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gaianwrath · 7 months
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Godthrymm- reflections
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sunseekerdeluxe · 1 year
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Tunesday 25
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Also heard this week:
Foo Fighters - Saint Cecilia Peter Gabriel - “So Much (Bright-Side Mix)” Godthrymm - The Vastness Silent Haken - Enter the 5th Dimension Haxprocess - The Caverns of Duat Insomnium - Since the Day It All Came Down Judicator - Let There Be Nothing Krallice - Dimensional Bleedthrough Krallice - Krallice Ted Leo & the Pharmacists - August 2023 Bandcamp EP Lör - Edge of Eternity Lovebites - Battle Against Damnation Marillion - This Strange Engine Jeff Martin - The Seven Deadly Sins Mental Cruelty - Zwielicht Obituary - Cause of Death Phase Meridian - Grow. Decay. Transform. Radiohead - “MD111″ - “MD116″ from MINIDISCS [HACKED] Saga - 10,000 Days Styx - The Grand Illusion Thantifaxath - Hive Mind Narcosis
Backlog: 88.
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metalshockfinland · 13 days
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GODTHRYMM Unveil New Two-Track EP "The Light", Out Now
Following the success of their latest full-length release “Distortions” in August 2023, UK-based doom metal powerhouse Godthrymm has returned with a mesmerizing new offering in the form of a two-track EP titled “The Light”, now available via Profound Lore Records. Comprised of seasoned members with past affiliations to renowned acts like My Dying Bride, Anathema, Vallenfyre, and…
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toxicmetalzine · 13 days
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Godthrymm
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GODTHRYMM – Release New EP “The Light” Get the album info now @ https://toxicmetalzine.com/post/godthrymm
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columnistfromtheabyss · 10 months
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Godthrymm's poetry of pain and disaster, the tragedy of a world's downfall that no longer nurtures life, revives death in its corrosive cradles. Human alienation that resonates in the blackness of the existence; and the nature that goes into decline and decay.
Phenomenal.
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radiophd · 1 year
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youtube
godthrymm -- devils
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soldier-requests · 7 months
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https://www.tumblr.com/soldier-requests/742779174051364864/hello-can-i-ask-for-a-playlist-for-a?source=share
hello, sorry for not specifying. nothing from a certain media, the kintype in general. but if a character can help with it, something like Barbatos from obey me!, but I don't kin him. he isn't stated as a realitywarper anyway-
and about songs.. things like Six Forty Seven by insupendo ; Solitude from Candlemass and Vermillion by Slipknot?
thank you for your hardwork :). [please tag @orderling when you're done.]
hello!! okay i gotcha now, thanks for clarifying; hopefully you like whatever i ended up finding ^_^.
and thank you! i appreciate the compliment :]].
(@orderling)
under a cut because this one's pretty long XD.
songs go like "song" + "artist"
dividers from @/just-my-latest-hyperfixation and @/baexywth
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"Falling" + "Instupendo"
"128" + "machingum"
"This Could Build Us a Home" + "The Garden"
"Where Is My Mind" + "Safari Riot" and "Grayson Sanders"
"Vanished" + "Crystal Castles"
"Suffer With Me" + "líue"
"LOVELY BASTARDS" + "ZWE1HVNDXR" and "yatashigang"
"Catalysts for Her Awakening" + "Avith Ortega"
"Insidious" + "joseph bishara"
"The Sound Of Your Fear" + "Midi Blossom"
"Key" + "C418"
"It's Playtime" + "MOB Games"
"Browser History" + "Graham Kartna"
"A Burning Memory" + "Reece Moseley"
"warm nights" + "Xori"
"Lavender Town" + "8-Bit Arcade"
"Lavender Town" + "Bitmaster"
"you not the same" + "TileKid"
"Judah's Lullaby" + "REPULSIVE"
"Kyomi's Lullaby" + "REPULSIVE"
"バラック集落" (In English: "Barrack Settlements" or "Barracks") + "Kikiyama"
"PP1" + "Frakkur"
"Deep Swim" + "Windows 96"
"Sony" + "VHS LOGOS"
"Implanted Memories" + "Infinity Frequencies"
"The descent" + "Infinity Frequencies"
"Agony" (Instrumental) + "Scammacist"
"Echoes of Tranquility" + "Nocturne"
"Stars Will Fall" + "Duster"
"Choking on Flowers" + "Fox Academy"
"Dust Collector" + "YG Hypnos"
"Memoir #02 [06.12.09]" + "Maria Pseftoga" and "May Roosevelt"
"The Lobotomy" + "Maebi"
"Year Zero" + "Ghost"
"Con Clavi Con Dio" + "Ghost"
"Prime Mover" + "Ghost"
"Call Me Little Sunshine" + "Ghost"
"The Killer in My Skull" + "Alastor"
"I'll Cut You Down" + "Uncle Acid & The Deadbeats"
"Them!" + "Acid Mammoth"
"Strong Reflection" + "Mars Red Sky"
"Prehistoric Dog" + "Red Fang"
"The Culling" + "Chelsea Wolfe"
"Christ is Dead" + "Crypt Sermon"
"Beneath the Torchfire Glare" + "Crypt Sermon"
"Mare of the Night" + "Below"
"The Coven" + "Below"
"Seeds of the Desolate" + "Solitude Aeturnus"
"Fallen Empire" + "Dawn Of Winter"
"Ragnaradi Eve" + "Scald"
"In the Open Sea" + "Scald"
"Black Colossus" + "Funeral Circle"
"Scion of Infinity" + "Funeral Circle"
"Spiritus Mortis" + "I Am a Name on Your Funeral Wreath"
"Lost Horizons" + "Memento Mori"
"The Sword Woman" + "Smoulder"
"The Poltergeist" + "Count Raven"
"Beyond the Horizon" + "Isole"
"Among the Exalted" + "Godthrymm"
"Wolf God" + "Grand Magus"
"Here Be Monsters" + "Apocalypse Orchestra"
"Bring Me To Life" + "Evanescence"
"Break Stuff" + "Limp Bizkit"
"Bodies" + "Drowning Pool"
"Down with the Sickness" + "Disturbed"
"Yuve Yuve Yu" + "The HU"
"Up to the Flames" + "Ludovico Technique"
"Framed In Blood" (Remastered 2006) + "The 69 Eyes"
"Heavy Lies The Crown" + "In Fear And Faith"
"Last Man Stranded" + "In Fear And Faith"
"A Fire On A Hill" + "Hands Like Houses"
"Let Me In" + "Dead Silence Hides My Cries"
"Murder Mitten" + "I See Stars"
"Melancholia" + "Dark Sarah"
"Every Little Thing" + "Dishwalla"
"The Air-Conditioned Nightmare" + "Mr. Bungle"
"The Diary Of Jane" + "Breaking Benjamin"
"Truth" + "Seether"
"Woohoo" + "Fleshwater"
"Waking the Demon" + "Bullet For My Valentine"
"Orchid" (Remastered 2014) + "Black Sabbath"
"Neon Knights" (Remastered 2008) + "Black Sabbath"
"Holy Diver" + "Dio"
"Rainbow in the Dark" + "Dio"
"Anesthesia" + "Type O Negative"
"Nettie" + "Type O Negative"
"Love You to Death" + "Type O Negative"
"Haunted" (Per Version) + "Type O Negative"
"Rev 22-20" + "Puscifer"
"Dragonaut" + "Sleep"
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Godthrymm's 'Distortions': Evocative British Doom Review
Photo by Frank Ralph In 2020, Godthrymm dropped their debut album Reflections, a massive slab of proper doom worthy of a spot among the genre’s giants. With the bar already set high, the band returns in 2023 with their second full-length, Distortions, the next album in their Visions trilogy. Steered by ex-My Dying Bride members Hamish Glencross and Shaun “Winter” Taylor-Steels, Godthrymm takes…
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infraredmag · 16 days
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GODTHRYMM: British Doom Act Releases Surprise Two-Song EP Today Via Profound Lore Records
Photo by Frank Ralph Barely a year since the release of their acclaimed second LP, Distortions, English epic doom metal quartet GODTHRYMM today surprises fans with a new two-song EP, The Light, now streaming everywhere. GODTHRYMM delivers sorrowful doom metal of the most classic UK style, directly descendent to “The Peaceville Three” which some of the members were a part of creating, the…
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2024 Album Purchases Pt. 2
LPs and EPs that were bought digital-only (usually through Bandcamp) are marked with an asterisk.
July:
Voyage by ABBA
Dark Recollections by Carnage
The Awaiting Coffins* and None Shall Live... The Hymns Of Misery* by Churchburn
I'd Be Lying If I Said I Didn't Care by Hannah Georgas
A Grand Reclamation* by Godthrymm
Walls Of Jericho by Helloween
Hunted by Khemmis
Voice Among Us* by Knucklehead
Barbarians* and Cerna Krev* by Maniac Butcher
Wheels Of Steel by Saxon
More Parts Per Million* by The Thermals
The Early Years (Element V, uniVers, I Am The Revolution, and The Meaning Of I) by Voyager
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gaianwrath · 7 months
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Godthrymm
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sunseekerdeluxe · 1 year
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Tunesday 33
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Also heard this week:
The Anchoress - Versions Big Wreck - "Ought to Be" Capra - Errors Carnifex - Necromanteum Peter Gabriel - "Love Can Heal (Dark-Side Mix)" Peter Gabriel - "This Is Home (Dark-Side Mix)" Godthrymm - Distortions Insomnium - Argent Moon Lucifer's Heritage - Symphonies of Doom Magnum - Sleepwalking Marillion - Happiness Is the Road, Volume 2: The Hard Shoulder Primordial - How It Ends Rannoch - Age of the Locust Rannoch - Between Two Worlds Sorcerer - Anno 1503 Svalbard - The Weight of the Mask Walpyrgus - Walpyrgus Nights Year of the Knife - Dust to Dust
Backlog: 49.
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metalshockfinland · 1 year
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GODTHRYMM (Feat. Former Members of My Dying Bride, Anathema + More) Release Video for New Single 'Devils'
UK doom metallers GODTHRYMM – featuring members once involved in such luminaries as My Dying Bride, Anathema, Vallenfyre, and Solstice – will issue their sophomore full-length album “Distortions” on August 18 2023 via Profound Lore Records. After the releases of the first single “Echoes”, today, Godthrymm offer another intense glimpse into their soon to be released album with the brand new music…
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happymetalgirl · 5 years
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February 2020
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After a slow, but solid, start to the new decade last month, February sure picked the pace back up with a ton more releases. As usual though, the early month has seen a few more filler albums pushed out without the bands’ labels stirring up much of hype around them, and for some of it, you can see why. We got several more solid projects though that have me excited for what else their associated record labels have in store for the rest of the year. But let’s not get ahead of ourselves here, there’s plenty to talk about for February, starting with Sepultura.
Sepultura - Quadra
Machine Messiah was the first album I reviewed for this blog, and in that review I made note of the silliness ongoing complaining about this Sepultura lineup not being the “real” Sepultura by fans who still clamor for Max to come back or for the current lineup to retire the Sepultura name. As the size of the Derek Green era discography gradually dwarfs the Max era catalog, Sepultura fans gradually come to accept that the past is the past and this is Sepultura now. And the mild contrast between Sepultura’s output as old late and Max’s creative output through Soulfly, Cavalera Conspiracy, and Killer Be Killed hasn’t really shown any major gulf in class between the estranged artists. Sepultura may not be putting out successive critically acclaimed masterpieces, but they sure have maintained a greater ambition for grander sounds and concepts than Max, who, by contrast, has come through with some solid projects himself, but has largely repeatedly retread the tribal nu metal ground of Roots and tried to give the death metal he practiced with Sepultura some modern updates, with mixed results. Machine Messiah found Sepultura weaving proggy and orchestral elements into their modern form of death metal with respectable success, and the band’s ninth album with Derek Green is a solid continuation of the styles and aesthetics that the band had been evolving into on and leading up to Machine Messiah. Quadra, though, I think just lacks a bit of that creative spark that its predecessor had. It splits the band’s compounded sonic evolution into its main parts by going through sections of thrashy songs, groovy songs, slightly experimental songs, and more moody melodic songs, and it makes for a nice flow to the album, but it feels like each part is missing some of the others while also not going all-in quite enough to make the splitting up of their stylistic components worth it. Again, it’s still solid, just not blowing me away.
6/10
Ihsahn - Telemark
Kind of an odd one here, just a quick five-track EP: three originals and two covers. The first of two EPs to come this year from the Emperor frontman and black metal progressive progenitor finds him largely continuing in short form the slightly blackened prog-rock he had going on on Ámr. The opening track, “Stridig”, rides this mostly continuous guitar rumble over a few intriguing proggy passages while Ihsahn snarls in classic fashion. On the vocal front, his style is raspy and distinctly black metal, but he keeps the roughness on his throat to a minimum to not overpower the instrumentation around him and to make more potent use of melody with his vocals. The second track, “Nord”, introduces a few little modern Opeth-isms and some subtle horn accents to up the prog factor as the EP gets a little lighter. The title track in the middle of the record really goes to prog town even more dramatically than the previous two and takes with the horns with it. With covers of Lenny Cravitz’ “Rock & Roll Is Dead” (which sounds like it wouldn’t be too far off from a Marilyn Manson cover if he also decided to cover the song) and “Wrathchild” by Iron Maiden rounding the album, Ihsahn continues his use of raspy vocal tones and meager black metal rasp over the rock and metal classics while giving the Maiden cut a sweet extra flair with the brilliant addition of a little horn section. It’s a splendid little addition to Ihsahn’s solo catalog and a continuation of his proggy vision for his brand of black metal.
7/10
Intronaut - Fluid Existential Interventions
I have kind of long seen Intronaut as the heir apparent to Isis, with their spacy, sludgy brand of post-metal taking that of the post-metal godfathers’ into more proggy territories, and the L.A.-based trio have gradually grown more into their skin over the past few records, taking , and with The Direction of Last Things having been released almost five years ago, I was starting to get a little worried about if they’d hung it up for some reason. The band shows that the longer break has not dampened their boldness or creativity as they pick up right where they left off with the marriage of gargantuan sludge heaviness and ethereal post-metal atmosphere. The band get a little Meshuggah-type jazz fusion going on in the song “The Cull” and keep that jazzy flow going on the spacy sections of “Contrapasso”, while getting infectiously headbangingly groovy on “Pangloss”. I love the ways the band finds to shift in so many different directions so smoothly. I’d say though that the repetition of smooth movements in similar directions from song to song continue to be the band’s Achilles heel, sometimes really needing some kind of X factor or some kind of compositional surprise to break their cycles in these songs so as to not feel so circlular. The groovy riffage on “Pangloss” is probably the closest the band comes to diverting from their post-metallic mould, and as much as I love it there, I wish there was more. It’s a strong effort from them nevertheless, but I hope the band don’t take so long to progress in this vein on their next album.
7/10
Napalm Death - Logic Ravaged by Brute Force
With a new record on the way this year, I’m sure happy to get a little appetizer from the grindcore legends in the form of this two-song EP. The first song, the titular “Logic Ravaged by Brute Force” kicks off on a melodic brooding note, but quickly ramps up into the band’s famous high grinding death gear. It’s a pretty solid track, just a bit lacking in aggressive pay-off during the choruses, the verses constantly bringing the tempo down. But it’s definitely the kind of Napalm Death song that fixated on its melodic brooding mood and its titular hook, not necessarily representative of the band’s whole catalog or the album to come. The second track of the two, the cover of Sonic Youth’s “White Kross”, is a bit more of a burner, but it fits quite well into that mould for that kind of Napalm Death track like “Omnipresent Knife in Your Back” that could work as an album closer as well.
It’s just two songs and you want a number? Come on./10
Anvil - Legal at Last
The long-running Canadian outfit’s previous album, Pounding the Pavement, served little more than a reminder of why they never ascended to the heights of thrash metal during that genre’s peak of cultural relevance, and I have not revisited that record since re-listening to it to figure out exactly where to place it on the year’s worst-of list. The bar has never been super high for Anvil, and Pounding the Pavement really made it seem like the only way to go was up. The corny cover art to this follow-up here, though, didn’t give me much hope, and it sure isn’t much of an improvement. As with any Anvil project, the lyrics on Legal at Last are malignantly atrocious, and any attempt to enjoy the album is going to have to overcome the serious hurdle of tuning out some of the dumbest lyrics that sound like they were lifted from a high-schooler’s math notebook. I, again, kind of went into the project not expecting much, and knew I was going to hear some truly cringy bars. The “Chemtrails” song, nevertheless, manages to astound me with its ridiculously stupid lyricism feeding into the titular conspiracy theory seemingly unironically. Nice one guys. I’ll say, the band at least kind of redeem themselves with their pointing out the obvious corruption surrounding the fossil fuel industry and government surveillance. Anyway, predictably shitty lyrics aside, the band channel the same Motörhead-esque proto-thrash they’ve channeled their whole career with similar compositional predictability and lack of imagination, and it tires really quickly. And there really isn’t much to say about it musically. The riffs here, I’d say, are marginally better than those on Pounding the Pavement, and this album at least slightly more tangibly fun than its even more bumbling predecessor.
4/10
Sylosis - Cycle of Suffering
For some reason I didn’t quite like this album when I first heard it, and what an idiot I was in that moment, because damn this album is solid! Blending thrash with some technical death metal much like Revocation and knowing when to inject a little metalcore rhythm, Sylosis have come through with a ferocious and pummeling, but melodically nimble record that channels pure thrash aggression in every direction it travels. The band works in rewarding thrash breakdowns in songs like “Arms Like a Noose” and gripping harsh vocal melodies on songs like “Idle Hands”, and all sorts of little touches that only make the compositions more and more intense; I think this may be their best effort yet!
8/10
God Dethroned - Illuminati
The trajectory of blackened death metal has really been impossible to separate from Behemoth’s highly influencial landmark album, The Satanist, with bands in the field all aware and taking cues from the Polish juggernauts on how to size up the already-mammoth-y style to biblical proportions. And while they still have their instinctive old-school death metal war-like brutishness showing through on songs like the title track, God Dethroned seem to be more willingly working in ethereal choirs and . Songs like “Spirit of Beelzebub”, “Eye of Horus”, and “Gabriel” show a clear Behemoth influence wrapping itself around the band; the intro of “Broken Halo” is perhaps the clearest tribute or rip-off of “Ov Fire and the Void” I have ever heard, and the song only continues to expound on the integration of Behemoth’s style into God Dethroned’s. As nice as the alternating mesh of old and new for the band is aesthetically, there are a few too many bland, filler cuts on here like “Book of Lies” and “Satan Spawn” weighing down the more excitingly volatile tracks with dragging performances that can only sound so good over such dry compositions.
6/10
Five Finger Death Punch - F8
Ivan Moody did a little phone interview with Loudwire prior to this album’s release and his assessment of his band’s recent output was actually pretty sober and realistic. Along with detailing the mental health benefits that have come with his newly committed sobriety (which I am genuinely happy about for him) Moody admitted that the band’s past two albums (And Justice for None and Got Your Six) have not been very special, and he’s right. He even said that the band’s double album pair was bloated and should have been trimmed down to one album, and he’s definitely right. He stated that he felt that the band has been in a rut for awhile and expressed a rejuvenated desire to make music that isn’t so here-today-gone-tomorrow, and he’s right about that. And he said that on this album, F8, the band really stepped it up and improved their craft to finally make something special again, and that’s where his hot streak of correctness ends. Don’t get me wrong, he’s partially right about F8 being better than the past two albums, but that’s not a very high bar to clear. I was very critical of And Justice for None when it came out in 2018 and I agree that it and Got Your Six are without a doubt the band’s worst albums, and that is saying something because they were on a downward slide for a long time and it wasn’t very surprising the way they bottomed out so badly on those two albums. While I don’t think the improvement was quite as dramatic as he made it out to be, I will say that I can see what Moody was talking about with the refined songwriting on F8, it really does seem like the band tried to inject a little more boldness into their writing and their performances have a bit more of a sense of purpose this time around. The band gives us a few glimpses of their younger selves with returns to The Way of the Fist heaviness on a couple songs, and even though they still don’t have the best track record for ballads, the few mellow tracks on F8 are certainly better than the past two albums’. On that subject, the track sequencing on F8 isn’t quite so disjointed and awkward as it was on And Justice for None. But again, the improvements still aren’t as dramatic as Ivan Moody might see them. The band still don’t really break out of their box too much; it’s not so much an album of them finally getting them out of their creative rut as it is an album of them slowly making their way out of that rut or getting them more capable in that rut. Again, it is a noteworthy enough improvement over the past two (or four even) albums’ drivel, but it’s not quite a full return to form. Hopefully this gets them back in the right direction though if it’s not too late.
4/10
Blaze of Perdition - The Harrowing of Hearts
The Polish quartet’s fifth full-length is another set of solid modern occult black metal with just enough of a sense of atmosphere and emotional rawness lifted from blackgaze. I certainly wouldn’t call this an atmospheric black metal album, but the band does venture into those more ethereal realms of black metal too. They do well to maintain their intensity throughout it too, as the atmospheric elements serve to create a more expansive and grand feel to the music rather than just breaking up and diluting the darker, heavier aspects.
7/10
Sightless Pit - Grave of a Dog
After a pretty big past few years for them, Lingua Ignota mastermind Kristen Hayter, The Body’s Lee Clifford, and Full of Hell frontman Dylan Walker teamed up for a seemingly casual dark-ambient-noise-venture to kick the decade off. I’m contrast to the extreme abrasiveness most of these artists peddle through their main projects, Grave of a Dog remains predominantly ambient until Dylan Walker’s distorted-noise-backed screams on “Drunk on Marrow” usher in the industrial noise of “Miles of Chain” and “Whom the Devil Long Sought to Strangle” being the standout exceptions. I enjoy Kristen Hayter’s ever-languishing operatic vocals across the album, especially on the minimal, piano-driven closing track and on “Violent Ruin”, on which the trio play with some autotune on her voice that actually comes out nicely. But for the most part, this album is so casually below all these artists’ punching weight, it’s no doubt just a quick bonus album project for all three of them that I’m sure pales in comparison to their past and future releases.
6/10
Insect Ark - The Vanishing
With clear influences from avant-garde elites like Sumac, Deathspell Omega, and Neurosis seeping through the pores of this album, Dana Schechter continues to refine Insect Ark’s spooky, psychedelic brand of instrumental doom metal with the help of newly-recruited drummer Andy Patterson’s well-tempered percussive accents to give the brooding songs more than just a steady anesthetized heartbeat, but also a newly percussive sense of punch. And the two gel in artistic partnership in such an seemingly innate way you would think they’d have been bandmates for years. The Vanishing, again, continues to hone the spacy, darkly ambient metallic psychedelia Insect Ark has carved out a niche for, floating from unnerving oppressive heaviness to eerie drones of dark, brassy ambiance with ease and confidence. I definitely respect and recommend this one highly.
8/10
Godthrymm - Reflections
Godthrymm is the offshoot project of a couple of former members of My Dying Bride, and Reflections is the trio’s first full length project together after a couple of EPs (from which a few songs on this album are pulled) that gave me mixed anticipations for this full-length. A Grand Reclamation in 2018 sounded very prototypic and derivative of Candlemass without the crucial bombast to back it up, but the band made some strides on 2019’s Dead in the Studio that clearly piqued Profound Lore’s interest, with much more melodically compelling songs like “We Are the Dead” and “Cursed Are the Many” making it into this LP. The band had a more I like the emotive Spirit-Adrift-esque guitar melodies that “The Sea as My Grave” incorporates and the more straightforward funeral dirge of “The Light of You”, and the band even improved the originally amateurish “The Grand Reclamation” from the first EP greatly with a more professional vocal performance and better drum accents. Still, much of the melody on here is not enough to really conjure any strong emotions and the grand doom the album shoots for isn’t quite as epic as it should be as a result. The band did well to improve upon their first efforts together, but I think they do still have a way to go.
6/10
The Amity Affliction - Everyone Loves You... Once You Leave Them
I didn’t totally hate The Amity Affliction’s pop-oriented direction on 2018′s Misery, but I didn’t like it much either (granted they’ve never really been my style), and I wonder if fans felt similarly about the stylistic drift because Everyone Loves You... Once You Leave Them is a definitive return to the band’s roots that, while still not entirely for me, I can definitely appreciate more than Misery. The band’s older sound that makes its way into this album is proportionally much more metalcore than the sound they trended toward on Misery, and even though I still don’t find the pop-punk-ish vocal style and melody writing to be a very fitting compliment to the early 2000’s metalcore the band rides instrumentally, I can much more clearly see the appeal this time around and enjoy a greater portion of the tracks here.
5/10
Kvelertak - Splid
Norwegian alchemists Kvelertak have been eccentrically fusing punk at varying degrees of hardcore and rock ‘n’ roll with black metal for four albums now and they’ve been pretty damn successful at it the whole time so at this point it’s a matter of what the band do with their established style, how far they can take what they already, and how much expanding they have to do to keep it sustainable. Splid shows that the band’s answer to all those questions is “yes, we can”. While much of the vibrant novelty of the self-titled debut and Meir has worn off, what’s left is a band showing that they are indeed more than an attention-grabbing novelty act and can keep their style going beyond that initial excitatory period. Stylistically Splid only occasionally draws from new-ish territory, occasionally going significantly light-spirited and even dancy, but otherwise it’s pretty much the Kvelertak we know and hopefully love, maybe some of that initial charm is a little worn and sensible through the compositional repetition, but sure as hell not to the point where it’s not a good time.
7/10
Frigoris - ...in Stille
Germany’s Frigoris continue to struggle to set themselves apart from the ambient black metal pack, which they present themselves as little more than a statistic in the growing homogeneity of the genre with all the baseline competence to pass but nothing stylistically or compositionally unique or forward-thinking.
5/10
殞煞 Vengeful Spectre - 殞煞 Vengeful Spectre
Blending ambient elements of traditional Chinese folk music into the atmosphere of Deafheaven-esque blackgaze (the vocals being some of the closest I have ever heard to George Clarke’s) this anomaly of a self-titled debut from 殞煞 Vengeful Spectre is a fantastic way to enter the fold for the Guangdong outfit, establishing a signature style early and with impressive genre-blending competence. I am eager to hear what this band has in store for the future.
8/10
Tombs - Monarchy of Shadows
A pretty sizeable EP from the Brooklyn-based four-piece, Monarchy of Shadows gives a pretty concise and tasty portrait of the band’s crushing Gorgoroth-esque black metal that sacrifices hardly any heaviness for its dissonant atmosphere. The compositions get a little repetitive as the EP draws on though, which does do a harsh number on the project’s otherwise consistently solid aesthetic. Luckily the more death metal-infused portions of the album like “The Dark Rift” and “Once Falls the Guillotine” kick some needed energy and compositional life into the project. I’d say it’s worth a go for anyone with a hankering for black metal with unrestrained distorted heaviness and occult vibes more than shoegazy ambianc; it’s not a mind-blower, but it’s a good quick dose of it.
7/10
Delain - Apocalypse and Chill
After being thoroughly disappointed by Within Temptation’s writer’s-block-ridden LP last year, I was honestly not in much of a mood for any more pop-oriented neoclassical symphonic metal this year, but after hearing a lot of praise for this new Delain project, I thought I’d give it a try, and Delain sure did change my appetite for the genre. The band sound so much more cathartically vibrant with their willingness to depart from the neoclassical norm into synthetic and other diverse stylistic territories, incorporating adrenaline-fueled downtuned guitar riffs, upward key shifts akin to alternative metal and power metal, and resounding melodic choruses into modern symphonies with big but tasteful production bolstering, and the Lacuna Coil-esque vocal trade-offs across it all are executed brilliantly. And even when the band go more traditional they show they can accomplish similarly invigorating results with a more bare production pallet, a truly impressive display of symphonic versatility and creative courage.
8/10
Suicide Silence - Become the Hunter
After the calamity that was their ill-fated attempt to branch out into Deftones-imitation and clean vocals on their self-titled album, Suicide Silence show that they thoroughly learned their lesson with their gruff, classically deathcore groovy sixth LP, Become the Hunter, which finds the band playing much more to their instrumental strengths and their signature style of deathcore chug (there is a lot of thicccc, delicious chug on this project), finds them taking their riff-writing style back a bit to The Cleansing and No Time the Bleed and feels more natural than what they were trying to do on the self-titled record. Eddie Hermida got the memo about his vocals on the self-titled; it’s all screams and growls here, not a “tee-hee” in sight. Unlike the aforementioned albums with Mitch Lucker behind the mic, Become the Hunter isn’t quite as productionally rough around the edges or as horror-movie eerie and menacingly evil. It’s all about the crunchy guitar rhythms all across the album, which finds the band repeating themselves a bit, but not so much that it feels more like derivative writing rather than convergent compositional tactics across the song. While it could certainly be seen as a run through the motions or a retreat to the band’s safe zone, this was definitely the return to form Suicide Silence needed after the misfire that was the previous record, and definitely a more exciting album for Hermida to showcase his deathcore vocal talent than You Can’t Stop Me. For me though, it’s definitely an improvement on the band’s meager first album with their new vocalist and its subsequent creative dry heave, and it sets a much more convincing tone for Suicide Silence going forward with Eddie Hermida.
8/10
Neaera - Neaera
Despite their fluctuating quality across the first run of their career, I was a surprised and disappointed when Neaera disbanded back in 2014, but equally enthralled to hear the band return to the fold thankfully not too long after. With this self-titled record being the German act’s first after returning from the grave, the band rose back up in the most emphatic way I can imagine. As self-titled albums are generally meant to, Neaera represents Neaera at their essence, blending Swedish melodic death metal with modern NWOAHM metalcore as they always have throughout their career. Indeed, the fascinating thing about this self-titled album is that it’s really not significantly stylistically different from the band’s previous efforts aside from some minor production tweaks. But Neaera really found the sweetest balance for themselves between the menacing blend of death metal urgency with a thrashy metalcore sense of rhythm and the cathartic guitar leads of melodic death metal, and I can’t honestly think of any other project that makes a better case for the intermingling of these styles than the case this album makes. While plenty of metalcore out there incorporates some elements of melodeath, Neaera’s brand that they crystallize on this album is the other way around, primarily melodic death metal but with the raw pounding drive of metalcore to provide a more punchy dynamic to a style that often finds itself in great need of it. And the band manages to mesh these genres in a manner that, rather than diluting them both, brings out the best in both of them. I could seriously sing this album’s praises for much longer, but I think I will leave it at it being the best album I’ve heard so far this year.
9/10
Ozzy Osbourne - Ordinary Man
I’ll admit that I don’t really follow the public life of the original Black Sabbath frontman too closely or intentionally, but it is pretty hard to avoid as well so it’s not like it’s even possible for me to be completely ignorant of how he’s doing. It goes without saying of course, but Ozzy Osbourne is a bonafide icon and singular figure for heavy metal that very very few, if anyone else, can compare to, and with his career and musical output kind of petering out over the past decade as his old age begins to get the better of him, there seems to be a greater sense of awareness in the metal world that we probably only have a few years more with Ozzy, if that. And it’s going to be a very profoundly somber day when the vocal godfather of heavy metal is gone. That being said, this is quite possibly the last album we will get from the prince of darkness and yet listening to it doesn’t quite feel that way. In the weeks leading up to the album, Ozzy’s supporting tour was postponed (or maybe just cancelled), and the man himself said that he does not have his health as is not happy. Yet the album sounds like a very stale, yet modern take on Ozzy’s doomy and classic heavy metal sounds with some modern rock production updates that honestly sound a few generations younger than its seventy-one year old apparent creator, and Ozzy himself sounds uncannily clear, coherent, and healthy. I saw a little bit of dismissal of this album as not being a profound conceptual contemplation of mortality like David Bowie’s, Leonard Cohen’s, or David Berman’s last albums, and while I definitely enjoy those artist’s swansong albums more than this and while I do feel like Ozzy deserves a proper album that better represents his importance to and impact on metal and culture at large, I don’t know if that’s the kind of album Ozzy wants to make. The man is struggling with Parkinson’s disease and based on his music leading up to this point, I wouldn’t be surprised if he just wants to make fun rock music therapeutically to get his mind off the pain rather than honing in on it and intensifying it. Going back to criticism of the album though, Ozzy still sounds so checked out in his performances despite his suspiciously healthy-sounding voice that I can’t help but wonder how touched up it is, the exception being the title track featuring Elton John on which Ozzy does get a little introspective about realizing his ambitions and cementing his legacy as a music legend. Ozzy also sounds more enthusiastic in his performance with Post Malone on the galloping, blood-pumping closing track “It’s a Raid”, but for the majority of the album, it really sounds like he doesn’t even want to be there, and I just hope this wasn’t something people around him pressured him into. I really do want to reiterate my utmost respect for Ozzy Osbourne and all that he has done for the music I love so much, and I would love to hear him round out his legendary career in a more fitting manner. But if he needs to end it here to rest and heal, which it really seems like he does, I won’t begrudge the man or take anything away from his legacy and what he’s accomplished for music. Thank you forever Ozzy, and whatever you do next, as always, go fucking crazy.
5/10
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“Among the Exalted” Godthrymm
Godthrymm is the new UK doom metal band formed by vocalist/guitarist Hamish Glencross (ex-My Dying Bride/Vallenfyre/Solstice) and is rounded off by drummer Shaun Taylor-Steels (ex-My Dying Bride/Anathema) and bassist Bob Crolla. Their debut album "Reflections" will be released on CD/2xLP/Digital Feb 14, 2020.
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