electric Callboy (Elevator Operator) â Itâs dumb, itâs trite, and itâs so devastatingly catchy that it sticks in my head for days on end. Most importantly, it makes me want to move things up and down, and I wonât apologize for that.
âSunlight Covenantâ // Spire of Lazarus (Those Who Live in Death) â I donât dabble in deathcore often, but when I do, itâs usually technical, symphonic, and anthemic. Spire of Lazarus crafts just the right blend of their core components to make âSunlight Covenantâ a certified HMH banger. As a bonus, try to time it so that the track hits on your last set of the dayâthe melody and backing swells make a triumphant send-off as you clinch the last rep and wipe down the bench. You wiped the bench, right?
âFossilizedâ // Ăltra Raptör (Fossilized) â This song has stayed close since I first laid ears on it, and not once has it failed to engage the hype machine. Whether warming up, working out, or cooling down, the classic retro riffs and sunglasses-at-night nonchalance define a cool I strive for, and motivation like that is the key to gainz.
Dolph Does Heavy This Time:3
âMortuary Ritesâ // Mörtual (Altar of Brutality) â Blood boils fastest with a roto-tom take off followed by a death-thrash pummel. As churning pit energy converts to flared nostrils, focused vision, and engorged fibers at the crack of a incessant stick, find a slow and steady breath as your body prepares for war.
âTlazolteotlâ // Kalaveraztekah (Nikan Axkan) â The beat of a clanging snare threatens whatever weighted structure exists in your path. âTlazolteotlâ marches ever forward through growling twists, hardwood clack, and flute-led guitar abandon. A brief respite of acoustics awaitsâbut so does the real bulk of this journey.
âBlack Scrawlâ // Pupil Slicer (Fleshwork) â Feedback, growling bass, pneumatic kicks, and an urgent snarlâPupil Slicer demands your full thrust. With this affixing hardcore anchor, âBlack Scrawlâ will carry you to your first peak push with a dragging breakdown coda.
âSwamp Mentalityâ // The Acacia Strain (You Are Safe from God Here) â Rest does not come to those who push only once, though. The burn of your resolve will light the path in the angst and mire and core-fluid whiplash of âSwamp Mentality.â And Vincent Bennettâs tattered and spit-riddled mic will provide an extra OUGH to your exhale.
âOrphansâ // Dormant Ordeal (Tooth and Nail) â If you could tether your pulse to the relentless kick assaults that Chason Westmoreland brings to âOrphansââall of Tooth and Nail reallyâyour spotter wouldnât be able to find dial emergency fast enough to save you. Instead, search for the heavier weighted tempo that exists between the pitter-patter as your guide. In this space, relentless and emotive riff runs and lead wails coalesce into one of the most threatening thrash-pit breaks of the year. Harness this power.
âThe Great Day of His Wrathâ // Blindfolded (What Seeps through Threads) â In vicious harmonized splendor, Blindfoldedâs neoclassical scale hopping riffage possesses a buoyancy that is vital to remaining invigored. And whipping around bleating and squealing mic energy with resplendent solo work, âThe Great Day of His Wrathâ both maintains your demanding schedule and restores a lightness to your being before the heaviest pulls come to play.
âRetinaâ // Pillars of Cacophony (Paralipomena) â Neoclassical drama, however, doesnât always seek to restore with its airy play. âRetinaâ arrives, rather, with a mechanical and and programmed structure that functions as a scaffold upon which ascending scale iterations match your own gradual and gravity-creating climb. As the pinch-happy shuffle sneers in precision stank-face deployment, resist the urge to discharge your steel load into the earth.
âLunar Tearâ // Barren Path (Grieving) â In any routine, no matter how structured, a moment of ferocious release can provide a benefit. Before this playlist enters its most grueling minutes, a lightning-speed romp in the grips of endless blasts and riffs exists to shake off the inertia that can result from testing your limits.
âHeaping Pile of Electrified Goreâ // Pissgrave (Malignant Worthlessness) â We are all filthâcorpses brought to life by the signals we create. Synapses creating chains from proximal to distal drive our movements from concept to power. Through squelching refrain and lockstep death metal assault, fibers at the edge of their load-bearing capacity persist and persevere in the midst of Pissgraveâs shifting and grimy rhythms.
âBursting with Lifeâs True Fruitâ // Umulamahri (Learning the Secrets of Acid) â Guttural expression unlocks the last inches of a tough pull. As we channel Doug Mooreâs garbage disposal tier phlegmanations into our own tidal vibrations, we visualize the final set. We are victorious. And in a celebratory expression of might, we slip into Umulamahriâs enlightened synth dissolution. Those who float cannot collapse.
#AndOceans #1914 #2025 #Ade #Ambush #Ashen #Barbarous #BarrenPath #Bianca #Biohazard #BlackSoulHorde #BlindEquation #Blindfolded #BloodRedThrone #Brainstorm #Cytotoxin #Deafheaven #DeathWhore #Depravity #DormantOrdeal #Eisbrecher #ElectricCallboy #FiliiNigrantiumInfernalium #Flummox #GloriousDepravity #Guts #HeavyMovesHeavy #Igorr #Jordsjuk #Kalaveraztekah #Majestica #Mortual #MutagenicHost #Nephylim #Nite #ParadiseLost #PedestalForLeviathan #Phobocosm #PillarsOfCacophony #Pissgrave #PrimitiveMan #Psycroptic #PupilSlicer #RuinousPower #Sepulchral #SerenityInMurder #Soulfly #SpireOfLazarus #StarlightRitual #TheAcaciaStrain #ToTheGrave #ĂltraRaptör #Umulamahri #Unbirth #Werewolves #WinterSBane#TheMetalDogArticleList
#BraveWords
MAJESTICA Frontman TOMMY JOHANSSON Shares Cover Of SAVATAGE / TRANS-SIBERIAN ORCHESTRA Classic âChristmas Eve / Sarajevo 12/24â (Video)
#MAJESTICA #TOMMYJOHANSSON #Frontman #SharesCoverOf #album #newrelease #video #drummer #guitarist #BraveWords #metal #music