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"Bruised Sky” Is Poppy at Her Most Metal
Music

“Bruised Sky” Is Poppy at Her Most Metal

by jummy84 November 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Heavy Song of the Week is a feature on Heavy Consequence breaking down the top metal, punk, and hard rock tracks you need to hear every Friday. This week, we highlight Poppy’s “Bruised Sky.”


Poppy is a chameleon when it comes to genre, but lately, she’s embedded herself with alt-metal royalty, collaborating with the likes of Amy Lee in the studio and with Linkin Park onstage.

It would seem some of that hangtime has rubbed off on her, as she goes full metal on her latest single “Bruised Sky.” Her right-hand studio collaborator, Jordan Fish, also brings his past work with Bring Me the Horizon to the table here, given the overall metalcore treatment of the production.

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The heavy guitars and general sonic aggression lets Poppy throw her voice in all directions, exercising both her highest clean register as well as death growls. She wears this style well, even if she’s only dabbled in it thus far. It begs the question: How much more metal does her upcoming album Empty Hands have in store?

Honorable Mentions:

Black Swan – “If I Was King”

Black Swan are a veteran supergroup featuring Headbangers Ball heroes Robin McAuley (McAuley Schenker Group), Reb Beach (Winger, Whitesnake), Jeff Pilson (Foreigner, The End Machine, ex-Dokken), and Matt Starr (Ace Frehley, Mr. Big). On the group’s new single “If I Was King,” McAuley’s recognizable pipes are right out front, with a just a bit of aged grit to his hyper melodic delivery. Meanwhile, Beach supplies a robust guitar arrangement that keeps the track from stagnating. Fans of any of the involved band members’ other projects — particularly McAuley Schenker Group and Winger — will enjoy this immensely.

Flatwounds – “Vilify”

Flatwounds is a great name for a heavy rock band, because you gotta have flatwound strings on your bass if you’re gonna pull off divebomb riffs and slide those fingers. Otherwise you’re asking for blisters. Anyways, this choice nomenclature been claimed by Flatwounds, an Albany-based grunge revival group with a classic Alice in Chains vibe thanks to the gravelly voice of frontman Colin O’Hare. The band’s fat skronky riffs are also a blast from the past, filled with pure groove — riffs that sounds like they’re fun to play on a bass with flatwounds. Their latest single “Vilify” is excellent. We’re keeping an eye on these guys.

Raven – “Metal Militia”

When the Metallica Kill ‘Em All tribute album was announced, we circled this cover by Raven. Among the numerous NWOBHM acts featured on the comp, Raven hold particular significance in that Metallica’s first tour was supporting Raven on the “Kill ‘Em All for One” tour in 1983. The British metal pioneers are known for their many anthems about rock and metal, making “Metal Militia” really the only correct choice for them, as far as covering something from Kill ‘Em All. The Gallagher brothers’ signature craziness comes across great here too, with John letting out his cartoonishly high-pitch falsetto for the chorus.

November 16, 2025 0 comments
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Cricket in L1
Bollywood

Opening for Linkin Park in Bengaluru is a full-circle moment for Delhi metal band Bloodywood: ‘Lit a fire within us’

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Delhi-based folk-metal band, Bloodywood has described opening for Linkin Park as ‘a full-circle moment,’ after it was announed that they will be the supporting act for the American band’s Bengaluru concert on January 23, next year.

Bloodywood will be opening for Linkin Park in Bengaluru next year

“This is a full circle moment for all of us in Bloodywood. We all have looked up to Linkin Park at certain points in our lives and are big fans of the band. Their sound really defined the nu metal sound in the 2000s and just they kept going ahead with full force,” said the band’s frontman Jayant Bhadula explaining why the opportunity felt deeply personal for the band.

“They lit a fire within all of us that made us create this band and try to walk the same steps as them,” he said. Adding that the announcement was “a very big moment” for the trio, he also said that much of Bloodywood’s identity can be traced back to the band they will now open for .

“Honestly, we are heading into these shows with a lot of love and passion. And the same fire that Linkin Park lit in our hearts back in the day. Yes, not just as musicians, but also as human beings. Also as people who would have posters of Linkin Park in their rooms and would just listen to each and every track of theirs. It’s a very big moment for all of us. It’s a very wholesome one,” he added.

The show in Bengaluru comes just two days before Linkin Park headlines Lollapalooza India in Mumbai, marking the band’s first-ever live performances in the country.

For Bloodywood, the slot adds another major milestone to their international rise, placing them on a platform alongside the artists who shaped their earliest musical ambitions. Known for blending heavy metal with Indian folk elements, the band has been consistently touring globally, building a loyal audience across Europe, the U.S. and Asia.

As they prepare to step on stage before one of their biggest influences, Jayant summed up the mood simply: “We’re just very, very excited to share the stage with them.”

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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The Best Metal Albums of November 2025 » PopMatters
Music

The Best Metal Albums of November 2025 » PopMatters

by jummy84 November 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Nearing the end of the year, and as is usually the case, November is loaded with excellent best metal releases. Black metal masters Blut Aus Nord continue to explore the dream space, while Deogen and Tatterdemalion adhere to the genre’s raw, lo-fi character, yet still incorporate further elements. On the death metal edge, Qrixkuor continue to showcase ambition and vitality, while the Ominous Circle use blackened steel to embellish their barbaric essence. Then you have Uranium, dripping venomous chaos into their industrialized structures.

On the faster side, Barren Path rise from the ashes of Gridlink to unleash an exhilarating ride with Grieving. On the slow side, Old Year drop a monolith of a record with their droning doom/death in No Dissent. Finally, as part of the last releases from Gilead Media, Yellow Eyes produce a creative peak in an already stellar discography. There is something for everyone, so dig in! – Spyros Stasis

Best Metal Albums of November 2025

Barren Path – Grieving (Willowtip)

The unexpected return of Gridlink with the fantastic Coronet Juniper was unfortunately short-lived. Thankfully, all Coronet Juniper members, minus Jon Chang, have now regrouped as Barren Path, with Mitchell Luna (Maruta/Shock Withdrawal) taking over vocal duties.

As is expected, Barren Path carry forward much of Gridlink’s lineage in their debut, Grieving. The chaotic energy is still the guiding force, immediately taking over from the start of “Whimpering Echo”. The tumultuous ride does not cease. Barren Path showcase an unhinged resolve as “Subversion Record” twists and turns and “Lunar Tear” storms ahead at lightning speed.

Where Barren Path diverge from Gridlink is by trading their sense of playfulness for a more determined, in-your-face approach. The feeling of exhilaration still carries over, lending an epic quality to the underlying melodies of “No Geneva”. It also navigates aptly through the maze-like structures of their song, as if navigating a sonic labyrinth, each turn narrowing like a corridor in House of Leaves.

Luna’s dual vocal delivery further distinguishes Barren Path from their predecessors. Here, the approach leans more towards the death metal style, with cutthroat vocals interacting with deeper growls that result in monstrous moments, as seen in “Primordial Black”. It is a warranted departure from the path, one that echoes with towering figures from mid-to-late 2000s grindcore, and especially Nasum. No karaoke mode this time, just 13 relentless minutes of down-to-business grind. Exactly as it should be. – Spyros Stasis


Blut Aus Nord – Ethereal Horizons (Debemur Morti)

Few bands operate in chapters as Blut Aus Nord do, each new phase anchored by a record that serves as both point of origin and a stylistic guide. Ultima Thulée and Memoria Vetusta I: Fathers of the Icy Age opened the black metal path. The Work Which Transforms God would reach its peak through the 777 trilogy. In their current phase, the origin point is undoubtedly Hallucinogen, a work that moved Blut Aus Nord toward a post-black metal interpretation, with a rich psychedelic backbone.

The mirror image of Hallucinogen, the Disharmonium cycle, reverted the melodic inclinations for a more bitter, nightmare-invoking quality. Now, Ethereal Horizons performs a balancing act, tapping into melodic inclinations without completely succumbing to their sugary quality.

Here, the psychedelic essence is not used to either invoke Lovecraft-ian horror or to craft overbearingly sentimental constructs. The result instead manifests as an alien landscape, monstrous in its form, yet still strangely beautiful. Off-kilter arrangements aid this transformation, the keyboards and synths lending “Seclusion” its otherworldly hue. Similarly, the ritualistic quality emerges with a towering form, rather than a disfigured manifestation, in “The Ordeal”, where the repeating background vocals echo an unknown mantra through the vast space.

Similar to their use of psychedelia, Blut Aus Nord draw on the post-metal and post-black metal genres to add fluidity to their progression. Subdued riffs fill the space with a sense of flux and continuity, yet can erupt at any moment into something immediate and exhilarating. “The Fall Opens the Sky” exemplifies this demeanor, while the discordant, tremolo-picking of “The End Becomes Grace” completes the picture.

In this sense, Ethereal Horizons aligns with the spirit of Memoria Vetusta III: Saturnian Poetry, less through its black metal core than through its melodic devotion. The hooks are excellent and memorable, drawing on classic metallic tropes (“What Burns Now Listens”) to amplify their emotional weight. And so the record stands as both a solid addition to their discography and a bridge between the parallel chapters. – Spyros Stasis


Calvary – White Ruins (Into Endless Chaos)

JW has consistently delivered high-quality extreme music, from the raw, punk-inspired black metal of Grinning Death’s Head to the noise-drenched aggression of Crooked Cross and other projects. Many of these elements are also present in Calvary and their debut White Ruins, but while the punk spirit is undeniable in moments like “Bone Helm”, JW aims for a different interpretation.

The endeavour instead shifts to an early punk/gothic hybrid state, a quality that shines through the melodic inclinations of the record, evident from the outset with “Sanguine Crest”. This further ties into the vocal delivery, which is clean and direct, and drenches the record in a gloomy sense. “Manifest Destiny” carries this demeanour, and ties neatly into doom-laden passages, especially with the mid-tempo parts of “Unto the Morrow”.

The black metal character remains dominant, every riff and lead steeped in raw, lo-fi grit. “Grand Vestige” radiates with this well-known grimness, but it is usually contorted, drawing it closer to Circle of Ouroboros territory, especially with “Lame Deer”.

However, despite its breadth, two key elements stand out for White Ruins. Firstly, the intricate sense of melody, which is present in all different Calvary states, regardless of whether JW is after a black metal riff, a punk breakdown, or a post-punk progression. The other part is the momentum. Whether fast and exhilarating or mid-paced and deliberate, White Ruins feels unstoppable. – Spyros Stasis


Deogen – The Graves and Ghosts of Yore (Iron Bonehead)

Symphonic black metal is nowadays associated with the more mainstream expression of the genre.

However, some understand its original, raw potential, represented by the early works of Limbonic Art, Obtained Enslavement, and Odium. That was further contorted by names long buried in the underground, such as Maldoror, Midgard, and Winter Funeral. Deogen align themselves with this later expression, producing an excellent first specimen in their 2023 debut, The Endless Black Shadows of Abyss.

Deogen understand that two pillars are required for a successful traditionalist expression of symphonic black metal. That was true of their debut and remains the defining trait of The Graves and Ghosts of Yore. On one hand, they produce a work that is filled with atmosphere, sorrow, and drama. Symphonic black metal demands a storytelling quality, and they grip you from the mysterious entrance of the “Pernicious Prayer” intro.

Once the main course arrives, the piano and synths remain central, their icy touch taking an active part in the proceedings. “Desolation Bestowed” unleashes beautiful melodies that define the progression. At the same time, they evoke a romantic quality, each line conjuring scenes of an ancient castle and its endless, dark passageways.

On the other hand, Deogen require their black metal to be raw, not succumbing to the melodic pull of the symphonic side. That is precisely what they deliver, with the start of “By Torchlight” establishing this unyielding approach. The traditional grim riffing is found throughout, its purest and most staggering expression in “Clawing Into Sphere and Sun”, where it overpowers the tasteful piano.

What makes these two pillars come together is the production. At first glance, this might appear to be a standard, lo-fi, and minimalist 1990s throwback. While on the surface that is true, Deogen have made sure that it complements the diverging elements of their work. The harshness is thus increased, but at the same time, the symphonic backbone shines. It is the final catalyst that ensures their bitter brew does not lose any of its edge to the naturally sweet quality of their symphonic side. – Spyros Stasis


Old Year – No Dissent (Apocalyptic Witchcraft)

It is generally rare for a debut record to present itself with a sense of maturity. Yet, Old Year’s No Dissent possesses both compositional vigour and an extensive genre knowledge that moves it past your standard doom/death release. Following in the footsteps of their 2023 self-titled single, the Boise act now return with a more ambitious offering.

Old Year unearth much of the off-kilter doom spirit of the late 1990s and early 2000s. “Death Frequency” echoes with the early Khanate’s feedback technology, an enveloping technique where the amorphous guitars dominate the frequency spectrum. It is an asphyxiating affair, one that also channels the Burning Witch spirit in their more extravagant moments, but this is where Old Year exploit their breadth.

The combining factor here is a death metal undercurrent. That informs much of the composition, as it moves toward dissonant guitar ideas, even when these are presented through the slow doom lens. Still, when combined with the slow and determined pace, its ceremonial quality begins to echo with touches of Evoken and Esoteric, minus the melancholic inclinations. In its most devastating moments, it even conjures the tortured spirit of Wormphlegm, with all the grimness of existence echoing through “Lock Step”. From this vantage point, the psychedelic fumes are expected, making “Mechanical Birth” manifest like a trip gone very bad. It also unveils the post-metallic inclinations, with moments of “Rotting Illusion” embracing a Neurosis-like progression.

Constructing such a multi-faceted record can lead to the different parts feeling disjointed, but No Dissent oozes with a sense of fluidity and cohesion. That is the most striking part: Old Year’s ability to not only coalesce these attributes but also use them to add flourishes and variety to their work. It is a core point that many artists on the slower side of extreme metal often overlook. Playing just slow and heavy is not enough. The greats understood this, and so do Old Year. – Spyros Stasis


Qrixkuor – The Womb of the World (Invictus/Dark Descent)

Within the occult death metal revival and the black/death rejuvenation, many acts lose their identity. Amid chaotic structures and cavernous spaces, it’s all too common to forget the starting goal. That has never been a problem for the UK’s Qrixkuor. Since their early days, they have pursued a grand vision, one rooted in heavy layering and dissonance, yet guided by a quasi-classical sense of order. It resulted in the creative culmination of Poison Palinopsia, a work whose spectral ambition finds new expression in The Womb of the World.

Their death metal, like Mitochondrion’s, is informed by the dissonant revelations of Deathspell Omega, but where those acts tend toward the cerebral, Qrixkuor balance with the carnal, channeling the same fire into Teitanblood’s kind of ritual violence. The result is a vast expression of devilish forms, from the ritualistic descent of “Slithering Serendipity” and the murmuring echoes of “And You Shall Know Perdition As Your Shrine”, to blasphemous black/death assaults.

Across the record’s four long-form tracks, the stylistic shifts are impressive yet all orbit a hidden core—a classical perspective that dictates the progression. At times, this will rise to the surface, the instrumentation changing from the metal form to something alien. The sudden drops of Stravinsky-ian madness into the metallic form further expose this foundation. It is the defining aspect for Qrixkuor, and what imbues ambition into their work.

In many cases, the application of classical music to metal is either sloppily added or feels pompous and bloated. Fortunately, that is not the case here. Qrixkuor have distilled the grand perspective from that genre, understanding how it can provide the guiding light through the cavernous depths. That alone would be an achievement, but what elevates The Womb of the World is how, amid its maze-like structures, Qrixkuor still summon moments of unmistakable power and immediacy. It is a record that requires patience, but will return the effort tenfold. – Spyros Stasis


Tatterdemalion – Ultraterrestrial (Wergild)

Wergild is one of the more interesting underground black metal labels and collectives to watch. With most bands hailing from Washington, Wergild’s sound bridges the early Cascadian scene and the raw origins of black metal. One of their latest releases is Tatterdemalion’s sophomore record, Ultraterrestrial, an uncanny combination of ambient music and lo-fi black metal.

The project of Krieger, who is also involved in other Wergild bands, such as Iron Firmament, Lander, Runeblade, and Astral Gauze, Tatterdemalion prioritize mood and atmosphere. “End Carrier” opens in kosmische musik fashion, a dreamy essence that rises from the deep, unexplored edges of space. These stripped-down moments possess an inherent ceremonial quality (“Teak”), and they can also open gateways to similar hallucinatory dimensions. So, “Tharsis – Phobos” leans toward the progressive side, the smooth solos and leads adding depth. On the other hand, “Tharsis – Olympus Mons” retreats to a harsher, psychedelic reality, the noise piercing through and channelling otherworldly fumes.

Still, beneath these excursions lies a foundation of raw black metal energy, its lo-fi tremolo picking grounding the record’s cosmic wanderings. Even in these moments, Tatterdemalion can morph and change. At times, they arrive with an exhilarating force, an unhinged drive that causes devastation. In other moments, they become heavier, their monstrous form complete when the deeper growls combine with the cutthroat vocals.

Yet, as is the case with Iron Firmament, more pleasing elements pierce through. Melodic additions are one of Ultraterrestrial‘s pillars, radiating with a sense of melancholy and sorrow. Similarly, their explosiveness radiates a post-black metal quality, likely inherited from their Cascadian lineage, but it is executed tastefully, one that retains the necessary rough edges.

Like other Wergild acts, Tatterdemalion excel at walking that fine line of channeling more approachable textures without ever compromising the raw, devout ethos at the heart of their black metal. – Spyros Stasis


The Ominous Circle – Cloven Tongues of Fire (Osmose)

The Ominous Circle is a prime example of a band that deeply understands genre heritage. Formed in 2014, the Portuguese act are likely to have grown up listening to the underground death metal revival hailed by bands such as Dead Congregation, Necros Christos, and Cruciamentum. Yet, their 2017 debut record, Appalling Ascension, found them unearthing the earlier malice that gave rise to the 2000s scene. With Incantation’s defining groove and Immolation’s devastating discordance, the record is an absolute gut punch. It is an experience that they now look to repeat with Cloven Tongues of Fire.

Attempting to match the impact of Appalling Ascension after eight years of silence is daunting, but The Ominous Circle hit the ground running. Incantation’s doom bedrock establishes a torturous progression, with the latter half of “Lowest Immanations” producing a psychotropic nightmare through the blackened inclusions. At the same time, their dissonant phrasing unleashes contortions that echo through the dark space of “Through Tunnels Ablaze”. That is where the early Immolation quality shines, with a sense of malice oozing through the death metal structure.

With their foundation established, the Ominous Circle offer some fitting deviations from the norm. Proto-death metal madness seeps in through the schizoid lead work, a feature that naturally clicks with their 2000s underground death metal aspirations, uniting the two strands. Similarly, they lash out from their doom-laden form to produce some brutal moments of war metallic inclination, with “Black Flesh, Sulfur and All In Between” channeling the intense brutality of Diocletian.

Yet, these are fleeting moments, and the return to the slow, brutal centre is inevitable. However, that is precisely the allure of Cloven Tongues of Fire, a record that revels in its traditionalism, more interested in perfecting craftsmanship than offering innovation. – Spyros Stasis


Uranium – Corrosion of Existence (Sentient Ruin)

There has always been a method to Uranium’s madness. The one-person project thrives in the intersection of industrial, power electronics, and extreme metal, a combination that has produced a series of exquisite works in An Exacting Punishment, Pure Nuclear Death, and their Wormboiler compilation. Throughout these endeavours, Uranium’s releases displayed a tightness, a sense of utter and inhuman control over the compositions. Despite the chaos, it is the rigid sense of order that makes the music so punishing.

Corrosion of Existence carries this trajectory to a certain point. The early Godflesh-ian DNA provides weight and precision, a bulldozer energy that runs through the dystopian corridors of “Bliss and Void”. The electronic applications further evoke this past, with “Descent Into Entropic Death” providing a futuristic groove, while simultaneously delivering an utterly barbaric beatdown. Both expressions carry that same unyielding architecture, excruciating yet logical.

That is where the coming divergence hits hardest. The precision of “Traffic Warden” begins to fade, the rhythmic pattern letting go of its familiar repetition. It is the sound of a machine spiralling out of control, malfunctioning in ways that seem impossible. Losing themselves in this strange trance comes in various forms. The black/death explosion near the end of the opening track is such an expression, but the most terrifying moments come in the loss of self.

The power electronics allure is augmented in Corrosion of Existence, and now not only unleashes a barrage of noise, but also descends to newfound depths. “Concrete Tombs” sees all structure dissipate, melting into a state of dark nothingness. It is a deformed ritual, unrecognisable and unknowable, and something that Uranium revisit with their darkest moment in the 12-minute-long opus that is the title track.

It is here that Uranium’s vision is complete, where industrial mechanics meet the deafening void, and the blackened primitivism stands side by side with the futuristic electronic grooves. In this moment Uranium have understood that they no longer need to depend mainly on order and structure, but that they can also embrace chaos and its endless possibilities. That is the moment when mechanical precision gives way to transcendental entropy. – Spyros Stasis


Following 2023’s Master’s Murmur, a descent into industrial folk territory, it has been six years since Yellow Eyes last released a black metal record. The seasoned, New York-based act are a trusted force in the scene, boasting a substantial discography, and yet their new record, Confusion Gate, is a revelation. Not in the sense that Yellow Eyes deviate from the path, but in that they are doing everything better.

Their black metal is dense, heavily layered, resulting in a thick sonic wall. The unified front of riffs overwhelms from the outset through “Brush the Frozen Horse”, yet never at the expense of definition or melody. It is a technique inherited from a lineage of acts, such as Ash Borer and Fell Voice. Still, Yellow Eyes further unravel these abstracted forms, adding an erratic sense of unpredictability and vigor that echoes the early Krallice days. 

From there, they can gaze into a darker abyss, with the textural quality of the guitar work taking inspiration from their sister band Ustalost. In moments like “I Fear the Master’s Murmur”, they explode with triumphant rage, while in “The Scent of Black Mud”, they radiate cold grimness. And yet, they can still turn this around into a deep, hallucinatory sense of unease. Their dissonant inclinations greatly help here, with the cacophonous quality of “The Thought of Death”, the mysterious sorrow of “Suspension Moon”, and the chilling effect of “A Forgotten Corridor” depicting a reality as dead as dreams.

Their overarching tendencies do not cease. On one hand, they traverse into the folkloric, more confidently in the record’s interludes, but also in their main structures. In doing so, they invoke a latent, primordial Cascadian spirit alongside an early Ulverian form. The beautiful guitar lines in the final moments of the title track fully expose this deep communion with nature. Similarly, they channel the teachings from Master’s Murmur to further establish a deep, ambient sense, highlighted through detailed field recordings, as well as the impressive synthesizers and choirs tastefully placed in key moments.

In a robust discography, Confusion Gate stands apart. It feels like this is the record that Yellow Eyes were working towards all along. The album that required 15 years of practice and experience to reach. It is also part of the final releases from Gilead Media, and although there is still one more record to come, if this were the label’s final chapter, it would be a great way to go. – Spyros Stasis


November 11, 2025 0 comments
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Death Metal Singer Ignacia Fernández Wins Miss World Chile Pageant
Music

Death Metal Singer Ignacia Fernández Wins Miss World Chile Pageant

by jummy84 November 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Ignacia Fernández, a contestant in the Miss World Chile pageant who surprised the judges and viewers with a crushing death metal performance during the semifinals last week, has been crowned the winner of the entire competition.

As we previously reported, the 27-year-old model is also the lead singer of a band called Decessus, and was accompanied by her guitarist Carlos Palma for her performance of one of their songs as part of the pageant’s talent competition.

On Sunday, her daring decision to bring extreme metal to the pageant paid off, as she was named Miss World Chile 2025, and will now move on to compete in next year’s global Miss World competition.

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Following her performance in the semifinals, Fernández took to Instagram to write, “Metal has been a fundamental part of who I am as a person and in my life: a refuge, a source of strength and purpose. Being able to express it on stage at Chilevision and Miss Mundo Chile was an opportunity I deeply value. It was a great experience to break down barriers on open television, inspire, be real with it, and show that you don’t have to fear the prejudices of others.”

After winning the entire competition on Sunday, Fernández shared an official photo of her as Miss World Chile 2025 on Instagram, and wrote, “I couldn’t be happier or more grateful! I’m taking on this beautiful challenge with all my energy and heart, ready to represent my country in the best way possible. I promise to give it my all, with passion, hard work, and purpose.”

She added, “Thank you for the worldwide recognition of my singing, a piece of my soul that inspires me to keep growing and dreaming big. Let’s go, Chile… for that crown!”

Revisit her performance and see her celebratory Instagram post below.

November 11, 2025 0 comments
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The Best Metal Albums of October 2025
Music

The Best Metal Albums of October 2025 » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

We are gearing up toward the end of the year, and October packs quite a punch. This month, many heavyweights make their return. Tristan Shone with Author & Punisher continues his industrial trajectory while not completely distancing himself from the humane. Primitive Man descend into the abyss, their sludge/death/noise combination going strong, while Evoken plunge into sorrowful and harsh gloom with Mendacium.

Hooded Menace carry their newfound heavy metal-inspired path, and the long-awaited return of Coroner lives up to expectations. Finally, a newer band with a lot of promise, One of Nine expand their majestic black metal, drawing inspiration from the ever-fertile subject matter of Middle-earth.

Deeper in the underground, Gates of Dawn make an astounding return with the psychedelic rock of III, Grole continue their relentless march through punk-infused black metal, Binah open up their death metal to cosmic extensions, and Sum of R produce a fantastical, dark trip through Spectral. This month really has everything, so dig in! – Spyros Stasis

Best Metal Albums of October 2025

Author & Punisher – Nocturnal Birding (Relapse)

Author & Punisher have always been pulled by different forces. Tristan Shone’s fascination with the artificial is well established. By building his own drone and dub machines to articulate his industrial vision, Shone proves his complete dedication to his craft. On the other hand, he has always balanced his mechanical harshness with an unmistakable human core. His music might collapse into brutal breakdowns and sonic debris, yet beneath it lies an unmistakable emotional resonance. Case in point, his latest work, Nocturnal Birding, where he draws inspiration from birdsong for his compositions, forcing his machines to abide by their sonic quality and rhythmic structure.

Following an excellent record in Krüller, Shone does not look to repeat the recipe. Krüller might have been the epitome of Shone’s organic/inorganic approach, but Nocturnal Birding takes a different route. The record is condensed, clocking at just over 30 minutes. The compositions themselves are much more immediate, heard in the devastating Godflesh-ian breakdowns of “Black Storm Petrel” and “Rook”.

Similarly, the hooks here feel less intricate, more immediate, than those on Krüller. “Meadowlark” pushes toward a Nine Inch Nails subtleness, the desolate vocal delivery creating an encompassing space. Even more impressive is the ending to “Mute Swan”, where the final ascent carries a hypnotic and otherworldly quality. It ties the urban to the transcendent in fascinating equilibrium, the sound design intricately mirroring the background bird chirps.

In many ways, Shone has not changed his ways. His vision remains unwavering, but still, he finds places to experiment. If Krüller was the culmination of his hybrid vision, Nocturnal Birding shows how potent his sound can be when stripped back to its most direct, primal form. – Spyros Stasis


Binah – Ónkos (Osmose)

Listening back to Binah’s debut, Hallucinating in Resurrecture, it is easy to see how the UK band could be lumped in the old-school death metal revival of the 2010s. Their heavy groove and obsession with Sunlight Studios’ guitar timbre alone sufficed. However, even then, something more complex was brewing beneath, highlighted by the atmospheric qualities, especially prominent in the title track. This atmospheric dimension further flourished in 2018’s Phobiate, which incorporated additional progressive elements and off-kilter ideas to set Binah apart from the herd. “Dream Paralysis” is a perfect example of this evolution, its discordant quality colliding with a contorted rhythmical structure.

Ónkos is another leap forward for Binah, who forge stronger connections to their experimental side. Ambiance sits at the core, shifting forms throughout. The electronic component might have existed before, but here it feels more immersive. The introductions and interludes it offers have a cosmic quality. 

This widening scope feeds directly into the psychedelic and progressive components of Ónkos. Amid a punishing death-metal form, their intricate guitar work opens another dimension amid the brutality. It channels the early spirit of Timeghoul, balancing beauty and horror.

While this might suggest that Binah might have made a more rigid turn outside of death metal, that is not true. Their old-school Swedish death metal adoration is still there, palpable in every heavy groove, identifiable through the guttural distortion. However, they move from the raw churn of classic Clandestine toward the expansive, narrative approach of Crimson.

The melodic guitar lines, the intricate solos, the immersive ambiance, and the bravery of experimentation all reveal this, but even more so is the fact that, much like Edge of Sanity, they do not forget their past. That refusal to abandon death metal’s core is precisely what makes Ónkos Binah’s most daring and accomplished work to date. – Spyros Stasis


I never thought I would see Coroner release a new record, and yet here we are. Twenty-two years after the monumental Grin, the Swiss act makes its long-awaited return with Dissonance Theory. Coroner pushed thrash to new dimensions, harnessing its raw aggression through a technical lens. Their first single from the new record, “Renewal”, reaffirmed this lineage, taking on a Kreator-esque hostility, but patching it through the trio’s relentless precision and heavy groove.

However, Coroner’s vision was more ambitious. I always viewed them as a reflection of Voivod, both bands tapping into the same discordant stream. However, where the Canadians reveled in chaotic exhilaration, the Swiss worshipped an unyielding force of precision. The breakdowns of “Transparent Eye” show this rhythmic dedication, a relentless order that slowly twists the mind. That same structural rigor injects the heavy groove that has always been Coroner’s hallmark. It is hard to believe that a band founded in 1983 could unleash the industrial coating of “Sacrificial Lamb”, the tremendous momentum of “Symmetry”, or the mid-tempo application of “Trinity”.

It is a truly forward-thinking mindset, separate from any pointless progressive term. How many thrash bands can you name with atmospheric passages? The aforementioned Voivod, maybe Depressive Age, aspects of Mekong Delta, and Sabbat. It is a slim list, right? Yet, Coroner did exactly that through the discordant lead of “Paralyzed, Mesmerized” in Grin, and they still unearth this otherworldly sense in “Sacrificial Lamb” and “The Law”. Still, through all this technical aptitude, the relentless rhythm, the discordance and atmosphere, Coroner remain extremely straightforward and catchy.

The opening track, “Consequence,” and its chorus alone will have you tapping frantically on the repeat button. It makes the ride through Dissonance Theory that much more rewarding, an ambitious work that retains a direct perspective. It proves that Coroner were not just ahead of their time back in the 1980s and 1990s, they still are to this day. – Spyros Stasis


Evoken – Mendacium (Profound Lore)

Part of the extreme doom/death pantheon, Evoken have amassed a near flawless discography. Embrace The Emptiness, Quietus, and Antithesis of Light established an unyielding sense of dread and sorrow. However, starting with A Caress of the Void, Evoken began to soften slightly (very, very slightly), enveloping their dread in a sense of melancholy. Hypnagogia and Altra Mors joined that tradition, but their new record, Mendacium, looks to unravel this.

Mendacium acts as a hybrid point. Opener “Matins” rekindles the old hopelessness, its riffs breaking in slow waves, vocals lamenting as though everything is destined to be swallowed by the abyss. It is a sad procession, a task that must be completed to achieve some form of catharsis. The continuation with “Lauds” follows this paradigm; here, the guitars and keyboards drip with venomous intent, their discordance enhancing the already uneasy sense of the ritual.

This is where the record twists, with Evoken tapping into their latter-day self. In this mode, they augment their majestic quality, confidently walking toward despair rather than being dragged into it. To that end, they evoke (see what I did there?) the melancholic spirit of the Peaceville Three, adorning their ceremony with a tangible, sorrowful essence. Then it all comes crashing down again. “None” channels Esoteric’s psychedelic endeavors, and the grand finale with “Compline” results in the final, unavoidable devastation.

Here doom contorts into something harsher, as death metal brutality tears through the funereal veil. It is an excellent structure, paying homage to the band’s evolution over the years and collecting all its individual components into a unified form. Thus, Mendacium does not just retrace Evoken’s past; it refracts it, proving that their command of extreme doom/death’s language remains as devastating and as essential as ever. – Spyros Stasis


Gates of Dawn – III (Death Hymns)

One of the most exciting acts in underground black metal, Gates of Dawn possess an uncanny ability to mix psychedelia into their black metal brew. True, others have pursued similar experiments, most notably Oranssi Pazuzu, but Gates of Dawn retained much of the black metal rawness in both their debut, I, and their more experimental sophomore, II, which at times embraced a kosmische outlook.

With III, the balance nearly collapses, with Gates of Dawn giving themselves over almost entirely to psychedelic rock. As “Screaming Skin” comes in, it is still the majestic black metal side that pierces through. The synthesizers create a vast space, while the guitar work stays in the metallic domain with galloping rhythms and even a quasi-romantic, medieval-esque passage. Yet, under the surface, the guitars lay catchy licks, more akin to psych rock. The second half of the track establishes the shift as the dreamy melodies take on a 1960s surf-rock perspective.

While black metal persists in parts, the foundation has shifted. Garage rock becomes a driving force in “Magewind”, with the guitars acquiring more grit as the drums perform their circular krautrock-inspired procession. Funk ideas bloom within this setting, the second half of “Faces In Flames” coming alive with a 1960s groove. And then the intricate guitar playing in “Trembling Gaze” has more in common with Eric Clapton than with Snorre Ruch.

With III, Gates of Dawn display a similar mindset to Ved Buens Ende in Written in Waters, a willingness to transcend the genre’s perimeter, while still haunted by its presence. Though sonically these two records are very different, they both mark a step away from the black metal space toward psychedelia, but there is always some pull that remains.

“Fell Specter” is the most obvious example —an excellent track that sees Gates of Dawn momentarily retreat into tremolo-picked black metal. What is even better is the moment when that riff collides with the intense audio effects, combining the cold grimness with a spaced-out feeling. It encapsulates Gates of Dawn’s creativity and opens a world of potential for what comes next. – Spyros Stasis


Grole – Come Here at Your Own Peril (Tour de Garde)

Jordan Kelly, aka Illusory, is best known in the Canadian black metal scene for his work with Spectral Wound and Profane Order. With Grole, Illusory descends to the primal depths of black metal, relishing its lo-fi qualities and harsh structures, and also finds a place to excavate his interests in Newfoundland history, tradition, and heritage. The first specimen in With a Pike Upon My Shoulder is a raw and uncompromising piece, defined by harsh production and lead lines that cut through the murk.

Where the debut carved out Grole’s raw foundations, Come Here at Your Peril refines them. Here, Illusory places the punk and proto-extreme metal heritage on equal ground with the raw black metal side. “Sheila’s Brush” feels like a blackened crossover track, while “Dubh Dóite” delivers a Celtic Frost-ian groove and deathgrunts. Further heavy metal tropes appear, with the sharp riffs of “I Went Home Today” echoing with a blackened edge.

Despite these excursions, the black metal presence is strong. “Talamh An Éisc” is the most prominent expression, with its traditional riffing radiating the icy feel of the genre, while the howling vocals echo through the abyss. Even the acoustic guitar inclusion in “I Went Home Today” reaffirms its lineage, a technique associated with the folky side of the Norwegian scene.

What this results in is a record that is more immediate and catchier than its predecessor. Tracks like “Moratorium” and its insane chorus, or “The Anti Confederation Song” with its powerful hooks, will be embedded in your mind for days to come. There is, however, a touch of the earlier romanticism that has subsided, mainly due to the less cavernous production, which moves away from the mystical and into the confrontational. If With A Pike Upon My Shoulder is the descent to the abyss, then Come Here At Your Peril is where Illusory sharpens the blade, combining immediacy with rawness to deliver a memorable result. – Spyros Stasis


Hooded Menace – Lachrymose Monuments of Obscuration (Season of Mist)

Hooded Menace’s trajectory appeared set. The Finnish ghouls’ career was defined by the rotten ambition of Autopsy and the towering forms of Winter. Yet, in a surprising twist, 2021’s The Tritonus Bell saw them ingest classic heavy metal tropes. It was not so much the early Peaceville Three bleakness that guided them, but rather the fiery steel of Mercyful Fate and King Diamond. With Lachrymose Monuments of Obscuration, this transformation is solidified, with the trio stepping back into 1980s glory. This is immediately apparent as the expressive lead work to “Pale Masquerade” settles in. NWOBHM collides with the fiendish essence of Melissa, and a touch of proto-thrash through bursts of undisciplined guitar solos.

However, if it were a complete shift from death/doom into heavy metal, the result would be ridiculous. This is where Hooded Menace show their quality. They do not forget their past; instead, they reconfigure it. “Portrait Without a Face” is telling, the track alternating between its Iron Maiden fascination and the My Dying Bride and Paradise Lost gloom (cello and all). Similarly, “Into Haunted Oblivion” awakens the Celtic Frost specter, its vile demeanor as unforgiving as ever.

Further classic doom tropes surface: the melodic essence of Candlemass shines through “Daughters of Lingering Pain”, and Cathedral’s playful, circa The Carnival Bizarre, invocations define “Lugubrious Dance”. In that way, Lachrymose Monuments of Obscuration is a record that knows its past, thrives in its present, and even finds room for a sly wink with a Duran Duran cover to close the casket. – Spyros Stasis


One of Nine – Dawn of the Iron Shadow (Profound Lore)

One of Nine enter a rich tradition of black metal bands finding inspiration in the works of J.R.R. Tolkien. This is a subject that requires balance. On the one hand, they must lean into atmosphere and heroic poetry; on the other, they must retain the aggression and vigor of the genre. This tension pushes One of Nine to evolve from their debut style into something more ambitious.

Dawn of the Iron Shadow builds on Eternal Sorcery, but it is a deeper, more complete work. The ambient passages are more descriptive, serving as immersive introductions with monologues and narration. Much like Summoning, the band also weave these elements into the songs themselves. The result is a richer tapestry, with “Age of Chains” layering choirs and bells over a black metal backbone. Their fast-paced, expressive core has also stepped into majestic territory. Stormblåst-era Dimmu Borgir is the reference point, shining through the meticulous arrangements of “Behold the Shadow of My Thoughts” and “Of Desperate Void”.

Yet One of Nine balance this mainstream symphonic style with darker shades. Emperor’s influence fuels the fury of “Dreadful Leap”, while sharpened, melodic leads in the Sacramentum mold echo through “Death Wing Black Flame”. They also glance at their contemporaries, with Wormwitch’s recent pointed aggression informing “Quest of the Silmaril” and lending a modern edge to the Tolkienian tapestry.

Through these extensions, One of Nine live up to their ambition rather than becoming just another Middle-earth-inspired act. They project atmosphere and storytelling with both emotion and compositional strength. The only blemish is that Dawn of the Iron Shadow does not yet uncover wholly new ground. But if their evolution continues, that breakthrough might only be a matter of time. – Spyros Stasis


Primitive Man – Observance (Relapse)

In Primitive Man’s world, there is no room for hope. There is barely room for breathing. They view the world not as collapsing, but as already collapsed, and the rest of us are catching up to that fact. This running thread defines their discography and is the key component of their latest work, Observance. Many in extreme music have tried to capture this outlook, but Primitive Man stand apart in the way they join different lineages.

The slow, collapsing pace owes to the drone/doom pioneers, with the punishing minimalism of Khanate and the annihilating essence of early Unearthly Trance defining “Seer”. This is punishment delivered in sparsity. Riffs crash down, separated by gulfs of silence, while despairing vocals echo through cavernous depths. This feeling is enhanced via a funeral essence, a sense of melancholy that radiates with dread. The melodic touches of “Devotion” channel this energy, making for a heartbreaking turn. It is a foundation that is complete through the post-metallic influence of Neurosis, breathing a dissonant air into the grandeur of “Water”.

However, much like all their points of reference, Primitive Man understand that slow pace and towering form are not enough. To that end, they are on point with their sound design and noise textures, channeling the adventurous essence of Wolf Eyes to uncompromising effect, with even the interlude “Iron Sights” standing out with its chaotic form. Similarly, touches of punkish energy offer a pummelling alternative to the slow-moving dread of “Social Contract”.

The more subdued noise-rock applications are contorted, but they still arrive with the distinct Swans-ian touch in “Transactional”, and the blackened aesthetic is ever-present in “Natural Law”. And of course, none of these offer any respite, any deviation from the end goal of Observance. Seventy minutes of suffocation, ending not with relief but with obliteration. – Spyros Stasis


Sum of R – Spectral (WV Sorcerer / Dusktone)

Reto Mäder’s project, Sum of R, has always circled around one foundation: ritual. Through the years, Sum of R have changed their perspective multiple times. Their early experimental doom machinations reached a peak with 2013’s Lights on Water. This was followed up by a surprising retreat to a minimal, dark ambient form with the excellent Orga. 

In 2022, Sum of R released Lahbryce, which featured the addition of Jukka Rämänen and Marko Neuman of Dark Buddha Rising, injecting a new psychedelic dimension. In many ways,  Lahbryce was a return to the pre-Orga sound. Here, the drones were subjected to the doom riffs, but unlike Lights on Water, Sum of R injected a further psychedelic twist. A successful experiment, they now return to it with Spectral.

The droning progression and hypnotic movements mirror Lahbryce, where weaving melodies and free-flowing rhythmic patterns create a trance-like atmosphere that can lead to uneasy moments. “Null” exemplifies the latter, as the percussive structure becomes unwieldy and out of control. Like their Finnish kin, they embrace the doom dimension, unleashing excruciating processions of nihilistic torture in “Waltz of Death”.

At the same time, Sum of R return to their past. The post-metal and post-rock elements return in “Beer Cans in a Bottomless Pit”, where the electronic backbone slowly shifts toward krautrock-style repetition. Similarly, they again retreat to a minimal state, with echoes of Orga pulsing through the strange percussive structures of “Null” and the malicious abstractness of “Violate” and “Cold Signature”.

If Spectral falters, it’s in its closeness to Lahbryce. Though it refines the album’s approach—making it more focused, more controlled—it does not quite transcend it. The ritual remains, dark and glorious, but its circle feels familiar. However, as with rituals, repetition is not so much a sign of stagnation as of devotion, and this can lead to strange new places in the future. – Spyros Stasis


October 27, 2025 0 comments
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The Best Metal Albums of September 2025
Music

The Best Metal Albums of September 2025 » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

As we gear up for the end of 2025, the heavy stream continues uninterrupted. Unearthed black metal recordings from LVTHN and Vörnir are finally released, while Gjendød, Nexion, and Destruction Ritual continue to define the present of the genre, albeit in different ways. Historic acts make their solid returns, with the newest Paradise Lost and the long-awaited Fauna releases. On the fringes, Nuclear Dudes continue their manic, low-key, ambitious efforts, Igorrr merge electronica and black metal, Hateful Abandon offer dark industrialized post-punk, and Intercourse stare into the abyss without blinking. That and much more, so dig in! – Spyros Stasis

The Best Metal Albums of September 2025


Arkhaaik – Uihtis (Eisenwald)

One of the stranger outfits from the Jünger Tumilon, Arkhaaik are obsessed with the ritualistic dimension of extreme metal. Their debut record, dʰg̑ʰm̥tós, follows the path of mystical black/death, tracing the lineage of Grave Upheaval and Mitochondrion. Yet, their return with Uihtis sees a tectonic shift. While the ritual remains at the centre of it all, the primal black/death has given way to a more refined, blackened death/doom approach, a change that is also mirrored in the cleaner production. “Hagrah Gurres” oozes with this essence, taking on the latter-day Septicflesh majesty (minus the symphonic applications) and delivering it with devastating force. 

The striking component here is the groove, and its derivation is uncanny. It alternates between the modern death/doom scene and also incorporates elements from Panzerfaust and their graphic applications. This is Arkhaaik’s newfound strength. Their ability to assimilate diverse elements and bring a unified result. Take their black metal side. For the most part, they rely on fleeting lead patches, small discordant fragments. However, these still convey the same sense of unease evoked by the dissonant orthodoxy advocates.

Similarly, the death metal form alters, at times settling into its atmospheric doom quality, but then exploding in a catchy beatdown with “Hrkþos Heshr Hiagom”. It continues, from the atmospheric interludes that evoke the darkness ushered in by the Ruins of Beverast, to the momentum and energy infused with the spirit of Bölzer. Most importantly, Uihtis does not simply rehash these ideas. It makes them its own, and while it does not appear that Arkhaaik have fully completed their vision, they are definitely on the right path. – Spyros Stasis


Destruction Ritual – Providence (End All Life)

Destruction Ritual’s 2021 demo felt like a message from the genre’s primal years. It manages to contain the lo-fi, raw, and aggressive quality that defined black metal demos, but without becoming a gimmick. The project of French heavyweights MkM (Antaeus), TerrorReign (Necrobloos), and US-based guitarist Arafel oozes with poisonous distortion, taking to heart the relentless core of Blood Libels, and the venomous extension of black metal orthodoxy.

Yet, Destruction Ritual’s return with Providence turns a new page. The production now suits a full-length, shedding the demo’s rougher edges without losing venom. From the outset, the early Scandinavian ethos prevails. The title track best exemplifies this turn, its riffology saturated with the trademark icy tremolos. It provides a vivid element, a dream of dark forests where spectres roam. It is an aesthetic that carries over through the eerie, arachnoid lead work, especially pronounced in the clean-ish parts of “Washed Away Sins”. 

This excavation goes further, with a proto-black metal perspective shining through both lead mechanics and progression. The guitars encompass a duality, a yin and yang, at times descending into a cacophonous à la early Bathory haze (“Providence”), to then ascend to classically metallic notions (“Pride & Corrupted Dreams”). The drums do not relent, their continuous beating is not as fast, as it is dedicated. Their martial approach constructs a near militant procession, one that allows Destruction Ritual to tap into their latent DNA. The Antaeus strain is right there, and the venomous onslaught in “Closure” makes sure we do not forget this.

The orthodox route is also called upon, with the cold and torturous mid-tempo of “Gone Days of Splendor” and the atmospheric parts of “Decaying Masks of Remorse” shining through. Thus, Providence does not simply retrace Destruction Ritual’s steps. It instead unearths black metal’s primal soil, its proto form’s extremity, Antaeus’s venomous scars, and the ritual pulse of orthodoxy, binding them together in a singular, destructive statement. – Spyros Stasis


Fauna – Ochre & Ash (Prophecy/Lupus Lounge)

With their debut record, Rain, coming out the same year as Diadem of 12 Stars, Fauna established themselves as one of the first Cascadian black metal bands. Like their contemporaries, Fauna are obsessed with the majesty of the Pacific Northwest. They translate the area’s mystical sceneries into raw, ambient forms. However, it did take a moment for their sound to come together, with the rough promise of Rain and The Hunt finally paying off in their 2012 full-length, Avifauna. Following 13 years of silence, Fauna now return with another ambitious work in Ochre & Ash.

The atmosphere is again fundamental, Fauna taking great care in sonic placements and sound recordings to build a holistic ambiance. Today, this sounds closer to the Nordic folk of Wardruna, especially in “A Conjuring”, which also serves as a platform from which Fauna can leap into other territories. Hypnotic tinges rise from the clean guitars with “Labyrinths”, making use of their circular motif to craft its inescapable mazes. When the distortion surges and the pace drops, the music drifts toward funeral doom rather than earthy black metal.

The same energy can be harnessed to achieve a strange, forest psychedelia in parts of “Eternal Return”. The wolf might change his coat, but not his nature. Thus, Fauna still tap into the primal black metal havoc, the start of “Nature and Madness” conjuring an apocalyptic quality to its trademark black metal riffing. These reveal the bloodied teeth, with Fauna imbuing their form with a tribal essence passed from the likes of Neurosis. Not so much a musical influence, but rather a spirit guide that points the band toward their true north.

Fauna’s return is admirable, and Ochre & Ash sees them return to their true form. Longform compositions, blending ambient sensibility, tribal spirit, and black metal devastation, Ochre & Ash is a demanding yet deeply immersive rite, one that reveals more with each descent. – Spyros Stasis


Gjendød – Svekkelse (Osmose)

Rekindling black metal’s flames is no simple task, and few truly succeed in this endeavour. And then there are those who not only awaken the old ethos but also chart their own path. This is Gjendød’s story, whose latest record Svekkelse comes just one year after their excellent fifth full-length, Livskramper. As has been the case throughout the band’s discography, Gjendød’s foundation dates back to the mid-1990s, leaning toward the more outlandish expressions of the genre.

So echoes of Ulver’s pastoral melancholy reverberate through the passages of “Lykkens bortgang”, while the Enslaved influence injects a sense of lost magic and lore. It is an otherworldly pull, captured through the relentless progression of “Uten nåde” and the second half of “En elv av kjøtt” and its beautiful acoustic guitar passages.

Yet, underneath this foundation lies a discordant self. On “Maktens sødme”, the pre-industrial Thorns lineage is clear. The intricate guitar work feels like an echo of Snorre’s feverish dreams. This dissonant methodology recalls Ved Buens Ende. The start of “En elv av kjøtt” spirals into a vortex of chaos and entropy. Slight melancholic touches are offered, with “En staur i hjertet” employing the icy riffology to create a nocturnal anthem, parallel to the works of Djevel.

Further off-kilter ideas float, like the synthesizers in “Den Falske råte” hint at a cosmic escape. Throughout all this, Gjendød seamlessly balance between the primitive core of the genre and its more nuanced manifestation. Svekkelse stands as a testament to Gjendød’s duality, firmly rooted in tradition yet unafraid to venture into uncharted terrain as a hermit. – Spyros Stasis


Hateful Abandon – Threat (Sentient Ruin)

Hateful Abandon understand intersections. Their entire discography is built on this fact. For them, punk and industrial are not parallel lanes. No, they are branches of the same tree, best presented under a joining post-punk root. Their first record in a decade, Threat, opens with this principle. “Nuclear Thread Worker” relishes the early Killing Joke aura, this unsettling state between punk history and urban reality, where the two competing forces mold Threat.

“Shithouse” moves closer to hardcore chaos, but never gives in. The straightforward progression instead repeats on an endless loop. On the other side, the industrial tone appears in a sinisterly gleeful manner. The bombastic start to “Scavenger” is only the surface for Hateful Abandon, but deeper undercurrents are running just below. The apocalyptic essence of “Scavenger” takes hold, with operatic vocals evoking memories of the early In Slaughter Natives releases, as does “Sculptures” with its off-kilter synthesizers. It is an always-present narrative, as Hateful Abandon feel a strong pull toward the apocalyptic.

“Dome” with its huge bass lines evokes the fiery visions of Streetcleaner, the faraway cries heralding an inescapable devastation. It is a vibe that persists even in the most desolate moments, with “Shimmer Road” evoking the Swans-like melancholy. Coupled with some minor black metal influences, especially pronounced in “Nuclear Thread Worker”, Hateful Abandon unveil a world aflame. This invocation comes with a certain mystique. And while their guiding light might be the post-punk foundation of Joy Division, their far-reaching extensions make for a much more daunting offering. – Spyros Stasis


Treading a similar path to Jason Köhnen’s Bong-Ra, the past two decades saw the breakcore architecture of Gautier Serre’s early career mutate into ever more concrete forms—still as spastic and crazy as his earlier works, but touched differently. Where Köhnen’s vision ended up encased in industrial grime and heaviness, all oozing electronic textures and sparking electricity (check out Black Noise, released earlier this year), Serre pushed his project Igorrr towards predominantly black metal territories. While 2017’s Savage Sinusoid had already hinted at this direction and 2020’s Spirituality and Distortion announced the true metallic potential behind the project, Amen witnesses its full realization.

Drop the needle anywhere on the album and you’ll be inundated with waves of utterly intense and, perhaps, insane but organic-sounding instrumental expression. Owing to Serre’s ambitious approach, which included recording actual church organs and acoustic instruments, the album feels vibrant and breathes deeply even in its more suffocating passages.

Neoclassical strings and operatic vocals float above ripping riffs and striated breakbeats, then pour right through them (“Daemoni”). Gorgeous Eastern melodies intertwine with blast beats to explode into blistering second-wave black metal (“Headbutt”). Elsewhere, chants dissolve into saturating textures (“Pure Disproportionate Black and White Nihilism”). While it might appear unnecessarily extravagant on paper, this astute eclecticism is what ultimately elevates the album above its peers, with an injection of adrenaline at hand every time things threaten to fall into a rut. – Antonio Poscic


Intercourse – How I Fell in Love With the Void (Brutal Panda)

Many find staring into the abyss daunting, something to be done sparingly if at all. But that is not the case for Connecticut’s Intercourse, who, since their inception, have consistently peered into the void. Their aptly titled, fifth full-length, How I Fell in Love With the Void, does not abstain from that practice. To that end, they once more contort their noise rock fascinations through a hardcore immediacy. This makes the discordant guitar work in “The Ballad of Max Wright” hit with much more potency. “Unsuccessfully Attempting to Parse Nightmare From Reality” takes this further, contemplating a dissonant obsenity that bounces between old-school punk ethos and Fugazi‘s post-hardcore.

Thus, Intercourse dig into the dark and oppressive side of hardcore. The heavier groove works nicely alongside the noise rock influence, with touches of a sludge pedigree coming through when things slow down. This makes the despair more palpable in “Zoloft and Blow”, staring down the same dead ends that Great Falls have found (“Family Suicide Gun”). Plunging into the atmospheric only enhances the despair, the title track being a prime example when the clean guitars and subdued playing come in.

This contradiction brings to mind Chat Pile and their melancholic outlook, especially in “I’m Very Tired Please Let Me Die”, where they provide a subtle industrial injection. Even in their more energetic state, as seen in the metallic-induced “Cadaver Resume” with its chugging and the mathcore-adjacent “Another Song About the Sun”, they still cling to a sense of hopelessness. Intercourse understand that hopelessness is not always defeatism; sometimes it is the only way through. – Spyros Stasis


LVTHN – The Devil’s Bridge (Amor Fati)

Formed in the mid-2010s, LVTHN quickly transitioned from their early, raw, Scandinavian-inspired sound to the rising orthodox black metal trend. Their debut full-length, Eradication of Nescience, was a timely offering, following the footsteps of the French black metal scene, coalescing Antaeus’s devastating force with the Aosoth-ian transcendental devilry. The band’s sophomore record, The Devil’s Bridge, might be arriving nine years later, but in spirit it inhabits the same space as their debut.

The latter stage of orthodoxy still prevails, with “A Malignant Encounter – The Servant” employing the Aosoth principles once more, forming a solid, impenetrable guitar wall. The guitar timbre is near elemental, a cosmic force that pushes against all life. From there, the dissonant injections are expected, with the guitars in “A Malignant Encounter – The Master” and “Sum Quod Eris” dripping their discordant poison on top of the aggressive progression. Here, the more chaotic outbreaks break the mould, the start of “Cacodaemon” and “Grim Vengeance” show the unforgiving side of the band, honed by the spirit of Ondskapt and Funeral Mist.

In moments, this can become even more abrasive, with “Mother of Abominations” unearthing the Katharsis corpse for a brief time. However, while The Devil’s Bridge is a well-put-together record, it does feel like clinging too hard to the past. According to their press release, the bulk of the work was written and recorded in 2019, with further adjustments being made over the years. That’s something that comes across. A record frozen in a different time, which invokes its spirit, but does not extend it. – Spyros Stasis


Modern Life Is War – Life on the Moon (Deathwish)

One of the prominent hardcore acts of the 2000s, Modern Life Is War, released two pivotal records in My Love. My Way and Witness. What made them stand out was their dedication to the punk ethos, while feeling a strong melodic pull. This pull might have been overstated in their third full-length, Midnight In America, and the band eventually performed a course correction with their 2013 Fever Hunting. Now they return 12 years later with Life on the Moon, a record that swings the pendulum wildly across different states and moods.

The emotional core is exposed, from the “Invocation” introduction and its almost poppy sentimentality, and it remains prevalent throughout Life On The Moon. “Jackie Oh No” pushes harder on these melodic inclinations, while “Homecoming Queen” further digs in its hooks. Still, there are times when the balance is better, with “First Song on the Moon” finding equilibrium between fervour and catchiness. Similarly, “In the Shadow of Ingredion” and “Johnny Gone” move closer to the old-school ethos, the former embracing quasi-metallic elements and the latter some New York hardcore characteristics.

The transformations keep revolving, from post-hardcore abrasiveness in “There Is a Telephone That Never Stops Ringing”, to the relentless speed of “Bloodsport” and the subdued Have Heart energy of “You Look Like the Morning Sun”. There are also moments of quasi-psychedelic introspection, “Empty Shoes” with its emotive quality, “Over the Road” with its hypnotic aspiration, and finally “Kid Hard Dub” with a hazy perspective.

Overall, this constant transformation holds the record back, disrupting its flow and restraining it from hitting a certain stride. There are still interesting ideas in Life on the Moon, but it feels like Modern Life Is War have not completely coalesced these. Maybe this will come the next time around, and hopefully that will not take another 12 years. – Spyros Stasis


Nexion – Sundrung (Avantgarde Music)

The problem with unexpected hit albums, even in niche genres, such as 2020’s Seven Oracles by Reykjavík’s black-death metal outfit Nexion, is that the band suddenly have expectations to live up to. While the yips, the curse of the sophomore release, or whatever you want to call it, is very much a real thing, the Icelandic quintet appear too imperious and self-assured to succumb to such foolishness. Sundrung stands shoulder to shoulder with the best Nexion have produced so far.

Nebulous as it might be, applying the Icelandic black metal term here makes sense, as Sundrung exhibits certain similarities with the music of Misþyrming and Svartidauði in each of its tracks’ epic tapestry: majestic riffs rolling along growled chants and lighter folk flourishes alternating with brutal attacks. Simultaneously, there is a hunger at play within Nexion’s idiom that separates them from the lot as they draw from death metal’s unfiltered brutality and sprinkle perverted atmospherics across the eight tracks.

There is very little filler here despite the album’s 50-odd minutes. In fact, the extended duration seems critical in making the band’s special moments—passages that sound like storms brewed in the deepest layers of hell—feel truly earned. Here, Josh Rood’s deranged, Attila Csihar-evoking roars skitter over machine gun riffing and snaking melodies, like something off of an early Behemoth record or Keep of Kalessin’s flash in the pan Reclaim. Terrific stuff. – Antonio Poscic


Nuclear Dudes – Truth Paste (Independent)

Jon Weisnewski, of the mighty Akimbo, might have started Nuclear Dudes as his bedroom project, but boy, this thing has legs. On their fifth full-length, Truth Paste, Weisnewski is joined by Teen Cthulhu vocalist Brandon Nakamura for an exhilarating ride. The start is bombastic, as “Napalm Life” descends into a grindcore frenzy, fierce and unrelenting. It is an expression rooted in the punk lineage, which manifests in various forms.

The crossover-inspired “Holiday Warfare” contains fragments of a thrash past, while “Juggalos for Congress” reveals a more traditional groove. However, Nuclear Dudes tend to take things to extremes, relishing the powerviolence perspective, especially pronounced in the absolute mayhem of “Sad Vicious”.

Still, a fundamental component here is the industrial backbone, and Nuclear Dudes feel a strong pull towards electronica. It is so powerful that at times they retreat to dance-like moments, as in the second half of the title track and “Death of a Burning Man”. At other times, this morphs into an industrialized fascination, which at its most basic level arrives with a Ministry or Prong-ian quality (“Cyrus the Virus”).

Where things get really interesting is when the industrial self merges with the grindcore essence, taking a cue from Genghis Tron’s monumental Board Up the House. “Space Juice” is a prime example of this motif, and the stunning use of synthesizers is capable of expanding the violent ideas toward otherworldly realms, as is the case with the hazy quality of “Concussion Protocol”. There is a lot of sarcasm and playfulness here, and it fits the image, but do not fool yourself: Truth Paste is anything but middle-of-the-road or straightforward. The ambition shines from underneath all that. – Spyros Stasis


Paradise Lost – Ascension (Nuclear Blast)

Among the original wave of doom-death metal bands, particularly those who rose to fame during the early 1990s in the ranks of the UK’s Peaceville Records, Paradise Lost have aged most gracefully. Whether thanks to the stability of their lineup or the self-confidence and freedom to experiment with genres as they saw fit—from death and gothic metal to synthpop and back—the music they put out feels vibrant and played with genuine gusto even four decades into their career 

Ascension, the group’s 17th LP, finds them in stellar form. As if each style they ever came across embedded a fragment of itself into their DNA, the album becomes akin to a mashup—based in dramatic death and doom metal, but free to stretch into territories of gothic rock, post-metal, and pop. Take, for example, the opener “Serpent on the Cross”, which is a crushing and relentless sublimation of Paradise Lost’s death-doom tendencies, featuring tightly wound atmospheres that release into galloping rhythms and gorgeously melodic riffs.

Meanwhile, “Tyrants Serenade” ups the melancholy and Weltschmerz to levels unheard since 1993’s Icon, and “The Precipice” has the group descending into funeral doom, with grave piano keys and Nick Holmes’ stunning vocal delivery leading the dirge in its steady, heavy crawl. These are all signs of a mature band that, despite all odds, sound as if their life had just begun. – Antonio Poscic


Vörnir – Av Hadanfärd Krönt (Mystiskaos)

I am becoming increasingly terrified by the prolific nature of particular musicians, especially when they tend to collaborate. Not only can they continue to produce new work, but they also tend to unearth their earlier material, reworking it and releasing it. This is the case with Vörnir, featuring artists such as Alex Poole, Rory Flay, Swartadauþuz, and H.V. Lyngdal. Much like the case of LVTHN’s new record, Vörnir’s debut was written at a different time. Written between 2011 and 2015 and recorded from 2015 to 2024, Av Hadanfärd Krönt radiates with the spirit of another era, steeped in the orthodox tradition of black metal.

This work needs to be experienced as a continuum, a flow of dark energy that arrives in maelstrom form. Vörnir tend towards orthodoxy’s harsher side, not shying away from relentless assault without many breaks. However, while the anger is palpable, there is an underlying methodology that runs through it. This unyielding perspective is defined by strict precision, not loose aggression. It makes the work that much more calculating, and as a result, it becomes colder.

The pull of the dissonant is still there, but it feels like the time passed between writing and recording has transfigured it. Instead of the venomous injections, Vörnir unleash psychedelic fumes. Far away, fleeting lead work delves into this motif, projecting different emotional flavors. At times, these hallucinogenic capabilities project a deep ambiance, an otherworldly dreaminess. Still, they are also capable of constructing towering moments of mid-tempo dedication, or even granting momentum to the ongoing assault.

This is where Vörnir succeed. They balance between the initial proximity of their compositions to orthodox black metal, but they have allowed time to imbue these with additional components. In that sense, they appear almost as an avant-garde act that is rooted in tradition but pushes further beyond. – Spyros Stasis


October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Heavy Metal Music History Doc Series 'Into The Void' Official Trailer
Hollywood

Heavy Metal Music History Doc Series ‘Into The Void’ Official Trailer

by jummy84 September 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Heavy Metal Music History Doc Series ‘Into The Void’ Official Trailer

by Alex Billington
September 11, 2025
Source: YouTube

“It was: let’s break all the rules, let’s get as extreme as we can get.” Hulu has unveiled the official trailer for a rock documentary / music history special event called Into The Void, taking us right back to the days of Heavy Metal glory. Into The Void is made by Evan Husney & Jason Eisener, the same creators of the hit doc series “Dark Side of the Ring” previously, back with more crazy stories from the past. Into The Void delves into the emotional sagas and behind-the-scenes lives of iconic heavy metal bands and artists, offering an intimate look at the towering legends and unforgettable figures in the genre’s history. Featuring bands including Judas Priest, NME, Pantera, Hellion, Death, Randy Rhoads, Plasmatics, Confess, & others. Their deeply personal stories about finding success offer an intoxicating combo of volume and distortion as they discuss many major moments. It will be streaming on Hulu at the end of this month. It looks damn good. 🤘

Here’s the official trailer (+ poster) for Husney & Eisener’s doc series Into The Void, via Hulu’s YouTube:

Into The Void Doc Series

Into The Void Doc Poster

Hulu’s Into The Void is a groundbreaking streaming documentary series that explores the epic struggles and the cultural impacts made by Heavy Metal’s most compelling artists. Their intensely personal stories about finding success offer an intoxicating combo of volume and distortion delivered via pulsating tales of murder, addiction, rebellion and redemption. Into The Void is a new series created & produced by the two acclaimed filmmakers Evan Husney & Jason Eisener, also creators of the “Dark Side of the Ring” docu series for Vice TV previously. The series features episodes directed by Canadian director Andrew Appelle, also of “Tales from the Territories” and “Dark Side of the Ring” previously. Executive produced by Guillermo Garcia, Danny Gabai, Evan Husney & Jason Eisener. Hulu will debut the new Into The Void music doc series streaming on Hulu starting September 22nd, 2025 coming soon. Who wants to watch this and rock out?

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Find more posts in: Documentaries, Streaming, To Watch, Trailer

September 12, 2025 0 comments
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Jürgen Bartsch, Founder of Metal Band Bethlehem, Has Died
Music

Jürgen Bartsch, Founder of Metal Band Bethlehem, Has Died

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Jürgen Bartsch, the founding and one constant member of pioneering German extreme metal band Bethlehem, has passed away after an undisclosed illness. The news was shared by current Bethlehem singer Yvonne “Onielar” Wilczynska.

On Instagram, Onielar wrote (as translated from German), “He has died many times… But death was only temporary. After a serious illness, perseverance, and great fighting spirit, our beloved friend and esteemed founder of Bethlehem – Jürgen Bartsch – passed away on August 27, 2025. In deep sorrow and with a broken heart, In the name of Bethlehem, We will never forget you, Jürgen. Rest in peace.”

Bartsch was the founding bassist and chief songwriter of Bethlehem, whom he founded in 1991. The band is credited with pioneering the DSBM (Depressive Suicidal Black Metal) genre, combing black metal with doom metal on a series of influential 1990s albums, including its debut Dark Metal (1994) and its follow-up Dictius te necare (1996).

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Overall, Bethlehem has released 10 albums, most recently 2022’s The Gospel According to Alexander, with their sound evolving over the years. Two of the band’s songs appeared on the soundtrack to Harmony Korine’s 1997 cult movie Gummo.

In a 2017 interview, Bartsch was asked about Bethlehem being called the forefathers of the DSBM genre, to which he responded, “Yes, we are! [laughs]. Basically, we don’t have anything in common with that scene, but yes, we are their godfathers! … In the nineties, we were playing in front of ten people. People were saying: ‘This is shit! It’s not black metal, it’s about suicide, what kind of shit is this?’ So yeah, we were lucky that somehow some kids got interested in that.”

Our condolences go out to Jürgen Bartsch’s family, friends, and bandmates during this difficult time.

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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